Frank Hyde | |
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![]() Frank Hyde in 1878
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Born | 1849 London, England |
Died | 4 September 1937 (aged 87) |
Nationality | British |
Known for | Painting |
Frank Hyde (1849–1937) was a British portrait and figure painter. He was a war artist and portrait painter, best known for his works of Capri. He also created comic characters for greeting cards for Raphael Tuck.
Frank Hyde was born in Surrey to a gentleman who retired from the army, Captain John Francis, and Elizabeth Gudge Hyde in 1849. His father inherited Hyde End Manor, the family seat and a 1,500-acre estate in Berkshire, where he grew up with five brothers.
Hyde studied and exhibited his works of art in London at the Royal Academy of Arts. Later, Hyde inherited Hyde End Manor and later sold it.
During the Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71, he served the Royal Engineers as a 1st Lieutenant and then began created illustrations for The Graphic, working as a war artist.Battle of Sedan was depicted by Hyde for The Graphic.
In the late 1870s, he purchased a villaor the former Santa Teresa monastery at Anacapri on the island of Capri, where he made portraits of local model Rosina Ferrara and became a friend of John Singer Sargent. In 1914, he wrote the article Island of the Sirens about Capri for the International Studio about the allure of the people, culture, and island for artists over the years. It was one of many travel articles written by Hyde.
He is likely best known for his paintings of Ferrara and the one entitled Capri. In the late 1880s, he made the painting The Eton Boy.
During World War I, Hyde was a Captain and made paintings of the war, including First Battalion, the Royal West Kent, at Neuve Chapelle, 1914. An exhibit about the war, "Coming Home: Conflict & Care", at Maidstone Museum has shown three of his paintings, including Arrival of a Convoy of Wounded Soldiers at Maidstone East and Trones Wood, about the Queen's Own Royal West Kent Regiment.