Head of a Young Girl c.1895 Charcoal
sketch for Alleluia

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Thomas Cooper Gotch, RI, 1854
-1931
Born in Kettering in Northamptonshire, ‘Tom’ Gotch left school to work
at his family’s boot & shoe business before embarking on his artistic
career. He began his formal art training at Heatherley’s Art School
in 1876, aged 21, and entered the Slade in 1879 where he became a close
friend of the painter Henry Scott Tuke.
At the instigation of his future wife, fellow artist and Slade student,
Caroline Burland Yates, Gotch and Tuke first visited Newlyn in 1879.
Tom and Carrie returned to marry at St Peter’s Church in Newlyn in 1881,
but then both resumed their studies in Paris at Julian’s and Lauren’s
Academies and they did not become resident in Newlyn until 1887.
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At first Gotch adopted the Newlyners’ ‘rural realist’ style, but in
1891 they wintered in Florence which marked a change in the style of
his work to incorporate a ‘joyous sense of colour’. Many of his later
works are influenced by the resurgence of interest in mediaevalism and
resemble Pre-Raphaelite paintings. Of these, probably his most famous
work is Alleluia 1896 (Tate Britain).
Gotch frequently used local models in his works, including his own
daughter, Phyllis, who was famed in later life for her leading role
in stopping the Newlyn ‘slum clearances’. Gotch also modelled for his
artist friends, and is the model for King Arthur in Elizabeth Forbes’
illustrated book King Arthur’s Wood.
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