Jump to content

Lord Ronald Gower: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Line 23: Line 23:
==External links==
==External links==
*[http://www.whistler.arts.gla.ac.uk/correspondence/biog/display/?bid=Gowe_R Biography at Centre for Whistler Studies]
*[http://www.whistler.arts.gla.ac.uk/correspondence/biog/display/?bid=Gowe_R Biography at Centre for Whistler Studies]
*[http://andrejkoymasky.com/liv/fam/biog2/gowe1.html Website suggesting link to Oscar Wilde]
*[http://www.newlifeortho.com/ Website suggesting link to Oscar Wilde]


{{start box}}
{{start box}}

Revision as of 09:39, 2 October 2009

Portrait of Lord Ronald Gower by Henry Scott Tuke, 1897

Lord Ronald Charles Sutherland-Leveson-Gower (2 August 18459 March 1916) was a British aristocrat, Liberal politician, sculptor and writer.

Biography

The youngest son of the 2nd Duke of Sutherland and the former Lady Harriet Howard, daughter of the 6th Earl of Carlisle, he was educated at Eton and at Trinity College, Cambridge.

He was a Liberal Member of Parliament for Sutherland from 1867-1874, and was succeeded as MP by his nephew Cromartie, Marquess of Stafford (the elder surviving son of his eldest brother the 3rd Duke of Sutherland). He was a Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery, and of the Birthplace and Shakespeare Memorial Building at Stratford-on-Avon.

Creative work

Gower's statue of Hamlet in Stratford upon Avon

A sculptor, he also published a number of works on the fine arts. His most important sculpture was the statue of Shakespeare and four of his principal characters, erected in Stratford-upon-Avon. He also created a sculpture depicting Marie Antoinette on her way to the scaffold and another of a member of the Old Guard at Waterloo.

He also wrote biographies of Marie Antoinette and Joan of Arc, and a history of the Tower of London.[1]

Personal life

He never married, and was well known among the homosexual community of the time. Oscar Wilde's story The Portrait of Mr W.H. has been interpreted as a comment on Gower's social circle, and Gower is generally identified as the model for Lord Henry Wotton in The Picture of Dorian Gray.[2] In 1879 hints of his homosexual liaisons published in the journal Man of the World led Gower to sue the paper, but later in the year the Prince of Wales sent him a letter accusing him of being "a member of an association for unnatural practices", to which Gower wrote an angry reply.[2] John Addington Symonds, who stayed with him once, stated that Gower "saturates ones spirit in Urningthum [homosexuality] of the rankest most diabolical kind".[2]

Gower's most notable lover was the journalist Frank Hird, a relationship that lasted to the end of his life. Gower adopted Hird as his son, leading Wilde to remark on one occasion, "Frank may be seen, but not Hird."[3]

Notes

  1. ^ New York Times Obituary, 1916
  2. ^ a b c David Getsy, Sculpture and the Pursuit of a Modern Ideal in Britain, C. 1880-1930, Asgate, London, 2004, p.64.
  3. ^ Hyde, H. Montgomery (1970), The Love That Dared not Speak its Name, Little, Brown, p. 156
Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by Member for Sutherland
1867–1874
Succeeded by