Abraham Cooper

{{Short description|British painter (1787–1868)}}

{{for|the rabbi|Abraham Cooper (rabbi)}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2025}}

{{Use British English|date=June 2015}}

File:Young Abraham Cooper.jpg

File:Old Abraham Cooper.jpg of Abraham Cooper, 1860s.]]

Abraham Cooper {{Post-nominals|post-noms=RA}} (1787–1868) was a British animal and battle painter.

Life

File:Family grave of Abraham Cooper in Highgate Cemetery.jpg]]

The son of a tobacconist, he was born in Greenwich, London on 8 September 1787.{{cite book |last1=Cansick |first1=Frederick Teague |title=The Monumental Inscriptions of Middlesex Vol 2 |date=1872 |publisher=J Russell Smith |page=116 |url=https://archive.org/details/acollectioncuri03cansgoog/page/n38/mode/2up |access-date=9 April 2021}}[http://www.metmuseum.org/collection/the-collection-online/search/668723 "Fighting for the Standard at the Battle of Marston Moor"], Metropolitan Museum of Art collections. Retrieved 10 June 2015 At the age of thirteen he became an employee at Astley's Amphitheatre, and was afterwards a groom in the service of Henry Meux, a brewer and later the first of the Meux baronets. When he was twenty-two, wishing to possess a portrait of a favorite horse under his care, he bought a manual of painting, learned something of the use of oil-colours, and painted the picture on a canvas hung against the stable wall. His master bought it and encouraged him to continue in his efforts. He accordingly began to copy prints of horses, and was introduced to Benjamin Marshall, the animal painter, who took him into his studio, and seems to have introduced him to the Sporting Magazine, an illustrated periodical to which he was himself a contributor.{{EB1911|inline=1|wstitle=Cooper, Abraham|volume=7|page=78}}

In 1814 he exhibited his Tam O'Shanter, and in 1816 he won a prize for his Battle of Ligny. In 1817 he exhibited his Battle of Marston Moor and was made associate of the Royal Academy, and in 1820 he was elected Academician. Cooper, although ill-educated, was a clever and conscientious artist; his colouring was somewhat flat and dead, but he was a master of equine portraiture and anatomy, and had some antiquarian knowledge. He had a special fondness for Cavalier and Roundhead pictures.

He died on 24 December 1868 and is buried at the top of the western side of Highgate Cemetery (plot no.830), against the north wall.

Paintings

Gallery

Image:CribandRosa1811.jpg|Crib and Rosa, 1817

Image:Abraham_Cooper_-_Tam_O'Shanter.png|Tam O'Shanter

Image:Richard III at the Battle of Bosworth by Abraham (Abram) Cooper.jpg|Richard III and the Earl of Richmond During the Battle of Bosworth Field

File:Print,_1866,_by_Edward_Hacker_(1813-1905),_after_Abraham_Cooper,_RA,_(1787–1868),_shooting_scene,_UK.jpg|Engraving after Cooper, by Edward Hacker (1813–1905), 1866.

References

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Works about

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  • Harrington, Peter (1993). British Artists and War: The Face of Battle in Paintings and Prints, 1700–1914. London: Greenhill. {{ISBN|1853671576}}