Name Jonathan Bell | Died 1865 | |
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Jonathan Anderson Bell (died 1865) was a Scottish architect, known also as a draughtsman and for watercolour paintings.
Contents
Life
The second son of James Bell, advocate, and brother of Henry Glassford Bell and Jane Cross Simpson, he was born in Glasgow and educated at Edinburgh University. He spent most of 1829 and 1830 in Rome, as an art student. He then served his articles as an architect, and remained for some years afterwards, in the office of Messrs. Rickman & Hutchison of Birmingham. Thomas Rickman was a major figure of the English Gothic revival, and became a close friend.
For around 27 years Bell practised as an architect in Edinburgh. His designs included country houses, such as Beeslack for Charles Cowan, and the Scottish baronial Victoria Buildings, Glasgow for Archibald Orr Ewing. He was a member of the Institute of Scottish Architects. In 1839 he was appointed secretary to the Royal Association for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Scotland, a position he retained it until his death.
Bell died, in his fifty-sixth year, on 28 February 1865.
Works
Thirty of the engravings in John Le Keux's Memorials of Cambridge are from Bell's drawings. His Dryburgh Abbey was engraved by William Miller. As a watercolour painter, he was known for landscapes and marine scenes, Italian subjects, and still lifes.
Bell's poems were printed only for private circulation. The volume, printed posthumously in 1865, contained a biography.