George James Coates was born on 9 August 1869 at Emerald Hill, Melbourne, Australia. He was the son of John Coates, bookbinder, and his Irish-born wife Elizabeth Irwin. He attended St James’s Grammar School and at 15 was apprenticed to the stained-glass firm, Ferguson and Urie. He first studied art under W Dellit at the [...]
George James Coates was born on 9 August 1869 at Emerald Hill, Melbourne, Australia. He was the son of John Coates, bookbinder, and his Irish-born wife Elizabeth Irwin. He attended St James’s Grammar School and at 15 was apprenticed to the stained-glass firm, Ferguson and Urie. He first studied art under W Dellit at the North Melbourne School of Design, before attending evening drawing classes under Frederick McCubbin at the National Gallery School. He quickly became one of the school’s best draughtsmen. His father died when George was eight years old and unhappy at home, he shared various studios in the city. Coates ran a drawing class in his Swanston Street studio where the students included Max Meldrum, Norman and Percy Lindsay, and George Bell. In 1895-96 Coates studied painting under Lindsay Bernard Hall, acquiring both respect for the painter’s craft and the approach of the Munich School – qualities that formed the basis for his later development. He won a travelling scholarship in 1896 and went to London next year, before moving to Paris where he studied under Jean-Paul Laurens at the Académie Julian. In Paris, Coates renewed his acquaintance with a fellow art student, Dora Meeson (1869-1955), who arrived in 1898. She was born on 7 August 1869 at Hawthorn, Melbourne, daughter of John Thomas Meeson, schoolmaster, later barrister and his wife Amelia Kipling. She grew up in New Zealand. A student at the Melbourne National Gallery School and later the Slade, Dora studied in Paris under Benjamin Constant and Laurens. The couple were engaged in France, but could not afford to marry until 23 June 1903, some three years after their move to London. Coates and Meeson established themselves in Chelsea, where they became members of an extensive circle of Australian expatriate artists. To earn money, they contributed black and white illustrations to Dr H S Williams’ Historians’ History of the World and the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Coates had exhibited at the Old Salon in Paris in 1898 and continued to show there and at the Royal Academy. Recognition did not come until after 1910, with an honourable mention at the Old Salon, prominent public notice at the 1912 Royal Academy exhibition and success at the 1913 New Salon, when Coates was elected ARA (and RA in 1927). Numerous commissions followed and soon established him as one of London’s leading portrait painters. He was a member of the Chelsea Arts Club, the International Society of Sculptors, Painters and Gravers and the Royal Society of Portrait Painters. Meeson had the distinction of being the first Australian woman artist elected a member of the Royal Institute of Oil Painters. Despite his physical prowess, Coates lacked a strong constitution; when Meeson visited Australia alone in 1913 to accompany an exhibition, his health collapsed and she had to return to nurse him in Italy. In 1915 he enlisted in the Territorial Royal Army Medical Corps and served as an orderly at the 3rd London General Hospital, attaining the rank of sergeant. He was discharged in 1919 as physically unfit. While never an official war artist, he produced many portrait commissions for the Australian War Memorial. These included portraits of Great War heroes and a large group portrait of Major-General Sir William Bridges and his staff in Egypt – on which Coates and Meeson worked after returning to Australia in 1921-22. Coates also painted portraits of Canadian war heroes. Neither artist responded to developments in art after Impressionism and their work remained defiantly representational. Primarily a portrait painter, Coates was temperamentally disinclined to challenge accepted assumptions about art, despite his admiration for Whistler, Dégas and Puvis de Chavannes. His realism emphasised a harmonious range of low tones and his approach was painstaking. His best portraits were intimate such his Arthur Walker and his Brother Harold, (1912) which reveal a sensitive response to character. Meeson is best known for her many fine impressions of the River Thames, a number of which were acquired after 1945 by the Port of London Authority. Coates died suddenly of a stroke in London on 27 July 1930. A memorial exhibition of his work took place in May 1931 at the New Burlington Galleries opened by Lord Birdwood. His wife continued an active artistic career until her death in London on 24 March 1955. The two were buried together in Rye Cemetery.

