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Alfred E Child

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Nationality
  
English

Name
  
Alfred Child

Known for
  
Stained glass


Alfred E. Child

Born
  
1875
London, United Kingdom

Education
  
Central School of Arts and Crafts

Died
  
1939, Dublin, Republic of Ireland

Alma mater
  
National College of Art and Design

Alfred E. Child (1875-1939) was an English stained glass artist, a lecturer in the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art and was associated with An Túr Gloine.

Contents

Life and education

Alfred Ernest Child was born in London in 1875. As a young man, he left school to work in an accountant's office, working there for a year when he decided to pursue a career in the arts. He studied in the Central School of Arts and Crafts having won a scholarship, and went on to study stained glass under Christopher Whall as an assistant glass painter and designer. Child was married to Annie, with whom he had two sons and a daughter. Child died of stroke in Dublin in 1939.

Artistic work

Child was invited to Dublin in September 1901 to teach in the Dublin Metropolitan School of Art, forming a class in stained glass within two months. Whilst working in the School he tutored a generation of Irish stained-glass artists which included Harry Clarke, Ethel Rhind, Catherine Amelia O’Brien, Michael Healy and Evie Hone. It is this influence is seen as his largest contribution to Irish stained glass art.

Child became the manager of An Túr Gloine upon its opening in 1903. Child was a member of Guild of Irish Art Workers and exhibited with the Arts and Crafts Society of Ireland. Amongst the windows that he designed are those at Loughrea Cathedral, the Honan Chapel at University College Cork, the Unitarian Church, Dublin and St Mary’s Church, Haddington Road. Though his eyesight began to fail in 1937, he was associated with the studio until his death 1939.

References

Alfred E. Child Wikipedia