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Catherine Madox Brown

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Nationality
  
British

Spouse
  
Francis Hueffer (m. 1872)

Died
  
1927

Name
  
Catherine Brown


Catherine Madox Brown httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Full Name
  
Catherine Madox Brown

Born
  
11 November 1850
London, England

Movement
  
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, Aesthetic Movement, Arts and Crafts Movement

Role
  
Ford Madox Brown's daughter

Children
  
Ford Madox Ford, Oliver Madox Hueffer

Parents
  
Emma Hill, Ford Madox Brown

Education
  
Queen's College, London

Catherine Madox Brown Hueffer (11 November 1850 – 1927), also known as Cathy, the first child of Ford Madox Brown and Emma Hill, was an artist and model associated with the Pre-Raphaelites and married to the writer Francis Hueffer.

Contents

Early life

Born out of wedlock 11 November 1850 in London, Catherine was named after Emma's mother. Emma and Catherine posed as the mother and child in Pretty Baa-Lambs.

Marriage and family

She married Francis Hueffer on the 3 September 1872. They had two surviving sons, Ford Madox Ford born 1873 and Oliver Madox Hueffer, both writers. Their daughter, Juliet, married Russian revolutionary journalist David Soskice; their son Frank Soskice became Home Secretary. Emma left Catherine all of her property after her death in September 1890. Francis Hueffer died in January 1899.

Artistic career

She began painting along with her half sister Lucy Madox Brown, modelled and worked as an assistant under their father. Other female Pre-Raphaelite artists such as Georgiana Burne-Jones, the sister of Thomas Seddon and Marie Spartali Stillman also took lessons in the same studio.

List of works

Portrait of her father Ford Madox Brown at the Easel, watercolour, 1870.
At the Opera, watercolour and pencil, 1869.
Wandering Thoughts, watercolour heightened with bodycolour, 1875.
Portrait of Laura, wife of Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, watercolour, 1872, 50.8 x 33 cm, Exh. The Fine Art and Antiques fair Olympia, London, 2000 by Campbell Wilson (London).

References

Catherine Madox Brown Wikipedia