Biography D. Dawson-Watson (1864 - 1939)
Dawson-Watson is the son of painter and illustrator John Dawson-Watson of London, England. The family lived in St. John’s Wood, London, a fashionable residential district made up of artists, authors, and actors and where Dawson Dawson-Watson spent his early life. At the age of 8, he entered the Diocesan Grammar School in South Sea, England, where he made rapid progress in his artwork, and at the age of fourteen, he was far ahead of his class painting live models.
For a brief time Dawson-Watson took up china decoration, but his association with Mark Fisher, an American artist who spent most of his life in England, turned his talents forward along the lines of painting. The two were close friends and spent many days together.
Soon afterward he moved to Paris, France, and studied under Carolus-Duran, Aime Morot, Raphael Collin, and Leon Glaize. He met his American wife to be, traveling with the artist Emma Richardson Cherry. Dawson-Watson then moved to Giverny, France, and lived there for five years. He was among the first one to stay at Hotel Baudy in Giverny. He signed the Hotel Baudy guest register on May 12, 1888. In 1893 he moved to Hartford, Conn. and spent four years before returning to England.
Soon afterwards he moved to Canada and after three years he met the American artist Birge Harrison who told him of the new Artist Colony being founded in the Catskill Mountains of New York, so he moved there. After a long period in the Northeastern States, in 1904 he accepted an offer to teach at the St. Louis School of Fine Arts, where he spent thirteen years. After resigning his position in 1917, he started making his trips to San Antonio, Texas, but it was not until 1926 that he permanently moved there, lured by the Edgar B. Davis National Competition. In preparation for the 1927 competition, he painted 70 cactus studies before deciding on the entry of choice. His favorite subjects in Texas were cactus, landscapes and coastal scenes at Rockport, Texas. In 1933, he had a one-man exhibit of his watercolors, of which many were of the Rockport area. Dawson-Watson continued painting and exhibiting in San Antonio until his death in 1939.