Henry Raeburn Dobson
Encyclopedia
Henry Raeburn Dobson - also known as Raeburn Dobson - was a Scottish portrait and landscape painter from Edinburgh
Edinburgh
Edinburgh is the capital city of Scotland, the second largest city in Scotland, and the eighth most populous in the United Kingdom. The City of Edinburgh Council governs one of Scotland's 32 local government council areas. The council area includes urban Edinburgh and a rural area...

 who was active in Edinburgh and Brussels (Belgium) from 1918/1920 until 1980. His father Henry John Dobson (1858–1928) and his brother Cowan Dobson
Cowan Dobson
David Cowan Dobson , referred to as 'Cowan' Dobson ARBA , RBA , was a leading Scottish portrait artist who mainly worked in London...

 (1894–1980) were genre and portrait painters. His portraits are mainly painted in oil, while his landscape paintings are mainly painted in watercolour.

Family

Henry Raeburn Dobson, who was to become a fine Society Portrait painter, was born into a not so well to do middle class family with roots in Kirkcudbright
Kirkcudbright
Kirkcudbright, is a town in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.The town lies south of Castle Douglas and Dalbeattie, in the part of Dumfries and Galloway known as the Stewartry, at the mouth of the River Dee, some six miles from the sea...

, Scotland. His father, Henry John Dobson (1858–1928)10, was himself a Scottish genre and portrait painter from Dalry
Dalry
Dalry is the name of several places in Scotland:* Dalry, North Ayrshire* Dalry, Edinburgh* St. John's Town of Dalry You may also be looking for Dalrigh or the Battle of Dalrigh...

. His grandfather, Thomas Dobson, was a wool merchant in the town of Kirkcudbright
Kirkcudbright
Kirkcudbright, is a town in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.The town lies south of Castle Douglas and Dalbeattie, in the part of Dumfries and Galloway known as the Stewartry, at the mouth of the River Dee, some six miles from the sea...

. It is said in the family that there was a Dobson wool mill in Dalry. Perhaps this mill was owned and run by Thomas.

Henry John did not maintain the family tradition of running the family wool business. In order to become a painter he sacrificed his inheritance since family legend has it that Thomas Dobson disowned his son. Henry John's whole life would be marked by financial difficulties.

Henry John married Jeannie Charlotte Hannah Cowan on September 17, 1890 in Dalry, in the district of Kirkcudbright. To exercise his art (and because there were more opportunities for paintings portraits in the Scottish capital) they later moved to a house in Edinburgh. Raeburn was born there at 9, Merchiston Crescent in a house that is stated to have had at least " 7 rooms with one or more windows". At that time, the family had an in-house servant, Barbara Sutherland.

As a portrait painter, Henry John did not have much success. He transitioned into Scottish genre paintings in the style of Thomas Faed
Thomas Faed
Thomas Faed RSA was a Scottish painter who is said to have done for Scottish art what Robert Burns did for Scottish song.Faed was born on 8 June 1826, in Gatehouse of Fleet, Kirkcudbrightshire, and was the brother of John Faed....

 (1826–1900), Henry Wright Kerr (1857–1936) and David Wilkie
David Wilkie (artist)
Sir David Wilkie was a Scottish painter.- Early life :Wilkie was the son of the parish minister of Cults in Fife. He developed a love for art at an early age. In 1799, after he had attended school at Pitlessie, Kettle and Cupar, his father reluctantly agreed to his becoming a painter...

 (1785–1841). These scenes were especially popular in the United States and Canada, where they were often printed on tin biscuit boxes. Because Henry John often had difficulties paying the rent, the family moved quite often. It is said that he actually lived from hand to mouth and that it was mainly due to the household skills of his wife Jeannie that the family survived.

Siblings

Raeburn was the youngest of Henry John Dobson's four children. The oldest child was Thomas Stanley, born in 1892 and named after his grandfather. He was known as Stanley. He became an actor, but also worked for an art dealer named Robertson in London. David Cowan Dobson was born in 1894 and was known as Cowan Dobson
Cowan Dobson
David Cowan Dobson , referred to as 'Cowan' Dobson ARBA , RBA , was a leading Scottish portrait artist who mainly worked in London...

, a well known London Society portrait painter. Although he painted some very fine portraits of well known men, like Earl Attlee
Earl Attlee
Earl Attlee is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created on 16 December 1955 for Clement Attlee, the former Labour Prime Minister. He was made Viscount Prestwood, of Walthamstow in the County of Essex, at the same time, also in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. As of 2010 the...

, Earl Beatty
Earl Beatty
Earl Beatty is a title in the Peerage of the United Kingdom. It was created in 1919 for the prominent naval commander Admiral of the Fleet David Beatty. He was created Baron Beatty, of the North Sea and of Brooksby in the County of Leicester, and Viscount Borodale, of Wexford in the County of...

 and Harold Wilson
Harold Wilson
James Harold Wilson, Baron Wilson of Rievaulx, KG, OBE, FRS, FSS, PC was a British Labour Member of Parliament, Leader of the Labour Party. He was twice Prime Minister of the United Kingdom during the 1960s and 1970s, winning four general elections, including a minority government after the...

, he mainly portrayed "fashionable London ladies". The name Cowan was given to David after his mother's family name. The only sister was Louisa Rankin. She was born in 1896 and was also known as Louie. She had an intense family bond with her younger brother and – together with mother Jeannie - looked after him her whole life long.

Raeburn was given the name of Henry Raeburn, after the famous eighteenth century Scottish portrait painter, Sir Henry Raeburn (1756–1823), whom his father admired hugely.

School years

Despite Henry John's financial precariousness, he sent his children to good local schools. Little is known about Raeburn's school days. His first years of formal education were spent at James Gillespie's High School, in Edinburgh. He and Louisa were enrolled together, on 5 September 1906. The family then lived at 4 Glengyle Terrace, Edinburgh.

Raeburn left Gillespie's on 18 July 1911 to attend the prestigious George Watson's College
George Watson's College
George Watson's College, known informally as Watson's, is a co-educational independent day school in Scotland, situated on Colinton Road, in the Merchiston area of Edinburgh. It was first established as a hospital school in 1741, became a day school in 1871 and was merged with its sister school...

, also in Edinburgh. The family attached much importance to good education. At that time, the school was based near Lauriston Place in the centre of Edinburgh. Only in 1932 George Watson's College moved to present building in Colinton Road, outside the city centre. He was admitted to George Watson's College on September 26, 1911. He left the school in July 1917, to attend (according to the school's archives) Art College.

In his last year at the College (his fifth) he studied English, History, Mathematics, Latin and French. His best subjects were the latter two. Drawing was then only taught to boys up to the fourth year. His art teacher at Watson's was Ralph W. Hay In art teaching he was a pioneer of the Modern Movement in Scotland. He was one of the first to break away from the traditional colourless nineteenth century way of teaching drawing. He was all in favour of colour, decoration and the expression of fantasy. This may explain why Raeburn's portraits – unlike his brother's portraits - are more colourful.

There is one odd circumstance which has been noted in his records. Henry left the school without warning in July 1912 to attend Mr. A. Miller Inglis' School for Boys, Maidenhead College, Maidenhead, Berkshire. Mr. Inglis was a cousin of his father. The note states "…but probably not to be there long as mother is missing him being at home."25. He did indeed return quickly to Edinburgh and returned to George Watson's College, but this time he stayed at a private boarding house run by Mrs. Imrie, who catered for George Watson's College pupils.

His art education started by being taught drawing and painting by his father. In 1917, after his years at George Watson's, he attended the Edinburgh College of Art
Edinburgh College of Art
Edinburgh College of Art is an art school in Edinburgh, Scotland, providing tertiary education in art and design disciplines for over two thousand students....

, but only for one year According to his R.A.F. file, he attended the Royal College of Art
Royal College of Art
The Royal College of Art is an art school located in London, United Kingdom. It is the world’s only wholly postgraduate university of art and design, offering the degrees of Master of Arts , Master of Philosophy and Doctor of Philosophy...

 in London the following year, where he studied until 1924. However, this cannot be proven, because the Royal College of Art in London does not have any records of Raeburn. In 1921, he was elected "Associate Member" of the Royal Cambrian Academy
Royal Cambrian Academy of Art
The Royal Cambrian Academy of Art is a centre of excellence for art in Wales. Its main gallery is located in Conwy and it has over a hundred members.thumb|right|240px|Plas Mawr, Conwy-Early history:...

, of which he became a full member in 1930.

London years

Raeburn left Edinburgh sometime between 1928 and 1929 and went to live and work in London, only to return to Scotland after the War. Several references state the following addresses for Raeburn :
  • (1927) 130 George Street, Edinburgh
  • (1928) 130 George St, Edinburgh
  • (1929) Studio 108, Earl's Court Road, London, W8
  • (1931) 5 Thurloe Square, SW7
  • (1939) 20, Cranley Place, London SW7
  • (1940) 82, Studland Rd,, Hanwell, London, W732
  • (1941) c/o Mathieson, 20 Frederick St., Edinburgh
  • (1941–1947) 12, Shandwick Place, Edinburgh 2
  • (1945) f/o, R.A.F., c/o C. Robertson & Co., 71 Parkway,London, N.W. 1
  • (1950–1963) The Scottish Liberal Club, Edinburgh
  • (1965) Mavisbush Lodge, Polton, Lasswade, Midlothian


However, these addresses are a mixture of residences, post boxes and studio addresses. In 1945 he had a forwarding address at the shop where his brother worked. In 1947, Raeburn had already returned to Edinburgh and lived a very long time in Queen Street, before moving to Fettes Row, on the outskirts of the Georgian Town of the Scottish capital. The address at the Scottish Liberal Club was probably a post box. But, he exhibited there and he may also have had some rooms there.

Mavisbush Lodge was his workshop. At that time (1965) he actually lived in a flat at 5, Fettes Row, Edinburgh.

In the early 1920, his elder brother Cowan Dobson
Cowan Dobson
David Cowan Dobson , referred to as 'Cowan' Dobson ARBA , RBA , was a leading Scottish portrait artist who mainly worked in London...

, an official war artist
War artist
A war artist depicts some aspect of war through art; this might be a pictorial record or it might commemorate how "war shapes lives." War artists have explored a visual and sensory dimension of war which is often absent in written histories or other accounts of warfare.- Definition and context:A...

, had already settled in the British capital. He was well established in London, as well as in his home town Glasgow. His wife, Phyllis Bowyer, a fragile looking lady, always elegantly dressed and made up with powder and red lipstick, was a driving force behind his success. Cowan and Phyllis travelled constantly between Glasgow
Glasgow
Glasgow is the largest city in Scotland and third most populous in the United Kingdom. The city is situated on the River Clyde in the country's west central lowlands...

 and London and probably made Raeburn decide to try his luck in the British capital.

Although Raeburn's sheer production of portraits is amazing, and although he was considered as one of the best portrait painters in Edinburgh, Raeburn, contrary to his elder brother, was never be as commercially successful as Cowan: neither in London, nor in Edinburgh and not even in Brussels. Raeburn himself seemed not to have been interested in making money and – unlike his brother – did not have a wife who would make this her vocation.

In London, Raeburn lived in expensive places. Thurloe Square
Thurloe Square
Thurloe Square is a traditional garden square in South Kensington, London, England.There are private communal gardens in the centre of the square for use by the local residents. The Victoria and Albert Museum is close by to the north across Thurloe Place and Cromwell Gardens...

 and Cranley Place, in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, were – as they are still now – prestigious addresses, as was Earls Court Road. He wanted to create an image for his customers and properly for himself: the image of a well-to-do society painter. Such image was very much acceptable for his customers. In the late 1920s, Raeburn befriended a Mrs. Humphries. She belonged to the 'London Set' and was a close friend to Harold Macmillan
Harold Macmillan
Maurice Harold Macmillan, 1st Earl of Stockton, OM, PC was Conservative Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 10 January 1957 to 18 October 1963....

. She introduced the painter into the London Society. Through Mrs. Humphries, the painter met many prominent figures. He was introduced to the Mitford
Mitford
Mitford is a village in the borough of Castle Morpeth in the Wansbeck parliamentary constituency, in Northumberland, England, about west of Morpeth.- History :...

 family and - through them – was exposed to their political views. In this pre-war period Raeburn painted the portrait of Gordon Highlander Col. Osbaldeston-Mitford, which was destroyed in a bomb attack in 1940, and - in 1928 - one of the few life-size portraits he ever made, the portrait of the Maharaja of Jodhpur (India), Umaid Singh
Umaid Singh
Umaid Singh was Maharaja of Jodhpur from 1918 to his death. The second son of Maharaja Sir Sardar Singh, he succeeded his elder brother Maharaja Sir Sumair Singh upon his death in 1918; in 1922 he served as the ADC to the Prince of Wales...

.

On January 19, 1939, a curious episode started: Raeburn married the 13 years younger Isabella Rae Smith Dawson. She was born in Falkirk
Falkirk
Falkirk is a town in the Central Lowlands of Scotland. It lies in the Forth Valley, almost midway between the two most populous cities of Scotland; north-west of Edinburgh and north-east of Glasgow....

, near Stirling
Stirling
Stirling is a city and former ancient burgh in Scotland, and is at the heart of the wider Stirling council area. The city is clustered around a large fortress and medieval old-town beside the River Forth...

, Scotland, on 23 September 1913. In the marriage certificate is stated that she was the daughter of chemist researcher Hugh Leishman Smith, by the name of Hugh Smith Dawson. However, when researching Isabella's genealogy, her father seemed to have been an ironmoulder and that her forefathers were all labourers, colliers and coal miners from Falkirk, Muiravonside and Tillicoultry
Tillicoultry
Tillicoultry...

 (Clackmannan
Clackmannan
Clackmannan District 1975-96From 1975, Clackmannan was the name of a small town and local government district in the Central region of Scotland, corresponding to the traditional county of Clackmannanshire, which was Scotland's smallest...

). The couple never lived together. After the wedding, Raeburn continued living with his mother in Cranley Place where he lived with his mother, who mainly looked after the house for him. And Isabella remained at her address at 85, Warwick Road. Both mother, Jeannie Cowan, and sister, Louie, were not in favour of this marriage and probably did everything they could - if not to prevent it from happening - then to terminate it. It is said that they had some suspicion about Isabella's identity and history.

The marriage did indeed not last long, because R.A.F. records of 1942 state that Raeburn was separated from his wife. Strangely there is no official record of a divorce, nor of an annulment in the Registers of the Divorce Courts of England and Wales. However, it is possible that the marriage was annulled - or that they were divorced - in Scotland. According to many family members, Raeburn took Isabella Rae often to family gatherings. And she was very much liked by all his nieces and nephews. Nothing more is known about Isabella.

Raeburn's World War record

During the Second World War, he joined the Royal Air Force
Royal Air Force
The Royal Air Force is the aerial warfare service branch of the British Armed Forces. Formed on 1 April 1918, it is the oldest independent air force in the world...

(R.A.F.), interpreting photographs of enemy positions made by R.A.F. reconnaissance flights. He most probably got his training for this in the secret quarters of Medmenham
Medmenham
Medmenham is a village and civil parish in the Wycombe district of Buckinghamshire, England. It is on the River Thames, about three and a half miles southwest of Marlow and three miles east of Henley-on-Thames....

. He joined the R.A.F. as an ordinary airman (aircrew) in 1942. He is recorded as being 5 foot 8 inches and having brown eyes, brown hair and a fresh complexion. However, on 16 June 1943 he was commissioned as officer. He was granted a commission as an Acting Pilot Officer
Acting Pilot Officer
Acting Pilot Officer is the lowest commissioned grade in the Royal Air Force, being immediately junior to Pilot Officer. Unlike other RAF ranks which officers may hold in an acting capacity, Acting Pilot Officer is maintained as a separate grade. It normally denotes an officer who has recently...

 on 17 June 1943. On 3 March 1944 he was promoted to Flying Officer
Flying Officer
Flying officer is a junior commissioned rank in the Royal Air Force and the air forces of many countries which have historical British influence...

. He was demobilised on 12 February 1946, but kept on the reserve until he relinquished it on 10 February 1954.

After the Invasion, Raeburn served under the command of Air Marshall Sir Arthur Coningham in Paris, and continued to serve as an Interpreter until his demobilisation in 1946. Raeburn became well befriended with the Air Marshall and attended many parties on his yacht in Cannes. In a letter to his sister, Raeburn wrote : " …we are leaving on the yacht at 10.30. A very large party today. 20 people. Four Princess (one the Prince of Monaco) and goodness knows how many Counts and Comtesses are coming. What a life ! Phyllis would be in her element among all this life. I have a nice wee girl friend, daughter of the Prince de Faucigny-Lucinge, a Rothschild, and one of the oldest families in France. She's a darling. …". But, he found life on the French Riviera quite frustrating. He wrote to his sister : " …This place is demoralizing. One can't settle to write or do anything. I am having the usual difficulties to be expected painting an air marshal on holiday {the Air Marshall and Lady Coningham had left France for England}, but I will win in the end….".

His cousin Andrew Blackwood Dobson remembered : "…I do recall him telling me (or Dad) that he did follow in the frontline RAF behind the lines into Europe, interpreting photo reconnaissance as the invasion advanced and that in his spare time he drew portraits of fellow officers in the mess. I think it was through this activity that he met Belgians during the advance through Belgium….", while another cousin Andrew Njal Dobson remembered especially the viewer and stereographs Raeburn had used during the war.

In July 1944, The Times
The Times
The Times is a British daily national newspaper, first published in London in 1785 under the title The Daily Universal Register . The Times and its sister paper The Sunday Times are published by Times Newspapers Limited, a subsidiary since 1981 of News International...

 of London published a rather bizarre obituary of Henry Raeburn. The reason for this obituary is not known. But the very much alive painter was certainly much alarmed by this slight "error". In The Times of Monday August 7, 1944 he wrote : "...Mr. Henry Raeburn Dobson, the Scottish portrait painter, who is at present serving with the R.A.F., wishes to be known that the NOTICE of his DEATH through enemy action is UNTRUE. ...".

Post-war years

After the War, Raeburn left London and went back to live in Edinburgh. It was also around that time that his Belgian ‘adventure’ started (see further).

His first own post-war studio in Edinburgh was at 12, Shandwick Place, in the Georgian part of the city. He occupied this studio from 1941 until 1947. Before that, he had been exhibiting at the gallery of the art dealer and collector Mathieson
Mathieson
Mathieson is a surname and may apply to the following:*Colin Mathieson, Scottish cartoonist*Craig Mathieson , Australian writer*David Mathieson , Scottish footballer*Jean Mathieson, Canadian animator...

, in Frederick Street. It was in Shandwick Place that the portraits of Bill, Janette and Andrew Blackwood Dobson, his cousins, were painted. Shandwick Place is the street leading west from Princes Street at what is known in Edinburgh as the West End (of Princes Street). It is part of the western extension of the New Town, but many of the Georgian buildings have been replaced with Victorian and later buildings. No. 12 is now a nightclub. In Raeburn's time however it contained suites of showrooms and studios, while on the top floor there might have been an apartment.

Raeburn's studios always faced north. Raeburn indeed always rented spaces facing north, because northern light is the best light for painting. He especially liked to paint when the sky was bright blue with some clouds at the horizon, to reflect the northern light.

It must also have been around the end of the 1940 that he met his life companion, Miss Evelyn Wight. They met at the Royal Scottish Dance Society in Edinburgh. Evelyn Agnes Mark Wight, was the daughter of George Wight and Catharina Mark, and born 26 July 1900 in Edinburgh. Raeburn and Evelyn were often seen at Jenners
Jenners
Jenners Department Store, now known simply as Jenners, is a department store located in Edinburgh, Scotland, and was the oldest independent department store in Scotland until its acquisition by House of Fraser in 2005.- History :...

 in Princes Street, having their afternoon tea.

They remained very good friends, until she died from a heart attack at her home at 13, Leamington Terrace, Edinburgh on April 2, 1985, only a few weeks before his own death.
Many described Evelyn as the ‘arty’ person and some claimed that there was an aura of sadness about her because Raeburn did not marry her. We do not know whether Raeburn could not marry Evelyn because he was in fact still married to Isabella Rae, whether he simply would not give marriage a second try after the rather disastrous first attempt or whether unmarried life actually suited him. Raeburn would always refer to her as "Miss Wight" and would never take her to official events, and hardly ever to family events.

From 1950 until 1964, Raeburn exhibited in the Royal Scottish Academy
Royal Scottish Academy
The Royal Scottish Academy is a Scottish organisation that promotes contemporary Scottish art. Founded in 1826, as the Royal Institution for the Encouragement of the Fine Arts, the RSA maintains a unique position in Scotland as an independently funded institution led by eminent artists and...

 and maybe in the Scottish Liberal Club. But, besides an inscription on the reverse side of the first portrait of the Bishop of Bath and Wells stating that his address was at the Liberal Club in Edinburgh, no written proof about the latter has been found.

In 1956 he exhibited a portrait of Stewart McKechnie in McLellan Galleries
McLellan Galleries
The McLellan Galleries are an exhibition space in the city of Glasgow, Scotland. Built in 1856, the Galleries are named after their founder, Archibald McLellan , a coach builder, councillor and patron of the arts...

 in Sauchiehall Street
Sauchiehall Street
Sauchiehall Street is one of the main shopping/business streets in the city centre of Glasgow, Scotland. Along with Buchanan Street and Argyle Street, it forms the main shopping area of Glasgow, containing the majority of Glasgow's high street and chain stores.Although commonly associated with the...

, Glasgow.

Around 1965, he moved his studio to the Lasswade
Lasswade
Lasswade is a civil parish and village in Midlothian, Scotland, on the River North Esk, nine miles south of Edinburgh city centre, between Dalkeith and Loanhead...

 area, at Mavisbush Lodge, in Polton. The upper floor of the coach house (a long rectangular space) was transformed into his studio in 1965. Raeburn then knew it as Mavisbush Lodge, but it has since been renamed Priorwood Lodge. The Lodge was owned by one of his cousins, who set up this work space in the attic of the house.

In the early 1970s, when the Lodge was sold, Raeburn moved his studio from Polton
Polton
Polton is a village located in Lasswade parish, Midlothian, Scotland, anciently a superiority of the Ramsay family, cadets of Dalhousie. In 1618 David Ramsay of Polton was in possession. ....

 to his one bedroom flat on the first floor of 5, Fettes Row, on the edge of Edinburgh's New Town, which he had bought earlier on.

Around that time Raeburn started to have serious physical problems and at the end of the 1970 his eyesight started to fade and he started to suffer from arteriosclerosis
Arteriosclerosis
Arteriosclerosis refers to a stiffening of arteries.Arteriosclerosis is a general term describing any hardening of medium or large arteries It should not be confused with "arteriolosclerosis" or "atherosclerosis".Also known by the name "myoconditis" which is...

.

Raeburn in Belgium

As mentioned before, Raeburn's career in Belgium started after the hostilities of World War II, in 1946. In August 1945 he was still serving under Marshall Arthur Coningham
Arthur Coningham (RAF officer)
Air Marshal Sir Arthur "Mary" Coningham KCB, KBE, DSO, MC, DFC, AFC, RAF was a senior officer in the Royal Air Force. During the First World War, he was at Gallipoli with the New Zealand Expeditionary Force, transferred to the Royal Flying Corps, where he became a flying ace...

 in Paris. But, in April 1946 he writes a letter to his mother from the house of a Madame Duchateau at the fashionable address of Avenue Jeanne, 52 in Elsene, Brussels
Brussels
Brussels , officially the Brussels Region or Brussels-Capital Region , is the capital of Belgium and the de facto capital of the European Union...

, telling that he was just about to furnish his painter's studio.
This lady is said to have had a son killed during the War and asked Dobson to paint a portrait of her son, from a photograph. However, there is a doubt about the identity of the dead son, because in a letter to his mother dd. April 11.1946 Raeburn wrote : "…My first snag took place yesterday, however. Mr. Marshall, who's portrait I started when I was over before heard only yesterday morning that his son, who had been missing for a year was actually shot by the Germans last spring. His body has been identified. Mr. Marshall is extremely cut up at this definite news and won’t be able to sit for a week or two I fear. He is not a young man. First snag !! I wonder when the next one will crop up and what form it will take. …".

It is therefore more likely that the portrait of the dead ‘son’ which introduced Raeburn in Belgian High Society was the portrait of the son of Mr. Marshall and not of Madame Duchateau.

The portrait was such a success, that Raeburn was recommended as portrait painter to countess de Liedekerke, Madeleine Beckaert, who recommended him to many other Belgian aristocratic families. Raeburn became well befriended with some of these Belgian families, especially with the family of Baroness Cécile Van Houtte-de Stella, with the Carton de Tournai and with Princess Léontine de Ligne de Lambertye-Gerbéviller. He stayed extensive times at their castles and was invited to the wedding of Baron Van Houtte's daughter. He even arranged for his cousin Janette Dobson in 1955 to act as an ‘au pair’ to the family of H. Baron Carton de Tournai of Bonsecours
Bonsecours
Bonsecours is a commune in the Seine-Maritime department in the Haute-Normandie region in northern France.-Geography:A southern residential suburb of Rouen situated at the junction of the D6014, D6105 and the D95 roads...

, near Perluwez, Belgium.

In Brussels, he set his first studio up in April 1946 (see above) at 11, Barricadenplein. In a letter to his mother of 11 April of that year he wrote : "… Yesterday I organized my studio. What a beautiful light. I have had a store put in and have got an easel throne, chair, table on loan. …". Since the end of the War, Raeburn would come every year to Belgium for three or four months, to look for and to work at his commissions.

Later he moved his studio to the socially far less acceptable area of Sint-Joost-Ten-Noode (Brussels). But, as many of his customers refused to come to this ill-famed borough, Raeburn went to their homes and resided there for an extended period of time while painting the family portraits.

In 1974, while painting the portraits of Countess Lippens and of Monsieur Jadot, he felt ill and suddenly went back to Edinburgh. He never finished either portrait. After 1975, he only shortly visited Brussels on several occasions, and gave the impression of being very forgetful and confused at times. He suffered from arteriosclerosis
Arteriosclerosis
Arteriosclerosis refers to a stiffening of arteries.Arteriosclerosis is a general term describing any hardening of medium or large arteries It should not be confused with "arteriolosclerosis" or "atherosclerosis".Also known by the name "myoconditis" which is...

, which lead to anterograde amnesia
Anterograde amnesia
Anterograde amnesia is a loss of the ability to create new memories after the event that caused the amnesia, leading to a partial or complete inability to recall the recent past, while long-term memories from before the event remain intact. This is in contrast to retrograde amnesia, where memories...

 and finally to senile dementia.

Last years

Raeburn's last years were quite difficult. Because of his arteriosclerosis
Arteriosclerosis
Arteriosclerosis refers to a stiffening of arteries.Arteriosclerosis is a general term describing any hardening of medium or large arteries It should not be confused with "arteriolosclerosis" or "atherosclerosis".Also known by the name "myoconditis" which is...

, he was unable to care for himself. This became clear when his friend Margaret Doughty, née McKechnie visited the painter in his flat on Fettes Row. She found the place getting more and more uncared for indeed, and rather messy. The sad thing was that Raeburn was well aware of his failing mental health.

In 1977, his eyesight started to fade. In that very year, he started a watercolour portrait of Kirsten Doughty the daughter of his friend Margaret Doughty, née McKechnie. However, due to his fading eyesight, the portrait became a true disaster. Raeburn was well aware of this and promised Margaret a new portrait of her daughter. It took him two years to complete this work. Sadly, it turned out to be his last.
On January 31, 1979, Raeburn wrote to Margaret Doughty, née McKechnie, in an ailing handwriting: "My Dear Margaret, Do please forgive me for never having written to you to acknowledge receipt of your lovely letter with all the nice compliments for the portrait of Kersten. It was grand to know it was so well liked: and I thank you for your cheque for £ 52.50p. in payment thereof. I am beginning to find life is getting a bit too hectic for me at my age, and I shall have to pack-up soon. It is a tremendous job for me to face – The giving up of this flat and all my work. I think the portrait of Kersten will be one of the very last I shall paint. Thank you again for your lovely letter & cheque. I hope we meet sometime soon. Love to you both. Raeburn. PS. I shall take your cheque to my bank today.".

Around 1980, Raeburn's mental health deteriorated dramatically. Baroness Van Houtte reports that Raeburn would visit her unannounced, while thinking he had an appointment.

The last time she saw him, he looked quite bewildered. Around that time, Margaret Doughty, née McKechnie met him a last time, walking on the Edinburgh streets. During the conversation, Margaret realised he did not know who she was and that he had very much mentally declined.

Shortly after the completion of the portrait of Kirsten Doughty (1980), Raeburn left his flat on the border of Georgian Edinburgh for "The Elms", a nursing home outside the city centre, run by the Church of Scotland.

He stayed there for several years, until he moved in his last days to Grange Care, a private nursing home for the incapacitated elderly, at 8, Chalmers Crescent. There, he died on May 22, 1985 at 21.40 hours of a stroke (cerebrovascular accident).

His remains were cremated and his ashes were adjoined to the grave of his parents, Henry John Dobson and Jeanie Cowan in Mortonhall Cemetery, on the outskirts of Edinburgh.

Reaburn did not have any children. He left a testament, leaving his few goods mainly to Evelyn and some friends, while his house was sold to cover his debts and cremation. In hiw will he did not leave any notice about the future copyright of his paintings.

Character

Getting an accurate picture of Henry Raeburn Dobson's character is quite difficult, because there are hardly any written testimonies on his life. He never got a real formal artistic education. He was not an intellectual man, but a craftsman. He never advocated big theories on art. He wrote few letters. He hardly ever spoke about his private life, either to strangers, or to family.

He gave few interviews and was only mentioned in the newspapers a few times. Therefore, we have to rely on interviews with people who have known him a little better: close relatives, friends and clients.
Raeburn seems to have been a warm, friendly and cheerful man and was quite an outgoing person. He attended many official functions and private parties in high society (parties in the entourage of HRH Princess Margaret, of Princess de Ligne
House of Ligne
The House of Ligne is one of the oldest Belgian noble families, dating back to the eleventh century. It s name comes from the village in which it originated, between Ath and Tournai. The lords of Ligne belonged to the entourage of the Count of Hainaut at the time of the Crusades...

, of Baroness Van Houtte a.s.o.). He was very entertaining and always in good spirits. He was a well-liked houseguest. People began to know him as a public figure and with him, his art. The post-War years until the beginning of the 1970s were his most successful time. His reputation was established as one of the best portrait painters of Edinburgh by word of mouth and was asked to paint portraits of many members of high society.

Raeburn was an elegant man, well spoken and well educated; loved by the female sex. He indeed loved to paint pretty and elegant ladies, but did not care very much for the social background of his sitters while painting. Although he was some sort of a socialite. He seems to have preferred the companionship of women to the friendship with men. For children he was a true entertainer: by impersonating different characters and performing magical tricks, he would catch their attention during long sessions of portraiture.

His Scottish origins were essential to him. Abroad and in Scotland, he was proud to wear his kilt
Kilt
The kilt is a knee-length garment with pleats at the rear, originating in the traditional dress of men and boys in the Scottish Highlands of the 16th century. Since the 19th century it has become associated with the wider culture of Scotland in general, or with Celtic heritage even more broadly...

. and his typical chequered waistcoat, all year round.

He was not interested in money, but painted for the love of his art. Although he had many commissions and was regarded as Edinburgh's best portrait painter, he mostly lived from hand to mouth or from commission to commission. It must be stated that, while his brother Cowan had the benefits from the commercial talents of his wife, Phyllis Bowyer, Raeburn could rely on anybody to promote him or his talents. In addition to his quite casual lifestyle, Raeburn refused to have anything to do with the art-establishment in Edinburgh. Although he had been influenced by the Modern Movement, through his art teacher Ralph Hay, he refused to conform to the later emerging Modernist Movement, while the backbench politics of the Royal Scottish Academy made him rebel even more against this closed circle of painters.

Behind this seemingly ‘happy’ man, lay in fact a quite self-cantered character, who took notice of the needs of his surroundings to a rather limited degree. Although he was briefly married to Isabella Rae and had a companion in Evelyn Wight, he lived the life of a bachelor. He would leave Edinburgh for months, going abroad and leaving Evelyn behind. Although Evelyn and Raeburn had a very deep friendship for over 35 years, he never proposed to marry. It is said that one could see the sorrow in her eyes, because of this neglect.

Painting technique

Raeburn used often cheaper materials, which he bought at the art shop of John Mathieson and at Aitkin Dott Galleries (in Fredrick Street) in Edinburgh. His canvas consisted mostly of industrial prepared thin linen, with a thin layer of grounding (singled primed), prepared by "Winsor and Newton Ltd., London" or by "Robertson & Co. Ltd., London".

The canvasses were nailed onto the frames with small black head nails.
Raeburn used industrial prepared but stable paint (Winton), which has kept its original colour. He always used bright and lively colours and used light impastos to represent fabrics. He was a master in painting hands (the most difficult part of a portrait).

His varnish technique was far from good. It seems he varnished his paintings while they were still on the easel, instead of laying down. This made the varnish dripping down and be unevenly spread over the painting, resulting in areas of high reflection, followed by matt areas. However, the different patches in the reflection of the varnish also indicates that Raeburn did not only varnish his paintings vertically, but that in addition, he let his paintings dry for a too short while, before varnishing them. Because of the different drying times of oil paints, this meant that the varnish did not dry evenly (polymerisation). The varnish (Damart) seems in all paintings to be quite stable.

Most of the portraits are still in a good state, although most of the canvasses were not properly stretched onto their frames (2004–2009).

Work

The work of Raeburn Dobson stretches over a period of about 60 years. He tried to make the British capital his home.

However, Scotland was always closer to his heart. Eventually he would return to live and work in Edinburgh.
There, although he tried to ignore the modernist movement of his time, he went his own way and became one of the leading portrait painters in the Scottish capital.

His heyday were from the 1950 until early 1970. As a portrait painter, he was not only highly regarded by members of the aristocracy, but also by the clergy, scientists, writers, entertainers, physicians, the constabulary, and ordinary members of the general public.

His wartime experience brought him to Belgium, where he became ‘the’ portrait painter of an exclusive aristocratic circle. To his Belgian friends, he was the epitome of the Scotsman: friendly, elegant, well educated, and fun to be with and always wearing … a kilt!

He was very reserved and hardly ever spoke about his private life or about his paintings.

His work consisted for the major part of portraits. Like his father, he also painted some watercolours and genre paintings. However, the quality of these genre paintings (unlike with his father) never reached the same quality of his portraits and can be considered as rather by-products.

When Henry Raeburn came to Belgium in 1945, his art of portraiture was already relegated to the past, redeemed as "passé", as "boardroom painting" or as "commercial painting"; and himself redeemed as being a mere "society painter".

When all of this may be true, even so, Henry Raeburn left us with some astonishing portraits : the portraits of Baroness Cécile Van Houtte and of Monsieur André Pirmez, the portraits of Richard Durand Trotter and of Dr. James Charles Thomson and the portraits of Dr. Andrew Rae Gilchrist and of Kevin Connolly are fine examples of his post-war production.

While the colour scheme reflects hardly ever the character of his sitter, it does reflect the painter's influence by Modernism and the Colourists
Scottish Colourists
The Scottish Colourists were a group of painters from Scotland whose work was not very highly regarded when it was first exhibited in the 1920s and 1930s, but which in the late 20th Century came to have a formative influence on contemporary Scottish art....

. In many ways his portraits are very conservative, especially in the 1920s and 1930s. But with his post-war period, when he starts to use rougher brush strokes and brighter colours, Raeburn really tries to bridge the Old (Victorian tradition) with the New (the Colourist Movement).

Through his paintings one may also spot Raeburn's interest in the sitter. One may say he probably had more pleasure in painting pretty and elegant woman, like Baroness Van Houtte, Baroness Velge, Countess d'Oultremont, or Mrs. McHardy and the Lady with White Pearls. However, he also enjoyed painting men in uniform, especially Scottish uniforms or in men Clan dresses.

On the contrary, painting "head-to-waist" portraits (especially of boardroom executives) must have bored him terribly. These paintings seem to have been finished very quickly and - most probably - were a welcome addition to his daily bread. It seems that he paid more attention to the paintings of the aristocracy and to those of his own friends and family, than to the ordinary executive. It has to be said that Dobson had great trouble to put an element of fascination in these portraits.

Although Raeburn did not seem to have had the means to lead the high-life, he certainly did everything to approach himself as close to it as possible. In London this meant moving around in fashionable places in order to be amongst potential clientele. Even in Brussels the painter would move around in the upper classes. But, there he got himself a studio in a not so well-to-do are of the Belgian capital, at the Place des Barricades, above a ‘bistro’.

When the jet-set did not want to take their way to the painter's studio, Raeburn had no reluctance to go and stay at the private homes and castles of his clients. He stayed an extensive time at Baron Velge's residence, with Mrs. Jadot, with Viscount Le Hardÿ de Beaulieu, with Baron Etienne della Faille d'Huysse and in Scotland with the Marquess of Huntly. And with many more sitters.

Raeburn did not get on very well with the art-establishment in Edinburgh. Although influenced by the ‘Colourists’, he refused to conform to the Modernist movement, while the politics of the Royal Academy made him rebel even more against this closed circle. Although he would stay faithful to traditional portraiture, he could not ignore this ‘Colourist’ Movement. One may note this Modernist influence of the ‘Colourists’ in his very colourful palette and contrasting colours. He must have been well informed about the philosophy and the work of this movement through a very good female friend in these circles.

His portraits are always faithful representations of the sitters. It is astonishing that after so many years, many of the portraits still resemble the sitters. But, sometimes he embellishes the sitter by adding some mannerist hands. Fascinated by hands (which is the most difficult part of a portrait ), he always would included some hand(s) into a portrait (when possible). But, generally they do not represent the hands of the sitter. They are - especially with woman portraits - a mannerist way to add more grace and elegance to the sitter. Baroness Van Houtte's and Baroness Velge's hands are indeed stockier than the hands Raeburn painted, while the position of the hand of Countess de Liedekerke is anatomically quite impossible, as are the hands of Countess d'Oultremont. One notices the elongated fingers in the portraits of Baroness Van Houtte, Countess d'Oultremont and Countess de Liedekerke.

While Raeburn's production is amazing, not all of his paintings are of the same quality. He had great trouble with painting group portraits and the perspectives are not always correct. This may well be because Raeburn was never trained academically. But, in the end, Raeburn Dobson remains one of Edinburgh's best portrait painters of the middle of the Twentieth Century.

Index of portraits

Photographs of these portraits are to be found in the archives of the National Portrait Gallery, London.
1. Dated and verified Portraits of which the Sitters are known.
Portrait of Sir Richard Arman Gregory (1864-1952), scientist, Oil on Canvas, 76.8 cm x 63.9 cm, Signed 'Raeburn Dobson', dated on the reverse '1929'.
Portrait of Christiane Leslie, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1930s. The reverse mentions that the painting was 91.44 cm x 71.12 cm and was Oil on Canvas.
Portrait of D. Brodie McDonald  in Kilt, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca.1930-1932.
Portrait of Cpt. J. McK-McKernell-Brown, "An Gaidheal Gorm", Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1933.
Portrait of Lt.-Col. W.B.J. Osbaldeston-Mitford, in Gordon Highlander dress, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1934
Portrait of Robert Walpole, 9th Baron Walpole and 7th Lord Walpole of Wolterton (1913-1989), son of Horatio Spencer Walpole (1881-1918), Oil on Canvas, 100 cm x 75 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1935-1936.
Portrait of the Hon. Pamela Walpole (1908-1986), M.B.E., daughter of Horatio Spencer Walpole (1881-1918), 7th and 9th baron Walpole, Oil on Canvas, 100 cm x 75 cm, Signed 'H. Raeburn Dobson', ca 1935-1936
Portrait of the young Douglas Morpeth (°1924), aged 12, in the Kilt of the MacKie Clan, Oil on Canvas, 160 cm x 100 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson, ca. 1936
Portrait of Lieutenant General Air Vice Marshal His Highness Maharaja Umaid Singh
Umaid Singh
Umaid Singh was Maharaja of Jodhpur from 1918 to his death. The second son of Maharaja Sir Sardar Singh, he succeeded his elder brother Maharaja Sir Sumair Singh upon his death in 1918; in 1922 he served as the ADC to the Prince of Wales...

 (1903-1947) (full), Oil on Canvas, lifesize, ca. 1937.Coll.of the Umaid Bhawan Palace, Jodhpur, India.
Portrait of the young Douglas Morpeth (°1924) aged 12, in the uniform of Hillsborough Prep School, Oil on Canvas, 97 cm x 76.5 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1937.
Portrait of Cameron Morpeth (°1927), aged 10, Oil on canvas, 127 cm x 80.2 cm, Signed H Raeburn Dobson, ca. 1937.
Portrait of D.B. McDonald, Esq., Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1937.
Portrait of Alan Sutherland (°1931) as a Loretto Nipper, Oil on Canvas, 76.2 cm x 63.5 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1940.
Portrait of Louisa Rankin Morpeth, née Dobson (c.1896), sister of Henry Raeburn, Oil on Canvas, 44.7 cm x 34.5 cm, ca. before 1940.
Portrait of David Williams (1895-1973), comedian, Oil on Canvas, 61 cm x 50.6 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1940.
Portrait of Lady Baird, Oil on Canvas, 76.2 cm x 63.5 cm, Signed 'H. Raeburn Dobson', ca 1940.
Portrait of Stroma Sutherland, Oil on Canvas, 76.2 cm x 63.5 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1940.
Portrait of an A.R.P. Warden from Kensington, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1940.
Portrait of Janette Dobson (°1937), Oil on Canvas, 61 cm x 51 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1941-1942.
Portrait of William Sharpe Dobson III (°1934), Oil on Canvas, 61 cm x 51 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1942
Portrait of 7/Lt. Don Irvindale, "Our Catering Type", Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1945.
Portrait of Louisa Rankin Morpeth, née Dobson (°1896), sister of Henry Raeburn, Oil on Canvas, 44.7 cm x 34.5 cm, ca. 1946.
Portrait of Andrew Blackwood Dobson (°1941), Oil on Canvas, 61 cm x 51 cm., Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca 1946-1947.
Portrait of Baron Henry Carton de Tournai (1878-1969), Oïl on Canevas, 80 cm x 65 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca.1946-1947.
Portrait of Douglas Charles Lindsey Gordon (°1908), 12th Marquess of Huntly and Premier Marquess of Scotland in full highland dress, Oil on Canvas, 110.5 cm x 85.05 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1946-1947
Portrait of Baroness Magdeleine Carton de Tournai (1916-2001), sister of Baron Michel Carton de Tournai, Oil on Canvas, 80 cm x 65 cm, signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca.1948-1949.
Portrait of Baron Jean Van Houtte
Jean Van Houtte
Jean Marie Joseph, Baron Van Houtte was a Belgian politician.Born in Ghent, van Houtte held a doctorate in law and lectured at Ghent University and the University of Liège...

 (1907-1991), Prime Minister of Belgium, Finance Minister, President of Sabena Airlines, Oil on Canvas, 110 cm x 80 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca.1949.
Portrait of Mr. Cameron Morpeth (°1927), Oil on Canvas, 59.6 cm x 49.5 cm, Signed H Raeburn Dobson, ca.1949.
Portrait of Dr. James Charles Thomson (1887-1960), Oil on Canvas, 136 cm x 99 cm, signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1949-1950.
Portrait of Lady Anne Morpeth (°1928), née Bell, wife of Sir Douglas Morpeth, Oil on Canvas, 51 cm x 63 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1950.
Portrait of Robert Spottiswoode Morpeth (1894-1979), father of Sir Douglas Morpeth, Oil on Canvas, 90 cm x 70 cm, Signed 'Raeburn Dobson', ca 1950.
Portrait of Baroness Cécile Van Houtte (°1908), née de Stella, Oil on Canvas, 110 cm x 80 cm, signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1953.
Portrait of the Bishop of Bath and Wells
Bishop of Bath and Wells
The Bishop of Bath and Wells heads the Church of England Diocese of Bath and Wells in the Province of Canterbury in England.The present diocese covers the vast majority of the county of Somerset and a small area of Dorset. The Episcopal seat is located in the Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew in...

, Bishop Harold William Bradfield
Harold William Bradfield
Harold William Bradfield was an Anglican clergyman who served as Bishop of Bath and Wells from 1946 to 1960.He was educated at Alleyn's School and King's College London. Ordained in 1922, he served as Bishop of Bath and Wells from 1946-1960.-References:...

 (Bishop 1946-1960), Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1954. There are two inscriptions on the back: Along middle stretcher, in ink: "The Rt Rev.The Lord Bishop of Bath & Wells Original Painting by H Raeburn Dobson. R.C.A.September 1954. Edinburgh". On top stretcher, right-hand side, in pencil: "H Raeburn Dobson Liberal Club Edinburgh".
Portrait of Count Charles de Liedekerke (1897-1965), Oil on Canvas, 92 cm x 70 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', dated 1954.
Portrait of Countess Madeleine de Liedekerke (1903-1980), née Baroness Bekaert, Oil on Canvas, 60 cm x 50 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca.1954-1955
First version of the Portrait of Count Charles-Emile Antoine d'Oultremont (°1915), Oil on Canvas, 87 cm x 64 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1955.
Second version of the Portrait of Count Charles-Emile Antoine d'Oultremont (°1915), Oil on Canvas, 80 cm x 64 cm, not signed, ca. 1955.
Portrait of Countess Béatrice d'Oultremont, née Baroness van der Straten Waillet (°1920), Oil on Canvas, 80 cm x 64 cm, Signed "H Raeburn Dobson', ca 1955.
Portrait of Kevin Connolly of Edinburgh, Oil on Canvas, 110 cm x 80 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1955-1960.
Second version of the portrait of Kevin Connolly of Edinburgh, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1955-1960.
Portrait of Mrs. Margaret Doughty (°1947), née McKechnie, Oil on Canvas, 61 cm x 51 cm, signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1956.
Portrait of Stewart McKechnie (°1944) as a Watson's Boy, Oil on Canvas, 61 cm x 51 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1956.
Portrait of a Belgian Business Man, Oil on Canvas, measurements unknown, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1956.
Portrait of Baron Jean-Charles Velge (°1930), Oil on Canvas, 60 cm x 50 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1956-1957
Portrait of a Lady with White Pearls (sitter unknown), Oil on Canvas, 76.2 cm x 60.96 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca 1955.
Portrait of Dr. Sir Stanley Davidson, M.D., (1894-1981), Haematologist, President of the Royal College of Physicians and of the Royal Infirmary, Oil on Canvas, 89 cm x 69 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson, 1957
Portrait of Count Etienne della Faille d'Huysse (°1892), Oil on Canvas, 90 cm x 70 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1957.
Portrait of Baroness Elisabeth Massange de Collombs, née della Faille d'Huysse (°1935), Oil on Canvas, 49 cm x 39 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1957-1958.
Portrait of Mrs. Thérèse De Smet, née Van Houtte (°1935), daughter of Baron and Baroness Jean Van Houtte, Oil on Canvas, 68 cm x 60 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1958.
Portrait of Mrs. Anne-Elisabeth De Bandt (°1938), née Van Houtte,daughter of Baron and Baroness Jean Van Houtte, Oil on Canvas,68 cm x 60 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca.1958.
Portrait of Viscount Jean-Pierre Le Hardÿ de Beaulieu (°1926) and his family, Oil on Canvas, 78 cm x 62 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson, ca. 1959.
Portrait of Viscount Jean le Hardÿ de Beaulieu (°1890), father of Viscount Jean-Pierre Le Hardÿ de Beaulieu, Oil on Canvas, 60 cm x 50 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1959.
Portrait of Viscount Philippe Le Hardy de Beaulieu
Philippe Le Hardy de Beaulieu
Philippe Le Hardy de Beaulieu was a Belgian Olympic fencer. He won a bronze medal at the 1906 and 1912 Summer Olympics.-References:...

 (°1921), Oil on Canvas, 60 cm x 50 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca 1959.
Portrait of Princess Albert-Eduard de Ligne, née de Lambertye, (Gerbevillers, France), Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1959-1960.
Portrait of Dr. Andrew Rae Gilchrist, M.D., (°1899), Cardiologist, President of the Royal College of Physicians and of the Royal Infirmary in Edinburgh, Oil on Canvas, 89 cm x 69 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1960.
Second (copy by Raeburn himself of the) Portrait of the Bishop of Bath and Wells
Bishop of Bath and Wells
The Bishop of Bath and Wells heads the Church of England Diocese of Bath and Wells in the Province of Canterbury in England.The present diocese covers the vast majority of the county of Somerset and a small area of Dorset. The Episcopal seat is located in the Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew in...

, Bishop Harold William Bradfield
Harold William Bradfield
Harold William Bradfield was an Anglican clergyman who served as Bishop of Bath and Wells from 1946 to 1960.He was educated at Alleyn's School and King's College London. Ordained in 1922, he served as Bishop of Bath and Wells from 1946-1960.-References:...

 (Bishop 1946-1960), Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1960-61.
Portrait of Count Wenceslas de 't Serclaes (°1924), Oil on Canvas,80 cm x 70 cm, Signed H Raeburn Dobson, ca. 1960-1965.
Portrait of Miss Jean C. Milligan, Co-Founder and Chairwoman of the Royal Scottish Country Dance Society
Royal Scottish Country Dance Society
The Royal Scottish Country Dance Society , was founded in 1923 as the Scottish Country Dance Society by Jean Milligan and Ysobel Stewart of Fasnacloich, who wanted to preserve country dancing as performed in Scotland, country dancing having fallen into disuse after the influx of continental...

, Oil on Canvas, 89.5 cm x 69 cm, ca.1961.
Portrait of Mr. André Pirmez, Esq. (°1922), son of Baron Herman Pirmez and Baroness Emilie del Marmol, Oil on Canvas, 76 cm x 63.5 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca.1962-1965.
Portrait of Baroness Marie-Louise Velge, née Van Houtte, Oil on Canvas, 60 cm x 50 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1963
Portrait of Mr. Donald Fortune, Oil on Canvas, 76.2 cm x 63.5 cm,signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1963.
Portrait of Mrs. Fortune, mother of Donald Fortune, Oil on 76.2 cm x 63.5 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1963.
Portrait of Mr. McHardy(°1920), Oil on Canvas, 107 cm x 87 cm, Signed ' H Raeburn Dobson, 1964.
Portrait of Mrs. Charlie McHardy (°1928), Oil on Canvas, 108 cm x 89 cm,Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1964.
Portrait of Sir John Dutton Clerk, 10th Baronet and Lady Clerk of Penicuik, Oil on Canvas, 111 cm x 86.4 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1965.
Second version of the portrait of Sir John Dutton (10th Bt) and Lady Clerk of Penicuik, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1965.
Portrait of Madame Jacqueline Pirmez, née Bekaert, Oil on Canvas, 76 cm x 63.5 cm, ca. 1965
Portrait of Madame Isabelle Jadot (°1928), née Velge, Oil on Canvas, 70 cm x 55 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1965.
Portrait of Helen Finlayson (°1944), née McKechnie, Oil on Canvas, 50.5 cm x 61 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca.1965.
Portrait of Ian Morpeth (°1953) as a Fettes College Boy, son of Sir Douglas Morpeth, Oil on Canvas, 51 cm x 40.5 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1969-1970.
Portrait of Christophe Velge (°1963), as child, son of Baron Jean-Jacques Velge,Oil on Canvas, 60 cm x 50 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson, 1965.
Portrait of Mr. and Mrs. Graham Watson and family, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1966. (This Graham Watson has NOTHING to do with the actual English LibDem MEP !)
Portrait of Charles Robert Dobson Morpeth (°1960), as child, son of Cameron Morpeth, Oil on Canvas, 91.5 cm x 87.6 cm, Signed H Raeburn Dobson, ca. 1970.
Portrait of Robin Law] Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1970.
Portrait of the Lord Provost of Edinburg Sir Herbert Brechin, Oil on Canvas, measurements unknown, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson, 1971.
Group Portrait of the Children Morpeth, Oil on Canvas, 76 cm x 91.5 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1972.
Portrait of Dr. Anne Cameron Robbins, M.D., née Gauld (°1951), daughter of Dr. John Gauld, M.D., Oil on Canvas, 63 cm x 76 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', February 1972
Unfinished Portrait of Mr. Philippe Jadot (°1929), Oil on Canvas, 100 cm x 76 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', ca. 1974.
Portrait of R.A. Smith, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson', 1974.
Portrait of Mrs. Patricia Roxburgh, née Wilson (°1925), Canvas on Oil,48.2 cm x 38.1 cm, Signed H Raeburn Dobson, ca. 1975
Portrait of Mr. Carmichael, Canvas on Oil, Signed H Raeburn Dobson, 1976.
Portrait of Michael Barker, Oil on Canvas, 60 cm x 70 cm, Signed H Raeburn Dobson, 1976.


2. Verified Portraits which are not dated but of which the Sitters are known.
Portrait of David Cowan Dobson
Cowan Dobson
David Cowan Dobson , referred to as 'Cowan' Dobson ARBA , RBA , was a leading Scottish portrait artist who mainly worked in London...

, Raeburn's brother, Oil on Canvas, 61 cm x 51 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Evelyn Agnes Mark Wight (1900-1985), Raeburn's lifetime companion, Oil on Canvas, 76 cm x 64 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Jeannie Charlotte Hannah Cowan, mother of Raeburn, Oil on Canvas, measurements unknown, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Mrs. Wishart, Edinburgh, Oil on Canvas, 76.2 cm x 63.5 cm; Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson' The identity of this Mrs. Wishart is not known. Her name was written on the reverse of a photograph of her portrait.
Portrait of Mrs. Richardson, Oil on Canvas, measurements unknown, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Alasdair Alpin MacGregor (1899-1970), Scottish photographer and writer, Oil on Canvas 76.20 x 63.50 cm, 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Richard Durand Trotter in suit, Oil on Canvas, 127 cm x 101.5 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'.
Portrait of Richard Durand Trotter in military uniform, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Dr. D. Chambers of the Murray Royal Hospital in Perth
Perth, Scotland
Perth is a town and former city and royal burgh in central Scotland. Located on the banks of the River Tay, it is the administrative centre of Perth and Kinross council area and the historic county town of Perthshire...

, Scotland, Oil on Canvas, Signed H Raeburn Dobson
Portrait of Ian McGregor Bazalgette (head to waist), Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portraitof Ian McGregor Bazalgette (full), in Kilt, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson
Portrait of Irene McGregor, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of J. Riley Jones, Esq., Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of the Chief Constable of the Lothians and Peebles William Merrilees
William Merrilees
William Merrilees OBE KPM was Chief Constable of the Lothians and Peebles Constabulary from 1950 to 1968.Willie Merrilees was Scotland’s best known policeman in his lifetime thanks to a flamboyant career involving disguise, celebrated court cases and tireless charity and welfare work...

 in full Highlander Dress, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Miss Jean Gray, Oil on Canvas,Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson
Portrait of Mrs. Alison Hunter, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Miss Sight, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Mrs. Linscke Gumley, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Mrs. Maude Belgarde of Dublin, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Mrs. McGregor, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Sir Guy Patrick Gilbert Crofton, Bt., Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Sir John Ure Primrose, 3. Baronnet of Burnbrae (1908-1985), Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Sir William Watson, Oil on Canvas, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Rothesay Herald
Rothesay Herald
Rothesay Herald of Arms in Ordinary is a current Scottish herald of arms in Ordinary of the Court of the Lord Lyon.The office was created after 1398 when the dukedom of Rothesay was conferred on David, eldest son of King Robert III, on 28 April 1398...

 Lieutenant Colonel Harold Andrew Balvaird Lawson (Herald 1939-1981, +1985), Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Mr. William Alford of New-York, U.S.A., Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Willy Dugaugier, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of the Ballantyne Girls of Dunnesleithan (Ireland), Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of 'Mattie', Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Professor Gordon Donaldson
Gordon Donaldson
Gordon Donaldson CBE, FRHistS, FBA was a Scottish historian.Born in Edinburgh of Shetlander descent, Donaldson attended the Royal High School of Edinburgh, before being awarded a scholarship to study at the University of Edinburgh. He also supplemented his income by undertaking some tutoring...

 (1913-1993) in Departmental Robes (head to waist), Scottish Historian, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson',
Portrait of King George VII (after a photograph), Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Admiral Sir Michael Denny, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson'
Portrait of Ian Stewart Robertson 3/4 length seated, wearing a dress kilt and jacket., Oil on Canvas, 110 cm x 85 cm, signed 'H. Raeburn Dobson'


3. Verified Portraits which are not identified and cannot be dated
twelve portraits (mostly) of (business) men (head to waist) are not identified and cannot be dated; of which a portrait (head to waist) of an oriental man and a man holding a gun.
three portraits woman (head to waist) are not identified and cannot be dated.
three portraits of children are not identified and cannot be dated; of which the "Portrait of a boy in a Navy Blue Sweater"(yellow background), Oil on Canvas, 60.96 cm x 50.8 cm, Signed 'H Raeburn Dobson


The boys in question are Malcolm (b.1940), Nigel (1941-1947) and Douglas (b.1944) Walker. The portraits were painted in Spring 1947 at a house in Pembroke Mews (or Walk), Kensington High Street. They remain in private hands

4.Known Portraits which have not been verified yet.
Portrait of Countess Lippens (Knokke, Belgium).
Portrait of Mrs. Albert de Radzitsky (Brussels, Belgium).
Portrait (unfinished) of Mrs. Joanna Reid (Nan), (Edinburgh, Scotland).
Portrait of Sir Ian Colquhoun of Luss (Cumtradden House, Luss, Alexandria, Scotland)
Portrait of Baron Braun (Ghent, Belgium)
Portrait of Countess Boël (Belgium)
Portrait of Count Yves du Monceau (Belgium)
Portrait of Countess de Prêt (Belgium)

External links

Dr. Eric Cabris, Ph.D. A Forgotten Edinburgh Painter : A Glimpse into the Life and Work of HENRY RAEBURN DOBSON (1901-1985), London-Brussels-Berlin, 2009.
The source of this article is wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.  The text of this article is licensed under the GFDL.
 
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