CHARLES FERDINAND BISCHOFF (1820-1898)


Bischoff was the only son of Ferdinand Henry Bischoff, an artist and engraver, who, as a member of the Royal Academy in London, exhibited many works between the years 1823-49. His father, in turn, F. Henry Bischoff, a Hanoverian, was Royal Oculist to His Majesty King George III, and author of A Treatise on the Extraction of the Cataract, published in 1793.

Charles Ferdinand was admitted to the Royal Academy School on 12th December, 1840. He became a professional portrait and miniature painter, working first in Ipswich and then in London. In 1854 he married a Miss Eleanor Cann and, deciding to emigrate, the couple sailed in 1855 in the 'Merchantman', being fellow passengers of Governor Gore Browne.

In the interval before going farming he lived and worked in Auckland. In a directory of the time, Bischoff, portrait painter, is listed as living in Wakefield Street. He is the only professional painter listed in the publication.

12 Self Portrait
Oil. 30 x 25.
No signature or date, but known to have been painted before 1870.
Lent by Miss O. Bischoff.

13 Thomas Paton
Pastel. 24¼ x 21½ Signed and dated 'C.F. Bischoff 1855' lower right.
Lent by Mrs C.C. Watt.

Thomas Paton is said to have come to New Zealand some time in the eighteen-forties to take up a position on the staff of the then Governor. He took up farmland instead, in what is now Balmoral Road, and farmed there until he died.

Amongst the sources listed in the catalogue are

Unpublished papers of the Bischoff and Martin families.


Notes

Governor Gore Browne

See Entry in Dictionary of New Zealand Biography.

Royal Oculist

It's not clear whether F. Henry Bischoff was Royal Oculist to His Majesty King George III or not. However, the London Gazette of the 3 January 1792 has the following

The Queen's Palace, January 7.

The Queen has also been pleased to appoint Mr. Frederick. Bischoff to be Oculist to Her Majesty.

So far, no corresponding announcement has been found regarding the appointment of an oculist to King George III.

Thomas Paton

appears to have been appointed the first Postmaster General of New Zealand in May 1841. (1842 - Terry, Charles. New Zealand: its Advantages and Prospects as a British Colony. Part I. History of the Colony of New Zealand. Chapter III, Page 49).

Elsewhere it is stated that Thomas Paton (1815-1901) was a notable early Auckland settler. Paton was an avid land speculator, and amassed significant land holdings in the Auckland area.

A Treatise on the Extraction of the Cataract.

The British Library catalogue says the author of this work published in London, by G.Nicol, in 1793, was Frederick Bischoff.


Source: Early Identities An Exhibition of Portraits Held at the Auckland City Art Gallery 1955/56, Page 24-25.