Patten Wilson


Patten Wilson was a British magazine and book illustrator.
Patten Wilson, the son of a clergyman, was born on 23 March 1869 in Shropshire. His brother was the architect and designer Henry Wilson, who ran an extensive business as a sculptor and metalworker, as well as taught metalwork at the Royal College of Art and at the Central School of Arts and Crafts in London.
At age 19, Wilson dropped out of Kidderminster School of Art, and returned home to pursue a course of self-education, studying the work of Albrecht Dürer. In addition, he made studies of animals and plants. His early designs were "spirited and full of invention". Taking a number of jobs, including secretary to the managing director of the Liverpool gymnasium, he continued his artistic endeavors. His earliest published drawings appeared in the magazine Recreation.
In 1894 Wilson was introduced to the publisher John Lane, who gave him a commission to design and illustrate Miracle Plays by Katherine Tynan Hinkson in a series of black-and-white line drawings. Subsequently he was invited as a contributor to the newly launched "The Yellow Book', which ultimately published thirteen of his drawings. His first contribution, titled “Rustem Firing the First Shot”, appeared in January 1895, Volume 4, and was inspired by a prose translation of the original epic poem, Rustem and Sohrab by Matthew Arnold. He contributed two more illustrations to the poem in later volumes. Between 1895 and 1897, Wilson also provided title-illustrations for a number of volumes published by The Bodley Head. He contributed an Arthurian illustration to The Builder Magazine in 1896 and several illustrations to The Architectural Review in 1898. That same year, he was commissioned to provide illustrations for a volume of poetry by Samuel Taylor Coleridge. In 1901 he was asked by J. M. Dent to create twenty illustrations for The Gospel Story of Jesus Christ, along with three other books for that publisher, including another one hundred illustrations for A Child's History of England by Charles Dickens. After 1905, he abandoned line drawings in favour of colour and half-tone, and moved into the fields of natural history and mythology.
In April 1900, Wilson married Alice Harding. He died on 22 January 1934 in Chelsea, London.
Books illustrated include -
J. S. Fletcher: Life in Arcadia
J. S. Fletcher: God’s Failures
Walter C. Rhodes: A Houseful of Rebels
Samuel Taylor Coleridge: Selections From Coleridge
Ida W. Hutchison: The Gospel Story of Jesus
T. W. H. Crossland: The Coronation Dumpy Book
Catherine Gasgoine Hartley: Stories of Early British Heroes
Charles Dickens: A Child’s History of England
The Sunday Dumpy Book For Children
Patten Wilson: Daniel In The Lions’ Den
Augusta Klein; Anotole: A Romance of The Sea
Vivien Phillipps: A Trip To Santa Claus Land, or Ruth’s Christmas Eve
Patten Wilson: Nature Round The House
Marianne Kirlew: Her Path To The Stars
Charles John Parrish: Animal Artisans and Other Studies of Birds and Beasts
William Samuel Furneaux; Field and Woodland Plants
Maude I. Ebbutt; Hero-Myths and Legends of The British Race
Homer: Odyssey
Sara Cone Bryant: Stories To Tell To Children
Lilian Gask: Legends of Our Little Brothers: Fairy Lore of Bird and Beast
Nathaniel Hawthorne: The Golden Touch
Nathaniel Hawthorne: The Three Golden Apples
Agnes Herbert: The Moose
Maud D. Haviland: Wild Life On The Wing
Lilian Gask: In The “Once Upon A Time” – A Fairy Tale of Science
Joseph Henry Harris: Phyllis In Piskie Land: A Tale of Cornwall inspired by Lewis
Lewis Carroll: Carroll’s Wonderland
Patten Wilson: Book of The Zoo: An Animal Book For Old and Young
Frederick John Snell: Boys Who Became Famous
Lilian Gask: True Stories About Horses
Samuel Cox; The Signs of the Planets: A Book of Birthday Lore
Samuel Cox: What The Stars Predict For You: A Book of Birthday Lore