Henrietta Maria Gulliver (29 October 1866 – 15 July 1945) was an Australian artist who specialized in landscape and floral still-life paintings. She was also a florist, horticulturalist and landscape designer.
Life and family
Henrietta grew up in Sale, in Eastern Victoria. She was the fifth of eight children born to pharmacist Robert Shanklin and Maria Barbara née Ronalds, who was a professional fly tier and daughter of renowned fly fishermanAlfred Ronalds.[1][2] Henrietta married George Ekins Gulliver in 1900 and had two daughters. Gulliver was a successful and wealthy pharmacist who developed and manufactured the famous Australian drug "Laxettes".[3] They spent the majority of their married life in the Melbourne area although they also lived for several years in Capel, Surrey in England.[4]Sam Griffiths is one of their great-grandsons.
Gardener and florist
Henrietta had moved to Melbourne around 1885 to work for her uncle Nathaniel Ronalds, who was a leading nurseryman and florist.[5] She then opened her own florist business in the city centre which quickly gained a strong reputation. After her marriage she was able to design and create substantial garden estates in Cheltenham and Sassafras, both of which were widely admired.[4]
^ abcRonalds, B.F. (2022). "A symbiosis of horticulture and painting: Exploring Henrietta Gulliver's gardens through her art". Australian Garden History Journal. 33 (3): 14–17.
^Ronalds, B.F. (2020). "Nathaniel Ronalds: Nurseryman and florist". Australian Garden History Journal. 32 (1): 24–27.
^Peer, J. (1993). More than Just Gumtrees. Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors.
^"Members". Twenty Melbourne Painters Society Inc. 24 July 2017. Retrieved 7 April 2018.
^Smith, P.M. (2018). Mavericks and masters: Centenary of the Twenty Melbourne Painters Society 1918-2018. Melbourne: Twenty Melbourne Painters Society Inc.