Dorothy Tennant, Lady Stanley (22 March 1855 – 5 October 1926) was an English painter of the Victorian era neoclassicism.[1] She was married to explorer Sir Henry Morton Stanley.

Dorothy, Lady Stanley
Portrait of Lady Dorothy Stanley, by George Frederic Watts
Born
Dorothy Tennant

(1855-03-22)22 March 1855
London, England
Died5 October 1926(1926-10-05) (aged 71)
NationalityBritish
EducationSlade School of Fine Art
Known forPainting
Spouse
(m. 1890)

Biography edit

Tennant was born in Russell Square, London, the second daughter of Charles Tennant and Gertrude Barbara Rich Collier (1819–1918). Her sister was the photographer, Eveleen Tennant Myers.[2] She studied painting under Edward Poynter at the Slade School of Fine Art, London and with Jean-Jacques Henner in Paris.[3][4] She first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1886 and subsequently at the New Gallery and the Grosvenor Gallery in London.[5] Outside of London Tennant featured in exhibitions by the Fine Art Society in Glasgow and also in the Autumn Exhibitions held in Liverpool and Manchester.[5]

In 1890, she married Sir Henry Morton Stanley,[1] and became known as Lady Stanley. She edited her husband's autobiography,[1] reportedly removing any references to other women in Stanley's life. After Sir Henry Morton Stanley's death, his widow remarried, in 1907, to Henry Jones Curtis (died 19 February 1944), a pathologist, surgeon and writer.[6]

Lady Stanley was also an author and illustrator,[7] including London Street Arabs in 1890.[8]

She died of heart failure on 5 October 1926.[9]

Works edit

Bibliography edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Henry Morton Stanley (1909) The Autobiography Of Sir Henry Morton Stanley, Dorothy Stanley Ed., Houghton Mifflin Company
  2. ^ "Eveleen Myers (née Tennant) (1856-1937), Photographer". National Portrait Gallery. Retrieved 13 April 2018.
  3. ^ Grosvenor Prints, London
  4. ^ w:fr:Jean-Jacques Henner
  5. ^ a b Frances Spalding (1990). 20th Century Painters and Sculptors. Antique Collectors' Club. ISBN 1-85149-106-6.
  6. ^ Supplement to the British Medical Journal (1944)
  7. ^ Google Books (2010)
  8. ^ "Lady Dorothy Stanley". Tate.
  9. ^ Chapman-Huston, Desmond, "The Lost Historian, A Memoir of Sir Sidney Low", pg. 325

External links edit