Victor Ernest Cobb
Australian, 1876 - 1945
With high hopes, but few opportunities for an artistic career, he filled several uncongenial occupations. While a mail order clerk in Cole's Book Arcade he met Alice Bassett, daughter of an engineer; they were married on 23 November 1908 at St Mary's Church of England, North Melbourne.
Cobb carried out various commissions, such as designing the ball cards and menus for the 1920 visit of the Prince of Wales to Adelaide and a series of etchings of Coombe Cottage for Dame Nellie Melba. In November 1925 he began work under (Sir) Colin Mackenzie as science artist to the National Museum of Australian Zoology. In the next five years, until the museum moved to Canberra to become the Institute of Anatomy, Cobb made hundreds of detailed anatomical drawings of Australian marsupials and reptiles, and skulls and skeletons of Aboriginals and notorious criminals such as Frederick Deeming and Ned Kelly-they are now in bound volumes at the institute. Subsequently he exhibited regularly, taught etching and lectured in country centres, to art societies, schools and universities.
Cobb's reputation rests on a large oeuvre of etchings, built up during his lifetime and depicting with meticulous accuracy the architectural splendour of Melbourne's colleges and churches, vistas of the city, the tea-tree patterned foreshore and the outer areas of bush and countryside.
He died of cancer at his home in East Brunswick on 2 December 1945, survived by his wife and one son. He was buried in Melbourne general cemetery.
Source: Australian Dictionary of Biography, "Cobb, Victor Ernest (1876 - 1945)', http://adbonline.anu.edu.au/biogs/A080043b.htm
Person TypeIndividual