Harry Rountree


Harry Rountree was a New Zealand-British illustrator and painter. He worked in England around the turn of the 20th century. Born in Auckland, New Zealand, he moved to London in 1901, when he was 23 years old.

Life

Harry Rountree was born in 1878 to Irish banker, Stephen Gilbert Rountree and Julia Bartley, the niece of New Zealand architect Edward Bartley.
Rountree was educated at Auckland's Queen's College, and began working at Wilson and Horton Printers in the city, designing show-cards, advertisements, and product labels. He progressed to become special artist for the Auckland Weekly News, published by Wilson and Horton, with his earliest signed drawings, quite serious in tone and subject matter, appearing in 1899. New Zealand formed part of the readership of the London periodical press at this time and Rountree developed the ambition to join the ranks of its most prominent illustrators. As he later stated in an interview with A B Cooper for The Boy's Own Paper:
The first stage to realizing his ambition came with his departure from his employer at the beginning of March 1901:
He travelled to England on the Orient Line steamship RMS Omrah, taking with him a portfolio of his work to impress British art editors. Going via the Suez Canal, he left Sydney on 10 April 1901 with members of the New Zealand bowling team. His sketches of one of their number, J V Dingle, completed on arrival in London, were sent home for publication by his former employer.
Rather than travel by ship the whole way, Rountree added a Continental flavour to the close of his journey, as was described for the New Zealand Herald by "Our own correspondent. London, June 8":
At that time the market for magazine illustration was flourishing:
Although Rountree contributed many illustrations to The King magazine in mid-late 1901, he struggled to make very much progress towards his objective. His first encounters with art editors provided him with few commissions and little encouragement, so he enrolled in the life drawing class under Percival Gaskell at the Regent Street Polytechnic's School of Art for the academic year 1901-02. He was awarded a second-class pass in July 1902, but by that time had already met Sam Hield Hamer, editor of Little Folks magazine, who invited him to illustrate his story 'Extracts from the Diary of a Duckling'. By this fortunate meeting, Rountree discovered his forte in animal illustration, which he developed by frequent sketching visits to London Zoo.
It was after this commission that Rountree's career began to flourish and he became in demand as an illustrator. Rountree is noted for his illustrations of British golf courses and golfing caricatures. His work features in publications such as The Strand Magazine, Cassell's Magazine, Pearson's, The Sketch, The Illustrated London News, Playtime, Little Folks, and many others.
Rountree was one of the leading illustrators selected by Percy Bradshaw for inclusion in his The Art of the Illustrator which presented a separate portfolio for each of twenty illustrators. Rountree also served as a consultant at the Percy Bradshaw's Press Art School, a school teaching painting, drawing, and illustration by correspondence. The consultants gave feedback on the work submitted by the students.
During the First World War, he served as a captain in the Royal Engineers.
Rountree produced well-liked cartoons for the magazine Punch from 1905 to 1939, and also created advertising, posters and book illustrations for writers such as P. G. Wodehouse and Arthur Conan Doyle.

Death

Harry Rountree died of cancer in the West Cornwall Hospital, Penzance, Cornwall on 26 September 1950, aged 72 years, being survived by his wife and two children. Fellow artist Bernard Ninnes wrote an appreciation of his work to accompany his obituary in the St Ives Times:

As an artist he stood alone in his own sphere as the supreme delineator of bird and animal life. His drawings and paintings in this specialised field bore the authentic stamp of deepest study and intimate familiarity of these subjects; the expression of anatomical diversity, with the constructional variety of fur and feather revealed the sum of a lifetime's keenest observation...To his animals and birds he often gave a whimsical or semi-human twist which has made them loved by generations of children... When first I knew him some twenty years ago at the London Sketch Club and The Savage his charming personality, the wit of his drawings and rare ability as a raconteur made him outstanding in a group which included such names as John Hassall, W Heath Robinson and Lawson Wood. He was one of the grand company of illustrators of the Edwardian and first Georgian period, a time when illustration had reached a pinnacle of excellence, and Harry Rountree was in the van.

The probate valuation of his estate was £4581 1s 7d.
A commemorative bronze plaque by the sculptor W. C. H. King was erected on Smeaton's Pier, St Ives for his contribution to the artistic and civic life of the town.

Selected works

Periodicals

By title, including annuals, containing Harry Rountree's illustrations within the years indicated. A representative sample from a total in excess of 100. Source:Auckland Weekly News, Wilson and Horton, 1899-1936Blackie's Children's Annual, Blackie and Son, 1913-1935Blighty, W. Speaight & Sons, 1916-1917; 1939-1943The Boy's Own Paper, Religious Tract Society, 1902-1944Bystander, H. R. Baines & Co., 1903-1930The Captain, George Newnes, 1901-1923Cassell's Children's Annual, Cassell, 1916-1933Fry's Magazine, George Newnes, 1905-1914Golf Illustrated, Golf Illustrated, 1909-1932The Humorist, George Newnes, 1922-1929Illustrated Sporting & Dramatic News, Illustrated Newspapers, 1911-1932I Pass This On To You, Women's Gas Council, 1940-1951Joy Street, Basil Blackwell, 1924-1936The King, George Newnes, 1901-1902Little Folks, Cassell, 1902-1933London Opinion, George Newnes, 1909-1931The Merry-Go-Round, Basil Blackwell, 1923-1939Little Dots|Our Little Dots/Little Dots, RTS, 1928-1936The Passing Show, Odhams, 1915-1934Pearson's Magazine, Pearson Ltd|Pearson], 1905-1935Playtime, Amalgamated Press, 1919-1920The Prize, Wells Gardner, Darton and Co., 1910-1933Punch, or the London Charivari, Punch Office, 1906-1939The Quiver, Cassell, 1903-1932Radio Times, BBC, 1929-1944The Red Magazine, Amalgamated Press, 1910-1920The Royal Magazine, Pearson, 1904-1922The Sketch, Illustrated London News & Sketch, 1905-1942The Strand Magazine, George Newnes, 1902-1930Sunday Reading for the Young, Wells Gardner, Darton, and Co., 1902-1915The Tatler, Nineteen Hundred Publishing, 1904-1937Tiny Tots, Cassell, 1907-1926The Wide World Magazine, George Newnes, 1902-1924Wonderland Annual, Amalgamated Press, 1920-1929Zoo, Odhams, 1936-1938

Books

Illustrated, and occasionally authored or co-authored, by Harry Rountree. A representative sample from a total, with editions, numbering in excess of 400. Source: