Herbert Cook
{{short description|British art historian and patron (1868-1939)}}
{{other people}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2015}}
{{Use British English|date=July 2015}}
{{more citations needed|date=January 2021}}
{{infobox person
| honorific_prefix = Sir
| name = {{nowrap|Herbert Frederick Cook}}
| honorific_suffix = 3rd Baronet
| image = William Orpen - Portrait of Sir Herbert Cook, 1923.jpg
| caption = Portrait of Sir Herbert Cook, by William Orpen
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1868|11|18}}
| birth_place =
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|1939|5|4|1868|11|18}}
| death_place =
| resting_place =
| education = Harrow School
| alma_mater = Balliol College, Oxford
| father = Sir Frederick Cook
| mother =
| spouse = {{marriage|Mary Hood|1898}}
| children = 3
| occupation = {{nowrap|Art historian}}
| known_for =
| relatives = {{nowrap|2nd Viscount Bridport (father-in-law)}}
Francis Cook (son)
}}
Sir Herbert Frederick Cook, 3rd Baronet (18 November 1868 – 4 May 1939) was an English art patron and art historian.
Life
Only son of Sir Frederick Cook, 2nd Baronet, he was educated at Harrow School and Balliol College, Oxford. He was subsequently called to the Bar by the Inner Temple in 1895. He married in 1898 to Mary Hood, daughter of Arthur Hood, 2nd Viscount Bridport, with whom he had one son (Francis, who succeeded him) and two daughters.
In 1920, he succeeded to his father's baronetcy, along with the first baronet's art collection, which he catalogued in three volumes in 1913 and which thereafter became known in art history publications as the "Cook Collection, Doughty House, Richmond". Though he was not a major collector himself, he did add Rembrandt’s Portrait of a boy (Norton Simon Foundation) and Titian’s La Schiavona (National Gallery, London).
Cook Collection
{{Commons|Herbert Cook collection, Doughty House, 1913}}
He was an art historian who wrote a catalog raisonné of Giorgione works in 1900, and managed and hosted visits to his family's collection which included a Cima da Conegliano Madonna and Child and two Giorgiones at Doughty House.[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/1527075 Giorgione], art catalogue record on WorldCat He was a co-founder of The Art Fund, and in 1903 was founding member of the "Consultative Committee" of The Burlington Magazine.[https://burlingtonindex.wordpress.com/2014/04/02/herbert-frederick-cook-giorgione/ Pan-Giorgionism: Herbert Frederick Cook (1868-1939) as art writer.] Retrieved 01-01-2018 Other members were Harold Dillon, 17th Viscount Dillon and James Lindsay, Lord Balcarres, Sir Martin Conway, Sidney Colvin, Campbell Dodgson, Herbert Horne, Charles Eliot Norton, Claude Phillips, and Roger Fry.[https://www.jstor.org/stable/871015 “Fifty Years of The Burlington Magazine.”] The Burlington Magazine, vol. 95, no. 600, 1953, pp. 63–65, on JSTOR Later Roger Fry disagreed with some of Cook's optimistic Giorgione attributions, especially Cook's 1913 acquisition of La Schiavona, which he catalogued as The portrait of Caterina Cornaro by Giorgione (finished by Titian).[https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/6577063 The portrait of Caterina Cornaro by Giorgione (finished by Titian)], 1915 on Worldcat[https://archive.org/details/gri_33125001303888/page/n463 catalog entry 536] in 1913 The other Giorgione in his collection that was purchased in 1907, has since been reattributed to Giovanni Cariani.[https://archive.org/details/gri_33125001303847/page/n395 catalog entry 137] in 1913
He was a member of the Arundel Society and served on committees for foreign exhibitions and organised several in London. In 1930, he also gave £1000 to the University of London for the Courtauld Institute of Art.
Selected works
- Giorgione - 1900
- Volume II, Dutch & Flemish schools, [https://archive.org/details/gri_33125001303870/page/n10 A catalogue of the paintings at Doughty House, Richmond, & elsewhere in the collection of Sir Frederick Cook, bt., Visconde de Monserrate], by Cook, Herbert; Borenius, Tancred, 1885-1948; Kronig, J. O., 1887-1984; Brockwell, Maurice W., 1869-1958, on archive.org
References
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{{succession box
| title = Baronet
(of Doughty House)
| years = 1920 – 1939
| before = Frederick Cook
| after = Francis Cook
}}
{{s-end}}
External links
- {{Gutenberg author |id=4307}}
- {{Internet Archive author |sname=Herbert Frederick Cook}}
- [http://infotrac.galegroup.com/itw/infomark/670/931/54529193w16/purl=rc1_TTDA_0_CS268907685&dyn=6!xrn_6_0_CS268907685&hst_1?sw_aep=camlib Obituary, The Times, 5 May 1939]
- http://thepeerage.com/p8092.htm#i80912
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Category:English philanthropists
Category:Alumni of Balliol College, Oxford
Category:People educated at Harrow School