Frank Morley Fletcher

Frank Morley Fletcher.

Frank Morley Fletcher (1866–1950),[1] often referred to as F. Morley Fletcher, was a British painter and printmaker known primarily for his role in introducing Japanese colored woodcut printing as an important genre in Western art.

Frank Fletcher was educated at the University of London followed by work at St John's Wood Art School and in the studio of Hubert Vos. He continued art studies in Paris at the atelier of Fernand Cormon in 1888. There his exposure to the Japanese colour woodblock print led to a career in teaching and development of the subject. A student of his was fellow woodblock print exponent, Allen W. Seaby He influenced the woodcut artist Eric Slater and the botanical artist Lilian Snelling. [[2]]

Fletcher taught in London and Reading schools, and from 1907-23 was director of the Edinburgh College of Art.

In 1924, Fletcher became school director of the Santa Barbara School of the Arts in California, United States.[3] He resigned as director in the spring of 1930 and eventually moved to Los Angeles where he continued to teach, paint, and exhibit.

In the late 1930s, Fletcher's eyesight began to fail and his output became more sporadic. He moved to Ojai in the early 1940s and he died there on 2 November 1950.

He was a brother of British physiologist Walter Morley Fletcher.

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