James Docharty
Deceased Person
1829 – 1878
Who was James Docharty?
James Docharty, a Scottish landscape painter, was born at Bonhill, near Dumbarton, in 1829. He first worked for his father as a designer of calico fabric. He did not turn to art till 1862. His works appeared at the Edinburgh Academy, the Glasgow Institution, and the Royal Academy. In 1876 failing health caused him to visit the Continent and the East. He did some promising sketches in Egypt in 1876. He was elected an Associate of the Royal Scottish Academy in 1877. He died from pulmonary illness in Glasgow in 1878. Amongst his best works are:
The Haunt of the Red Deer. 1869.
The Head of Loch Lomond. 1873.
Glencoe. 1874.
The River Achray. 1876.
A Good Fishing Day. 1877.
A Salmon Stream. 1878.
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