Английская Википедия:Emmeline Cust

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Файл:Memorial to Henry John Cockayne Cust in St Peter and St Paul's Church, Belton.jpg
Nina Cust's memorial to Henry John Cockayne Cust in St Peter and St Paul's Church, Belton
Файл:Emmeline Mary Elizabeth ('Nina') Cust (née Welby-Gregory) mw118249.jpg
Emmeline Mary Elizabeth ('Nina') Cust (née Welby-Gregory) after Violet Manners, Duchess of Rutland lithograph, 1890s
Файл:Alexander Fisher 1898 Nina Cust.jpg
An enamelled portrait by Alexander Fisher, 1898

Emmeline 'Nina' Cust (1867–1955) was an English writer, editor, translator and sculptor.[1] She was a member of The Souls, an upper class circle that challenged the conventions and attitudes of their class in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.[2]

Personal life

Cust was born at Denton Hall to Victoria, Lady Welby, a philosophical writer and Sir William Earle Welby-Gregory, a politician and landowner.[2][3] Her maternal grandmother, Lady Emmeline Stuart-Wortley was a renowned Victorian poet and travel writer.[2]

In 1893, Cust married another member of The Souls, Henry John Cockayne-Cust known as Harry. She supported her husband in much of his work, including correspondence for the Central Committee for National Patriotic Organisations.[2][4] Cust was devoted to her husband, despite a reputedly unhappy marriage that lasted until his death in 1917.[3][5] A detailed look at Nina and Harry, as individuals and as a married couple, can be found in 'Tangled Souls: Love & Scandal among the Victorian Aristocracy' by Jane Dismore (pub. The History Press, 2022).

Cust was a direct neighbour of sculptor Jacob Epstein when they both lived at Hyde Park Gate in London.[1]

Writing and translation

Cust wrote a biography of her mother, Victoria, Lady Welby's first thirty years, entitled 'Wanderers: episodes from the travels of Lady Emmeline Stuart-Wortley and her daughter Victoria, 1849-1855'.[6][7] She also published accounts of her grandmother's travels.[8] Cust contributed shorter pieces to contemporary periodicals including the journal of the English Association.[9]

Virginia Woolf is known to have reviewed at least one of Cust's published books, probably 'Gentleman Errant'.[10]

Cust's translation of 'Semantics; studies in the science of meaning' by Michel Jules Alfred Bréal presented the text's first appearance in English.[1]

Other published works include

  • Gentlemen Errant: being the journeys and adventures of four noblemen in Europe during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, first published by John Murray, London, in 1909[11]
  • Not all the suns; poems, 1917-1944, first published by Nicholson & Watson, London, in 1944[12]
  • A Tub of Gold Fishes, first published by James Bain, London[13]
  • Dilectissimo, first published by Macmillan and Co., London, in 1932[14]

Artwork

Cust may have attended the Académie Julian in Paris, although it is unclear which art forms she trained in.[15] It is also possible that she studied sculpture in London.[3]

Cust exhibited her sculpture at the Royal Academy in 1906 showing a bust of her niece and in 1927, part of a model of her husband.[1][2] She exhibited both in the United Kingdom and abroad, with works shown in Manchester, Liverpool, Birmingham and Paris.[3]

In 1884, Cust was the subject of a portrait bust by Alfred Gilbert.[1][16] Alexander Fisher produced an enamelled portrait of Cust in 1898.[17]

Works held in collections

Cust's sculpture is represented in British collections including the following works,

Title Year Medium Gallery no. Gallery Location
Adelbert Wellington Brownlow Cust (1844–1921), 3rd Earl Brownlow 1908 bronze 436816 National Trust, Belton House Lincolnshire, England
Adelbert Wellington Brownlow Cust (1844–1921), 3rd Earl Brownlow 1908 marble 436814 National Trust, Belton House Lincolnshire, England
Henry John Cockayne Cust (1861–1917) c.1905 plaster 436783 National Trust, Belton House Lincolnshire, England
Henry John Cockayne Cust (1861–1917) 1905 marble 436777 National Trust, Belton House Lincolnshire, England
Self-portrait[5] 1900–1955 marble 436834 National Trust, Belton House Lincolnshire, England
The Hand of Katherine Hariet Kinloch (d.1952), Lady Brownlow 1952 marble 436781 National Trust, Belton House Lincolnshire, England

References

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External links

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