study,
Sea and sky at Seaford Coastal landscapes, river estuaries, meadows and foreshores in Devon, Norfolk, Sussex, Cornwall and the north of England captivated him for his entire working life. Short's subtle and reticent drawing of the receding lines of the low banks and shallows of river estuaries and flat shores can be seen in many of his original etchings, mezzotints, and aquatints, notably "Low Tide and the Evening Star" and "The Solway at Mid-day." Other notable plates are: • "Gathering the Flock on Maxwell Bank," a
soft-ground etching • "New moon over the Bure", aquatint • "The Ferry over the Blyth," "Walberswick Pier," soft-ground • "Dutch Greengrocery," "Noon on the Zuider Zee," "De-venter," "Strolling Players at Lydd," "The clay pit", and "Staithes," all etchings • "A Wintry Blast on the Stourbridge Canal," "Peveril's Castle," and "Niagara Falls," dry points • "The Curfew," "A Span of old Battersea Bridge," and "Sunrise on Whitby Scaur," aquatints • "Moonrise, Ramsgate", "Orion over the Thames", "The Night Picket Boat at Hammersmith", "The Shadowed Valley", "Headlights over the Hill, Seaford", "The Angry Cloud, Seaford", "Exceat Farm and Hindover Hill, Alfriston near Seaford, Sussex", "Ebbtide, Putney Bridge," "The Weary Moon was in the Wane," "Solway Fishers," "The Lifting Cloud," and "A Slant of Light in Polperro Harbour," mezzotints. As head of the Engraving School at the
Royal College of Art, South Kensington from 1892 to 1920 and the inaugural Professor of Engraving from 1920 to 1924, Short had enormous influence on younger painter-etchers and engravers, including
Myra Kathleen Hughes RE, Percival Gaskell RE, Margaret Kemp-Welch RE, Martin Hardin RE, Job Nixon RE, Robert Austin RA, PPRE,
Mary Annie Sloane, ARE, Malcolm Osborne RA, PPRE, Henry Rushbury RA, RE, Dorothy Woollard RE, Frederick Griggs RA, RE, Stanley Anderson RA, RE,
Constance Mary Pott, and
Eli Marsden Wilson ARE amongst many others. [3] It is well recorded that Short was an outstanding and inspirational teacher. Short was elected a member of the Royal Society of Painter-Etchers and Engravers in 1885, and took a prominent part in conducting its affairs, becoming assessor (vice-president) in 1902. In 1910 he succeeded Sir
Francis Seymour Haden as its second president for 28 years, steering the society through the First World War and the end of the
etching revival of the 1920s and its crash from 1929. Short received, amongst other distinctions, the gold medal for engraving at the Paris International Exhibition, 1889, and another gold medal for mezzotint (Rappel) 1900. In 1906 Short was elected an
Associate of the Royal Academy, when membership as Associate Engraver was revived; and in 1911 he was elected a full
Royal Academician, and also received a knighthood. His work as a watercolourist was recognised in 1917 when he was elected a member of the
Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours. Short was Treasurer of the Royal Academy from 1919 to 1932. Short wrote several influential books on original printmaking: "On the Making of Etchings" was first published in 1888 and republished in 1911, 1912, 1951 and is still in print today. "British Mezzotints" from 1924 is a standard reference on original mezzotints.
The Etched and Engraved Work of Frank Short, a catalogue raisonne by Martin Hardie, in three volumes [I: Liber Studiorum; II: Mezzotints and Aquatints; III: Etchings and Lithographs] (Print Collector's Club, London, 1938–40) catalogues and describes 399 prints (many illustrated). Previously, a work with the same title by Edward F Strange (1908), describes 285 plates by the artist. In October 2018 a new book about Short was published. ''Short's Sussex'' explores the works he did in Sussex in his later life, and includes 40 images. Amongst many galleries and museums that hold examples of Frank Short's prints include: •
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City •
Victoria & Albert Museum •
British Museum •
Rye Art Gallery, Sussex •
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia ==References==