Adelaide Ironside

Adelaide Ironside
Portrait from Australian Town & Country Journal
Born(1831-11-17)17 November 1831
Sydney, Australia
Died15 April 1867(1867-04-15) (aged 35)
Rome, Italy
Known forPainting

Adelaide Eliza Scott Ironside (17 November 1831 – 15 April 1867) was an Australian artist. Born in Sydney in 1831, she developed an early interest in languages and painting. Influenced by the views of her eventual patron, the republican writer and politician John Dunmore Lang, she eventually began publishing radical poetry and articles in local newspapers. At the age of 23, she moved to Italy with her mother to train as an artist. She developed an interest in frescoes and aspired to return to Australia and paint the walls of public buildings. She painted portraits, including portraits of the Prince of Wales and William Charles Wentworth, along with several works that drew on Biblical themes and the style of the Pre-Raphaelites and the Nazarene movement. Ironside died of tuberculosis in Italy in 1867, after which her art largely faded into obscurity; many of her paintings are now lost.