Gertrude Hartland

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Gertrude Hartland (1865–1954), was an Irish illustrator.

Born in County Cork, she was the daughter of Richard Hartland and Mary Walsh, and the niece of artist Henry Albert Hartland and plantsman William Baylor Hartland.[1]

Hartland painted flowers, mainly daffodils.[1] Her uncle, WB Hartland, a plantsman who specialised in daffodils, produced a number of catalogues in the 1880s and 1890s which were illustrated with her engraved floral images.[2] This included several editions of the Little Book of Daffodils - for which her drawings were engraved by W.J. Welch.[3]

Gertrude Hartland was also a landscape painter.[citation needed]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b National Gallery of Ireland (1987). Irish Women Artists: From the Eighteenth Century to the Present Day. National Gallery of Ireland. p. 166. ISBN 0-903162-40-7. Hartland, Gertrude (1865-1954) Gertrude Hartland was the daughter of Richard Hartland and Mary Walsh; she was born in Cork. Her father's younger brother, William Baylor Hartland; became a prominent Cork nurseryman. Miss Hartland drew and painted flowers, principally daffodils, from her uncle's nursery between 1887 and 1897 at least
  2. ^ Laurence C. Hatch (1999). BIOH: Biographies in Ornamental Horticulture. LH Press. [WB Hartland's] 1890 "Floral Album of Daffodils" [has] illustrations by his talented niece Gertrude Hartland
  3. ^ W.B. Hartland (1887). Hartland's Original Little Book of Daffodils (PDF). Purcell and Company.
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