Carron Lodge

English painter

Carron Angus Cyril Oliver Lodge (born 1882,[1] in Bruges, Belgium[2][better source needed][non-primary source needed] – 24 June 1910, in London) was an English figure and landscape painter.

The son of a barrister,[3][better source needed][non-primary source needed] he trained as an artist and was a Royal Academy Schools student from 27 January 1903 to January 1908.[4] He went on to exhibit at the Royal Academy between 1906 and 1910. Lodge was the father of the black and white artist Francis Graham Lodge.[citation needed] At the age of 27, Carron Lodge died at home from an overdose of sulphonal. At the time his wife Winifred was expecting their second child.[citation needed]

Newspaper clippings of Carron Lodge's death in June 1910

Exhibits

  • Royal Academy
    • Cat No. 1048 Commerce in 1906
    • Cat No. 1453 The Good Samaritan in 1907
      • A watercolour drawing depicting a study for The Good Samaritan was given to the V&A by Carron's sister, Miss Winifred M. Lodge. The watercolour can be viewed in the V&A Collections Signed 'C. O. Lodge. 1905.'
  • New English Art Club in 1910
    • Cat No. 65 The Path to the Monastery
    • Cat No. 109 The King's Vision
    • Cat No. 162 Nativity
  • Royal Society of Artists, Birmingham (1)
  • Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool (1)
  • London Salon (6)[citation needed]

Residences

  • 1907 at 9 Gatestone Rd, Upper Norwood, SE
  • 1910 at 14 Belgrave Road, London NW (where he died)

Notable relatives

First Cousins Once Removed

  • Sir Oliver Lodge (scientist)
  • Sir Richard Lodge (historian)
  • George Edward Lodge (artist)
  • Eleanor Constance Lodge[citation needed]

Second Cousin

References

  1. ^ https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/art-artists/name/carron-angus-cyril-oliver-lodge
  2. ^ 1901 UK census entry for 9 Gatestone Road, Upper Norwood, London SE
  3. ^ 1871 UK census entry for 61 Russell Square, Bloomsbury, London
  4. ^ https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/art-artists/name/carron-angus-cyril-oliver-lodge