Difference between revisions of "Frederick Gush"
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{{Infobox rai-fellow | {{Infobox rai-fellow | ||
| first_name = Frederick | | first_name = Frederick | ||
Latest revision as of 08:26, 22 January 2021
| Frederick Gush | |||
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| Born | 1817 | ||
| Died | 1870 | ||
| Residence | 23 Newman Street | ||
| Occupation |
artist photographer | ||
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Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
landlord of 23 Newman Street
Sep. 1852 - [July] 1859 23 Newman Street, Oxford Street
One room, second floor rear, at £26 p.a. Moved to first floor front room, £36 p.a.
a' respectable artist', brother of the more famous William
Notes From Elsewhere
Gush, Frederick Aaron
Born in Finsbury 1817.
Christened May 25 1817 in Finsbury.
Md Eliza Susanna (1823 - 1883).
STUDIO: 179 Regent Street, Westminster 1858 - 1859. Succeeded by Gush & Ferguson. Court Circular advert August 6 1859; Times advert November 29 1859.
Miniature painter 23 Newman Street, Oxford Street, Westminster 1847 - 1852.
1861: photographer living at 14 Stamford Villas, Fulham. Also artist.
Exhibited portraits at RA 1847 - 1866.
Died in Hendon 1870.
LITERATURE: Foskett
Frederick Aaron, launched his new career as a professional photographer. His first business address in 1860 was in Regent Street, London - a ‘must have’ address for anyone setting up a photographic studio at this time. Frederick exhibited two frames each containing nine portraits, at the London Photographic Society Exhibition in 1860. A year later he entered into partnership with another photographer, W H Ferguson, and there are several examples of the small photographs, known as carte-de-visites, produced by this partnership including one of the Prince of Teck. The Gush & Ferguson partnership exhibited at the London Photographic Exhibition for the next three years