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Rosamond Praeger

Sophia Rosamund Praeger
MBE
Born 17 April 1867
Holywood, County Down, Northern Ireland, UK
Died April 16, 1954(1954-04-16) (aged 86)
Rock Cottage, County Down, Northern Ireland, UK
Resting place Priory Cemetery, Holywood
Nationality British, Northern Irish
Alma mater Belfast School of Art and the Slade School of Art
Known for sculpture

Sophia Rosamund Praeger, MBE, HRHA, MA (1867–1954) was an Northern Irish artist, sculptor, poet and writer.

Praeger was born in Holywood, County Down, Northern Ireland on 17 April 1867. Her parents were Willem Emil Praeger and Marie Ferrar Patterson. Her father, immigrated to Belfast from Holland to work with his uncle in the family linen company, which was established in 1860. Praeger had 5 brothers, the eldest of which was the naturalist Robert Lloyd Praeger. Praeger received her primary school education at the day school run by the Non-Subscribing Presbyterian minister, Rev Charles McElester. Praeger would later teach at this school. She attended Sullivan Upper School, the Belfast School of Art and the Slade School of Art in London. At the Belfast School of Art, Praeger studied under the painter George Trobridge, and became a member of the Rambler's Sketching Club in 1886. In 1888, she enrolled in the Slade School, studying under Alphonse Legros. Whilst there she became friends with fellow sculptor, Ellen Mary Rope. From 1892 to 1893, Praeger travelled to Paris to study, having been encouraged to do so by Legros and Rope.

Following her time in Paris, Praeger returned to Holywood and established a studio. Having rented a number of studios in Belfast, in 1914 she built St Brigid's Studio on Hibernia Street, which she worked from until her death. Praeger completed her first large commission in 1907, a memorial to T. Hamilton for Queen's University Belfast.

Praeger wrote and illustrated children's books, as well as providing botanical illustrations for her brother's work. However she is best known for her sculptures, working primarily in plaster but also marble, terracotta and stone. Her more well known pieces depict children in what is sometimes described as a sentimental style.

Her sculptures include:

She also modelled figures for such diverse bodies as the Northern Bank, the Carnegie Library on the Falls Road (Belfast) and at St Anne's Church of Ireland Cathedral (Belfast). She was President of the then Ulster Academy (became the Royal Ulster Academy later).


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