Sydney Prior Hall facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Sydney Prior Hall
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Born | 1842 |
Died | 1922 |
Nationality | English |
Known for | Portrait painter, Children's Literature |
Sir Sydney Prior Hall MVO, MA (18 October 1842 – 1922) was a British portrait painter and illustrator and one of the leading reportage artists of the later Victorian period.
The son of animal portraitist Harry Hall, Sydney Hall was educated at Merchant Taylors' School. He decided on a career as an artist while at Oxford University and joined the staff of The Graphic, an illustrated newspaper, shortly after its foundation in late 1869. He immediately established his name with a series of vivid drawings made at the front during the Franco-Prussian War.
As stated in the contemporary publication The Art Journal, his drawings of the Parnell Commission were among his finest achievements in the medium of graphic journalism: "he was in court the whole time, busy with a swift revealing pencil which missed no turn of affairs."
He illustrated a number of books including Tom Brown's School Days (MacMillan, 1885), and Tom Brown at Oxford by Thomas Hughes.
Hall married Hannah Holland, and was the father of Egyptologist Henry R. H. Hall.
Gallery
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Escaped Leopard Battles with Dogs at Raglan Castle, circa 1875, by Sydney P. Hall
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Painting depicting Archbishop of Canterbury Frederick Temple's collapse in the House of Lords while delivering a speech on the Education Bill, on 2 December 1902.