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==Further reading==
==Further reading==
''The life  and work of Henry Scott Tuke 1858–1929'' by [[Emmanuel Cooper]]. [[GMP publications]], 1988. Paperback edition by Éditions Aubrey Walker, 1997. ISBN 0-85449-068-X.
''The life  and work of Henry Scott Tuke 1858–1929'' by [[Emmanuel Cooper]]. [[GMP publications]], 1988. Paperback edition by Éditions Aubrey Walker, 1997. ISBN 0-85449-068-X.
==Gallery==
<gallery>
File:Henry Scott Tuke - A Holiday, 1921.jpg
File:Tuke, Henry Scott (1858–1929) - 1922 - Lovers of the sun (Midsummer Morning).jpg
File:Tuke, Henry Scott (1858–1929), "August Blue," 1893.jpg
File:Tuke, Henry Scott (1858–1929), Ruby, gold and malachite, 1902.jpg
File:Henry Scott Tuke - T. E. Lawrence as a cadet at Newporth Beach, near Falmouth.jpg
File:Tuke - Frank Hird - a comission for Lord Ronald Gower - colored chalks (29 x 24 cm.), 1894.jpg
File:Henry Scott Tuke - A full-rigged three-master making ready to sail.jpg
</gallery>


[[Category:Painters]]
[[Category:Painters]]

Revision as of 10:42, 6 May 2013

Tuke in 1920

Henry scott Tuke (1858–1929) was a painter, associated with the Newlyn School. His paintings are mainly in an impressionistic style, and many of them depict nude young men on the beach or in boats.

Tuke was born in York, but the family moved to Falmouth in 1859. Tuke attended a Quaker school in Weston-super-Mare and then studied at the Slade School of Art and in Paris. In 1883 he moved to Newlyn, joining an artists' colony, but in 1885 he moved to Swanpool near Falmouth where he converted a fishing boat into a floating studio and living quarters.

Charles Kains Jackson dedicated a homoerotic sonnet to Tuke.

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Further reading

The life and work of Henry Scott Tuke 1858–1929 by Emmanuel Cooper. GMP publications, 1988. Paperback edition by Éditions Aubrey Walker, 1997. ISBN 0-85449-068-X.