A Tour of Deaf Art

Miniatures
A Gentleman in a Gold-Embroidered Blue Coat by Richard Crosse (1742-1810) He was born deaf in Devon and was appointed Court Painter in Enamel to King George III in 1769. A Young Woman wearing a Mob Cap by Thomas Arrowsmith (1771-1831) He was born deaf and believed to..View Exhibit
Flowers
Our late President, Arthur F. Dimmock, was best friends with the Deaf painter, Alfred Reginald Thomson, R.A. (1894-1979). One day, on a visit near Christmas, Thomson’s wife reminded him to get Dimmock’s Christmas present. Thomson absented himself from the room for nearly an hour and when he returned, a painting..View Exhibit
Incident at Ascot
A second painting by Alfred R. Thomson, R.A is owned by DMAG. Although Thomson did a lot of work for the Ministry of War doing portraits of military personnel and RAF battle scenes, he was also renowned for his caricatures. Incident at Ascot is one of his finest examples and..View Exhibit
Pampas
William H. H. Trood (1859-1899) who became totally deaf aged 5 and was privately educated was well-known for his paintings of dogs and pictures of political satire which were in great demand by magazines such as Punch. His painting Pampas was one of the rare occasions he drew animals other..View Exhibit
Walter Geikie Sketches
Walter Geikie, RSA (1795-1837) was one of the great Scottish artists of the early 19th-century. The Grandchild Reading and the Shoe Stand shown here are two original engravings donated from the estate of Margaret Lawrie. In his short lifetime, Geikie produced over 1100 sketches of daily Edinburgh life as..View Exhibit
Reverend Henry Cox Mason
Another of five paintings donated to the DMAG from RSDCM after their closure. Cox Mason was one of the founders of the London Asylum for Deaf Children in 1792. We cannot fully decipher the signature of the artist but it is believed to be by Thomas Arrowsmith as it was..View Exhibit
The Conversation
Painted in 1975 by Stuart Walton, a Leeds-born artist, The Conversation captures so well a little-known role reversal of human conversation. Most Deaf people would be feeling left out of any conversation carried out by three ‘hearing’ men on a bench but in this picture, all the men are Deaf..View Exhibit