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The Rain it Raineth Every Day
1889

Norman Garstin 1847 - 1926
Garstin was born in Ireland and was brought up by his grandparents.
He first set out to be an engineer, then an architect, and then sought
his fortune prospecting for diamonds in South Africa in the company
of Cecil Rhodes. On return to Ireland, he decided on a career as an
artist.
Although he started by painting in his spare time, by the late 1870s
through the early 1880s he was studying in both Paris and Antwerp. He
arrived in Newlyn in 1886, moving to Penzance in 1889 where he finally
settled, living at Wellington Terrace. To supplement the sparse income
from picture sales, he taught painting, his most notable students being
Harold Harvey and his own daughter, Alethea Garstin, who became a notable
painter in her own right.
His most famous work is ‘The Rain it Raineth Every Day’, 1889, showing
Penzance promenade on a rainy day. The composition of this painting
demonstrates Garstin’s admiration for Japanese art, which was influencing
so many artists at this time, including Whistler, whose work Garstin
also admired. The title is taken from Shakespeare, where it is found
both in ‘Twelfth Night’ and ‘King Lear’.
Norman and his wife, Dochie, had three children: Denis, who was killed
in action in Russia in 1918; Crosbie, who went on to become a writer,
best known for the Penhales Trilogy, and painter Alethea, who exhibited
at the Royal Academy and was described by as Patrick Heron as "England's
leading Impressionist" and her work as "as good as Vuillard".
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