Laura Wilson Barker (6 March 1819 – 22 May 1905), was a composer, performer and artist, sometimes also referred to as Laura Barker, Laura W Taylor or "Mrs Tom Taylor".
Career
She was born in Thirkleby, North Yorkshire, third daughter of a clergyman, the Rev. Thomas Barker. She studied privately with Cipriani Potter and became an accomplished pianist and violinist. As a young girl Barker performed with both Louis Spohr and Paganini. She began composing in the mid-1830s - her Seven Romances for voice and guitar were published in 1837. From around 1843 until 1855 she taught music at York School for the Blind. During this period some of her compositions - including a symphony in manuscript, on 19 April 1845 - were performed at York Choral Society concerts.
On 19 June 1855 she married the English dramatist, critic, biographer, public servant, and editor of Punch magazine Tom Taylor. Barker contributed music to at least one of her husband's plays, an overture and entr'acte to Joan of Arc (1871), and provided harmonisations as an appendix to his translation of Ballads and Songs of Brittany (1865).
Barker wrote several sonatas and a great many other pieces for the piano - including the Four Studies (1846) and Revolution Waltzes (1849) - which are now in the collection of her great great grandson, Rupert Stutchbury. There are also some variations for organ and other music. Other pieces include the cantata Enone (1850), the violin sonata A Country Walk (1860), theatre music for As You Like It, (April 1880), Songs of Youth (1884), string quartets, madrigals and solo songs. Her choral setting of Keats's A Prophecy, composed in 1850, was performed for the first time 49 years later at the Hovingham Festival in 1899. The composer was present.
Several of Barker's paintings hang at Smallhythe Place in Kent, Ellen Terry's house.
Personal life
Barker lived with her husband and family at 84 Lavender Sweep, Battersea. There were two children: the artist John Wycliffe Taylor (1859–1925), and Laura Lucy Arnold Taylor (1863–1940). The Sunday musical soirees at the house attracted many well-known attendees, including the Prince of Wales, Lewis Carroll, Charles Dickens, Henry Irving, Charles Reade, Alfred Tennyson, Clara Schuman, Ellen and Kate Terry and William Makepeace Thackeray.
Tom Taylor died suddenly at his home in 1880 at the age of 62. After his death, his widow retired to Porch House, Coleshill in Buckinghamshire, where she died on 22 May 1905, aged 86.
Selected works
- Seven Romances for voice and guitar (1836)
- The Sprite Polka (1844) for piano
- Morceau Characteristique (1845), piano four hands
- Four Studies (1846) for piano
- Ode to the Passions (text William Collins 1846)
- Six Songs (1847)
- Dungeon Ghyll Force (1848), piano four hands
- Piano Sonata No. 1 (1849)
- Proteus: Fantasia (1849) for piano
- Revolution Waltzes (1849) for piano
- Enone, cantata (1850)
- A Prophesy, choir and orchestra (text Keats, 1850, fp. 1899)
- Six Songs (1852)
- Violin Sonata A Country Walk (1860)
- Music to Shakespeare's As You Like It (fp. 14 April 1880)
- Songs of Youth (1883)
References
- Brown, James Duff; Stratton, Stephen Samuel (1897). British Musical Biography: A Dictionary of Musical Artists, Authors, and Composers Born in Britain and Its Colonies. S.S. Stratton.
- "Laura Wilson Barker (1819–1905)", Royal Academy of Arts, accessed 19 February 2023
- ^ Rathbone, Jeanne. "Laura Wilson Barker", Damesnet, accessed 18 February 2019
- "Nicolo Paganini: His Life and Work" (2022)
- ^ Aaron C Cohen. International Encyclopedia of Women Composers (1981), p. 33
- David Griffiths. A History of Institutional Music-Making in York, University of York thesis (1990) p. 231
- ^ Howes, Craig. "Taylor, Tom", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 3 January 2008 (subscription or UK public library membership required)
- "Tom Taylor", The Magazine of Art, Vol. 4 (1881), p. 68
- Taylor, Tom (translator). Ballads and Songs of Brittany (1865), Internet Archive
- Rupert Stutchbury, YouTube channel
- 'Songs of Youth', in The Musical Times, Vol. 25, No. 499 (September 1884), p. 533
- The Academy, Vol. 57, p. 90
- 'Hovingham Festival', in The Musical Times Vol. 40, No. 678 (August 1899), pp. 545-546
- "'Laura Wilson Barker", ArtUK, accessed 19 February 2023
- 'Porch House', Coleshill.org
External links
- 'Laura Wilson Barker, Mrs Tom Taylor and her son John Wycliffe Taylor', National Trust Collection
- Jeanne Rathbone. Laura Barker 1819-1905 composer
- 'The Tie of Golden Thread', music supplement from The Girl's Own Paper (1882)
- 1819 births
- English classical pianists
- Women classical pianists
- Alumni of the Royal Academy of Music
- English women classical composers
- 19th-century English classical composers
- Women of the Victorian era
- 19th-century English women artists
- 19th-century British women composers
- British women composers
- 1905 deaths
- 19th-century British women classical pianists
- 19th-century British classical pianists