Epithet: painter
British Library Archives and Manuscripts Catalogue : Person : Description : ark:/81055/vdc_100000000818.0x00024a
Joseph Farquharson was born in Edinburgh on 4 May 1846. He started painting as a boy and was taught art by the Scottish landscape painter Peter Graham R.A. (1836-1921), a family friend. In 1862 or thereabouts he entered the Board of Manufacturers School in Edinburgh, and later, in 1880 he studied in Paris under Carolus Duran (1838-1917). Between 1885 and 1893 he made a number of visits to Egypt and these influenced his work which included The Egyptian and On the banks of the Nile outside Cairo . Farquharson's first Royal Academy exhibit was Day's dying glow (1873). His snow scenes were famed and he was said to have an understanding of both people and landscape. He painted snow and winter, sandy atmospheres, North African bazaars, and the Scottish Highlands. He is represented at the Tate, the National Gallery of Scotland, Scottish National Portrait Gallery, and in Aberdeen, Bristol, Manchester, and elsewhere in Britain. Joseph Farquharson R. A. died at Finzean, Aberdeenshire, on 15 April 1935.
From the guide to the Letters of Joseph Farquharson R.A. (1846-1935), [ca. 1880-1930], (Edinburgh University Library)