Cristina Asquith Baker was an Australian artist known for her paintings and lithographs. She studied with Frederick McCubbin, one of the key artists of the Australian impressionist Heidelberg school, but she was independent and did not tie herself to a single school of thought. She twice studied abroad, in Paris and London, gaining expertise in various other forms of artistic expression such as lithography and carpet-making.
Early life
Asquith Baker was born in London, England, in 1868. Her parents were William Asquith Baker and Cristina Millbanks. Her niece, Jean Morrison recalls that the members of the extended family were always close-knit, supporting one another and sharing accommodation at times. The family migrated to Melbourne in 1870. After having been relocated around the state of Victoria many times in her childhood, due to her father's occupation as a clergyman, the final school that she attended was the Presbyterian Ladies College, Melbourne, also attended by her life-long friend and fellow artist Ada May Plante. After leaving school, Asquith Baker embarked upon her professional training as an artist, which she continued intermittently over the years, not only in Australia but also in Paris and London, as follows:
In 1896 Asquith Baker had completed her initial training and began her professional life, in Melbourne. She first showed her work in public at an exhibition that year, with the Victorian Artists Society. In 1902 she left Australia to study and work in Paris and London. Despite selling her paintings for good prices she gained only a subsistence living, and returned to Melbourne in 1905. Here she was able to supplement her painting earnings by running classes in painting and drawing at her studio at Alexander Chambers in Elizabeth Street, Melbourne. In 1909, Asquith Baker was elected to the Council of the Victorian Artists Society. 1912–1914 she went again to Paris & London. Whilst in London she turned down an invitation to paint roses exclusively, for a gallery. Asquith Baker is said to have had particularly fond childhood memories of the country town of Seymour, where her family lived for four years in the 1870s. This may be part of the reason why, in 1914, she declared that landscape was a part of her artistic life and she would not give it up in order to paint only roses. 1914 marked the beginning of World War I, and Asquith Baker returned to Melbourne, where she remained for the rest of her life, apart from time spent in South Australia to provide her sister with companionship, and an excursion to Alice Springs to paint. In 1932 she entered two portraits in the competition for the Archibald prize, and was judged to be one of the finalists.
Exhibitions
Exhibitions showing her work include:
1896 with the Victorian Artists Society
1898 Royal Academy, London. Her painting "Quiet of the Cottage" shown. 1904 the same painting was shown in Paris Old Salon
1911 with the Yarra Sculptors and the Melbourne Athenaeum.
1913 Baillie Gallery, Bond St, London. Solo exhibition of Australian landscapes, portraits and flora.
1914 Miss Nicholl's Studio, England. Solo exhibition
1977 Jim Alexander Gallery, East Malvern, Victoria. Title of exhibition: The printmakers mainly of the thirties: important women artists. Exhibition included C Asquith Baker and several of her contemporaries: Violet Teague, Mary Meyer and A.M.E. Bale.
1978 Duvance Galleries: "A Collection of Australian Women Artists, 1900–1970".
1986 Jim Alexander Gallery, 13 Emo Rd, East Malvern, Victoria. Solo exhibition.
2018 S H Ervin Gallery, Sydney. Title of exhibition: "Intrepid Women: Australian Women Artists in Paris, 1900–1950".
Death and legacy
In 1960 Asquith Baker died at the age of 92, in Surrey Hills. She continued to paint until the end of her life. Her work is held in the collections of the following galleries: