Henri Tebbitt

{{short description|English painter}}

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

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

Henri Tebbitt (1852–1926) was an English-Australian painter.

Tebbit was born in Paris of English parents in 1852. Henri's lifespan could never be considered as being droll! He experienced many things in his journey through life. From manning street barricades in Paris against the Germans in the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871) at the ripe old age of 16, to dining with Charles Dickens while at the Queen Elizabeth Grammar School in Kent.

He was self-taught as an artist and after travelling in various countries settled in England. An oil painting by him, "Wet Weather", was shown at the Royal Academy exhibition of 1884. Coming to Australia in 1889, he did a large amount of work, particularly in water-colour. His pictures for a time were very popular with the public, and examples were acquired for the Brisbane, Hobart, Launceston, Bendigo and Geelong galleries. He had married Martha Bateman in Scarborough in September 1877. They had a daughter Daisy Marguerite, born in Paris, France, in 1878. However, Henri immigrated to Australia without the family, and went on to marry Robertha McGuigan in Sydney in 1903.

In the early 1900s Henri was invited by the publishers, Angus and Robertson to write his memoirs. This he carried out, but the manuscript was not published by A&R, at the time. However, it has now been published in 2025 by Austin and Macauley of London.

He died in Rose Bay, Sydney, on 4 January 1926. Although his standing as an artist was not high, Tebbitt was a man of some character with a philosophic mind. Speaking of his own work in his manuscript autobiography previously mentioned, he said: "I have simply endeavoured, perhaps with a vision obscured, to reproduce as faithfully as I could, nature as I see it, and if my efforts are indifferent, no one regrets it more than I do."

The original memoir now resides in the Mitchell Library in Sydney Australia. However, the published work (ISBN: 9781035871544) is available on-line or from book stores.

As an aside, Henri was insistent that his name was to be pronounced "Hen-Rye".

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