A BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF R W BUSS
Robert William Buss (1804-1875), painter and
etcher, the eldest son of William Church Buss (d. 1832) and his wife,
Mary, was born in Bull and Mouth Street, Aldersgate, London, on 4 August
1804. He was named after his grandfather, an excise officer who turned
schoolmaster in Tunbridge. Buss served an apprenticeship with his
father, a master engraver and enameller, and then studied painting under
George Clint, a miniaturist, watercolour and portrait painter, and
mezzotint engraver.
In 1826 Buss married Frances Fleetwood (d. c.1861),
a handsome, dignified woman whose practical resourcefulness and strong
character complemented Buss's gentle, humorous temperament, love of
colour and form, and exacting attention to painting realistic details.
The couple settled in Camden Town, London, where of their ten children
five survived infancy. The only girl, Frances Mary Buss (1827-1894),
became a distinguished educationist; she was assisted for many years by
her father and her clergyman brothers Alfred and Septimus.
| At the start of his career Buss, like Clint,
specialized in painting theatrical portraits. Many of the leading actors
of the day sat to him, including William Charles Macready, John Pritt
Harley, and J. B. Buckstone. Fifteen of these portraits, prepared for
Cumberland's British Theatre, were exhibited at the Colosseum in
Regent's Park, London. Later Buss essayed historical and humorous
subjects. He exhibited a total of 112 pictures between 1826
and 1859: twenty-five at the Royal Academy, twenty at the British
Institution, forty-five at the Suffolk Street gallery of the Society of
British Artists, seven at the New Watercolour Society, and fifteen in
other locales. Of these, twenty-five were engraved, evidence of
considerable popularity, Among them were Soliciting a Vote,
engraved by T. Lupton in 1834; The Bitter Morning, lithographed
by T. Fairland, also in 1834; and The Stingy Traveller, engraved
by J. Brown in 1845. Buss also entered a cartoon, Prince Henry and
Judge Gascoigne, into the Westminster Hall competition. |

London actress Mrs. Nisbett. From
this working sketch an engraving was prepared for Cumberland's
British Theatre.
Click to enlarge.
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For the music salon of Charles Philip Yorke, fourth
earl of Hardwicke at Wimpole Hall, Cambridgeshire, he executed vast
representations (9 ft x 20 ft) of the Origin and Triumph of Music.
(Click image, left, to see both murals.) |
Buss began his career as an illustrator on an
inauspicious note. Based on having carved into the block Buss's design
illustrating Dickens's 'A Little Talk about Spring, and the Sweeps' for
the Library of Fiction (published June 1836), the wood-engraver
John Jackson recommended Buss in late April 1836 to the publishers
Edward Chapman and William Hall. They needed someone to replace Robert
Seymour—who had committed suicide—as illustrator to Charles Dickens's
serial fiction Pickwick Papers. Buss set aside his painting and
worked up a dozen or so preliminary sketches (five are in the Pierpont
Morgan Library, New York) for the fledgeling novel, then in its second
of twenty instalments. His drawings were adequate, but the process of
biting in a steel plate was unfamiliar to him so he hired an expert
etcher. Buss saw that the ‘free touch of an original work was entirely
wanting,’ and that the printed images seemed lifeless and uninspired.
But, he concluded, ‘Time was up’ and the unsatisfactory illustrations
for part 3 had to be issued (R. W. Buss, 124). The publishers summarily
dismissed him—something that vexed Buss throughout the rest of his life,
as he revealed in a statement written on 2 March 1872. But he never held
his dismissal against Dickens; indeed, for his own pleasure Buss
subsequently painted three oils and two small watercolours and made
several other drawings from subjects in Dickens’s fiction.
Shortly after the Pickwick fiasco Buss mastered the
art of etching. Saunders and Otley hired him to illustrate a new edition
of Frederick Marryat's Peter Simple (1837) and Henry Colburn hired him
to illustrate Frances Trollope's The Widow Married (1840). These were
very successful, and thereafter he obtained several commissions for
illustrating fiction. For some years Buss worked for Charles Knight,
designing wood-engravings for Knight's editions of London (1841-4),
William Shakespeare (1842-3), and Old England (1842-6).
In 1845, burdened by
‘money anxieties’ Buss's wife started a school for young boys and girls,
and his daughter established on the same premises, 14 Clarence Road,
Kentish Town, a morning school offering young ladies a liberal education.When four years later the two schools moved into larger
quarters near by in Holmes Terrace, Buss assisted—first teaching drawing and later expanding his repertory to
include science, literature, and elocution. In 1850 Buss's wife retired,
and on 4 April in that year his daughter launched a more ambitious
venture, in the family house at 46 Camden Street, Camden Town: the North
London Collegiate School for Ladies.
A former pupil recalled that Buss’s ‘Chemistry
series was marvellous, especially for smells and explosions, while his
Elocution lessons and the little plays he arranged for us with costumes
made us his devoted pupils.’ He also researched earlier British
printmakers, lecturing on the subject in his daughter's schools and,
from 1853, he delivered a series four talks, accompanied by 300 examples
reproduced on sixty scrolling cartoons, at literary and scientific
institutions in London and the provinces. These he published privately
in 1874 as English Graphic Satire, a book for which he supplied
in various mediums examples of his predecessors’ work. Buss also gave
lectures on fresco painting and on the picturesque and the beautiful,
though these were never published, and from 1850 to 1852 he edited The
Fine Art Almanack.
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Click to see full image. |
After his wife's in 1861 Buss did little further
teaching. When Dickens died in June 1870, the ageing artist was moved to
attempt a large watercolour, Dickens's Dream (Dickens House
Museum, London), depicting the dozing author seated in his Gad’s Hill
study and enveloped by his creations. It was Buss’s last bid to
illustrate Dickens’s characters, and with typical modesty he replicated
the images of the artists who succeeded him. But before he could finish
the painting, he died peacefully at his home, 14 Camden Street, on 26
February 1875 and was buried at Highgate cemetery, Middlesex. |
Michael Buss: February 3,
2007
(Based on an article by Robert Patten in the
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography.)
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