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Charles Haslewood Shannon RA [2] (26 April 1863 – 18 March 1937) was an English artist best known for his portraits. [3] His works featured in several major European collections, including London's National Portrait Gallery .
Charles Haslewood Shannon (1863–1937) Description: British painter, illustrator, printmaker, lithographer and visual artist: Date of birth/death: 26 April 1863 :
Charles Shannon may refer to: Charles Shannon West (1829–1885), Texas politician; Charles Haslewood Shannon (1865–1937), English artist; Charles Shannon (artist) (1914–1996), American artist; Charles Shannon (ice hockey) (1916–1974), American ice hockey player; C. Shannon Mallory (1936–2018), Anglican bishop; Charles E. Shannon (1943 ...
Charles Haslewood Shannon and Ricketts by George Charles Beresford. In 1882 Ricketts entered the City and Guilds Technical Art School in Kennington, London, where he was apprenticed to Charles Roberts, a prominent wood-engraver.
Charles Ricketts and Charles Haslewood Shannon were the first in modern times to cut the blocks of their own designs or, more to the point, create their designs by the process of engraving them. The foundation of the Society built on the development of this approach by a later generation of artists and in the Modernist era.
Charles Haslewood Shannon (1863–1937), English painter and lithographer; Shao Mi (邵彌, c. 1592–1642), Chinese painter, calligrapher and poet; Harold Shapinsky (1925–2004), American painter; Tōshūsai Sharaku (東洲斎写楽, 1794–1795), Japanese ukiyo-e print designer; Sylvester Shchedrin (1791–1830), Russian painter
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The building contained apartments and artists' workshops. Among the artists who had studios in the building in the early decades of the 20th century were Charles Ricketts, Charles Haslewood Shannon, Glyn Philpot, Vivian Forbes, James Pryde, and Frederick Cayley Robinson, who are commemorated on a blue plaque on the building. [2]