William Logsdail

© National Portrait Gallery, London

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William Logsdail

by Walker Hodgson
pencil, 1891
13 3/8 in. x 10 5/8 in. (339 mm x 270 mm)
Purchased, 1986
Primary Collection
NPG 5899

Sitterback to top

  • William Logsdail (1859-1944), Painter. Sitter in 1 portrait, Artist or producer of 2 portraits.

Artistback to top

Linked publicationsback to top

  • Gibson, Robin; Clerk, Honor, 20th Century Portraits in the National Portrait Gallery Collection, 1993, p. 37
  • Saywell, David; Simon, Jacob, Complete Illustrated Catalogue, 2004, p. 387

Events of 1891back to top

Current affairs

The Irish Nationalist leader Charles Parnell is forced to resign after being named in the divorce proceedings brought by William O'Shea against his wife Kitty, who had been Parnell's mistress for a decade. The scandal severely damages the campaign for the Home Rule Bill, contributing greatly to its subsequent failure. Parnell's health also suffered; he contracted rheumatic fever and died a few months after resigning.

Art and science

Thomas Hardy's publishes Tess of the D'Urbervilles, a tragedy which explores the consequences of the young Tess's seduction by the wealthy Alec D'Urberville. In the novel, Hardy sets forward his major concerns about the individual's powerlessness before fate, whilst radically critiquing the hypocritical double standards of contemporary morals.

International

The construction of Trans-Siberian railway, the longest single rail system in Russia, begins in the Urals and at Vladivostock. Running between Moscow and Vladivostock, work was completed in 1917.
The German aviation pioneer Otto Lilenthal takes off in the first glider from a hill near Potsdam, the first of many guided flights and an important step in the development of aerial technology.

Comments back to top

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Dr James Robert Arthur Richards

18 October 2015, 14:14

In my (and his) home town of Lincoln those in the know are rather proud of Logsdail, some of whose works are present in the city's Usher Gallery. A man of interesting dates (half Victorian, half not), Logsdail could turn his hand to portraiture, but was most renowned for his cityscapes, of which the most impressive is the stunning 1884 work "St. Paul's and Ludgate Hill", which is (rather sadly) in private hands. However, his 1888 depiction of The Lord Mayor's Show entitled "The Ninth of November" can (rightly) be seen at the Guildhall Galleries, free of charge.