Friday, July 31, 2009

Thomas Charles Farrer



Painted in 1860, perhaps deliberately in a British Pre-Raphaelite style. Notice the picture by Millais hanging to the right.

Philip Naviasky


[The Beach, Hastings]
signed Philip Naviasky 1924 l.l.
oil on canvas
22 x 30"
.
1894-1982

Julius Hare


[Off to the Fishing Ground]
oil on canvas
25 x 50"
.
1859 - 1932.

Thomas W. Holgate



[Fishing on the Thames]

signed T.W.Holgate l.l.

oil on board

9.5 x 13.5"

.

exh. 1899 - 1910.


Edwin Thomas Roberts - Early Morning


[Early morning, Vale of Heath from Battery Hill, Hampstead Heath]
signed Edwin Roberts l.r.
oil on canvas
24 x 36"

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Frederic Edwin Church - The Heart of the Andes


More than five feet (1.7 metres) high and almost ten feet (3 metres) wide, it depicts an idealized landscape in the South American Andes, where Church traveled on two occasions.
I don't often American artists but Church was much admired by Ruskin for his style and there is a fascinating story attached to this painting.
The Heart of the Andes was first exhibited publicly between April 29 and May 23, 1859 at New York's Studio Building on West 10th Street, the city's first "studio edifice" designed for artists. The event attracted an unprecedented turnout for a single-painting exhibition in the United States: more than 12,000 people paid an admission fee of twenty-five cents to view the painting. Even on the final day of the showing, patrons waited in line for hours to enter the Exhibition Room.
The installation of the work was as unique as its dimension and detail. There is no record of the appearance or arrangement of the Studio Building exhibit. It has been widely claimed, although probably falsely, that the room was decorated with palm fronds and that gaslights with silver reflectors were used to illuminate the painting. More certain is that the painting's casement-window–like "frame" had a breadth of fourteen feet and a height of almost thirteen, which further imposed the painting upon the viewer. It was likely made of brown chestnut, a departure from the prevailing gilt frame. The base of the edifice stood on the ground, ensuring that the landscape's horizon would be displayed at the viewer's eye level. Drawn curtains were fitted, creating the sense of a view out a window. A skylight directed at the canvas heightened the perception that the painting was illuminated from within, as did the dark fabrics draped on the studio walls to absorb light. Opera glasses were provided to patrons to allow examination of the landscape's details, and may have been necessary to satisfactorily view the painting at all, given the crowding in the exhibition room.
Church's canvas had a significant effect on its viewers: "women felt faint. Both men and women succumb[ed] to the dizzying combination of terror and vertigo that they recognize[d] as the sublime. Many of them will later describe a sensation of becoming immersed in, or absorbed by, this painting, whose dimensions, presentation, and subject matter speak of the divine power of nature."
Accompanying the admission were two pamphlets about the painting: Theodore Winthrop's A Companion to The Heart of the Andes and the Reverend Louis Legrand Noble's Church's Picture, The Heart of the Andes. In the manner of travel guides, the booklets provided a tour of the painting's varied topography. An excerpt from Noble reads:
Imagine yourself, late in the afternoon with the sun behind you, to be travelling up the valley along the bank of a river, at an elevation above the hot country of some five or six thousand feet. At the point to which you have ascended, heavily-wooded mountains close in on either hand, (not visible in the picture – only the foot of each jutting into view,) richly clothed with trees and all the appendage of the forest, with the river flowing between them. … Conspicuous on the opposite side of the river is the road leading into the country above, a wild bridle-path in the brightest sunshine, winding up into, and losing itself in the thick shady woods. The foreground … forms of itself a scene of unrivalled power and brilliancy, …
Church wanted Humboldt, his intellectual mentor, to see his masterpiece. Close to the end of the first exhibition, on May 9, 1859 he wrote of this desire to American poet Bayard Taylor:
The "Andes" will probably be on its way to Europe before your return to the City … [The] principal motive in taking the picture to Berlin is to have the satisfaction of placing before Humboldt a transcript of the scenery which delighted his eyes sixty years ago—and which he had pronounced to be the finest in the world.
Humboldt, however, had died on May 6, so the planned shipment to Europe did not occur. However, later in 1859, the painting was exhibited in London, where it met with similar popularity, and engravings allowed for broad distribution. Showings in six more U.S. cities followed. The 1864 exhibition at the Metropolitan Sanitary Fair at New York's Union Square is better documented than the original exhibit; photographs confirm how the painting was displayed.
The painting was widely acclaimed. Poetry was written in its honor, and the composer George William Warren dedicated a piece to it in 1863. Mark Twain described the painting to a friend:
You will never get tired of looking at the picture, but your reflections—your efforts to grasp an intelligible Something—you hardly know what—will grow so painful that you will have to go away from the thing, in order to obtain relief. You may find relief, but you cannot banish the picture—it remains with you still. It is in my mind now—and the smallest feature could not be removed without my detecting it."
Church eventually sold the work for $10,000—at that time the highest price ever paid for a work by a living American artist. The painting was acquired by Margaret Dows, widow of David Dows, and bequeathed to the Metropolitan Museum of Art upon her death in February 1909. In 1993, the museum held an exhibition that attempted to reproduce the conditions of the 1859 exhibit.
Wikipedia

Wynford Dewhurst


[Glen Falloch, Scotland]
signed Dewhurst l.l.
oil on canvas
21 x 29"
.
1864 - 1941.

Dewey Bates


[In the Summertime]
signed Dewey Bates 1888
oil on canvas
24 x 36"
.
1851 - 1899.

(Sir) David Murray - Lochindorb, Scotland


1929
oil on paper
15 x 18"
.

Ernest Dade


[Waves breaking on a sunlit coast]
believed to be nr Scarborough
signed Ernest Dade 11 l.l.
oil on canvas
14 x 21"
.
1868 - 1935.
including works currently for sale

Wednesday, July 29, 2009

Mary Cassatt - Simone


[Simone in a White Bonnet]
c. 1903
Pastel on paper
featuring a young model from the Oise countryside whom she painted at least 20 times.

Arthur Spooner

[Old Cottage, Redford Marsh, Lenton]
signed a. Spooner l.r.
oil on canvasboard
10 x 14"
.
exh. 1890 - 1940.
http://www.artnet.com/artist/15953/arthur-spooner.html
http://www.baronfineart.com/Gallery/arthur_spooner.htm

Ida Southwell Perrin


[Bluebell Wood]
oil on canvas
40 x 28 1/4"
.
fl. 1897 - 1903.

Frank Lewis Emanuel


[Rye Church in Summer]
signed Frank L. Emanuel 1901 l.r.
oil on canvas
34 x 45"
.
1865 - 1948.

Joshua Anderson Hague - The Watermill


signed Anderson Hague l.r.
oil on canvas
30 x 24 3/4"

Tuesday, July 28, 2009

Mary Cassatt - Breakfast in Bed


oil on canvas
1897

Alfred Augustus Glendening - Fairy Glen


[Fairy Glen, Bettwys-y-Coed, Wales]
signed with initials l.l.
oil on canvas laid down on board
23 3/4 x 19.5"

Alfred de Breanski









[On Loch Ewe]
signed A.E. (should be an F) de Breanski l.r.
oil on canvas
20 x 30"
[Llyn Lydnu, North Wales]
oil on canvas
20 x 30"
[Figures before a cottage]
signed Afde Breanski l.l.
oil on canvas
16 x 22"
[Nantile Lake, North Wales]
oil on canvas
16 x 24"

Arthur Gilbert



[Evening on the Thames]
signed A Gilbert and inscribed No.2 On the Thames Evening
oil on canvas
8 x 12"
[A wooded river landscape]
oil on canvas
12 x 18"
.
1819 - 1895.
including works currently for sale

Monday, July 27, 2009

Edward Robert Hughes - Woman walking her Dog

c. 1900
Tempera on board
Signed E R Hughes
16.14 inches wide 21.26 inches high
http://www.leicestergalleries.com/art-and-antiques/detail/14035

Mary Cassatt - Margot in Blue


pastel on paper mounted on canvas
24 x 19 5/8"
1902
Baltimore Art Gallery
The model was Margot Lux a young girl from the neighbourhood where Mary lived at the time (Mesnil-Theribus).

Sidney Richard Percy - The Old Bridge


signed and dated SR Percy 48 l.l.
oil on canvas laid down on panel
14 3/4 x 21.5"
.

Joseph Denovan Adam


[Sheep in a Highland winter landscape]
signed J Denovan Adam l.r.
oil on canvas
10 x 14"
.
1842 - 1896.

Henry Hadfield Cubley


[Highland Drovers resting]
signed H. Hadfield Cubley l.r.
inscribed Montpellier/Marlock Bath (reverse)
oil on canvas
24 x 36"
.
fl. 1884 - 1902.
(short biog)

George Turner - Resting in the Lane


signed Geo Turner l.r.
1908
oil on panel
7 x 10"

Sunday, July 26, 2009

George Hay


[Gathering Hay]
late 19th century
signed George Hay/ ?
oil on canvasboard

James Charles - Across the Meadow


signed and dated J Charles 1890 l.r.
oil on canvas
18 x 30"

Henry Moore




[Fishing Boats running for the beach]
signed and dated H. Moore. 1872 l.r.
oil on canvas
16.5 x 26"
[Sunset off the coast]
oil on canvas
11 x 19"

Patrick M. Feeney


oil on canvas
[Saunton Sands, Devon]
30 x 60"
.
fl. 1867 - 1911.
known to work at Primrose Hill Studios and later Croyde, North Devon.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

Henry Deacon Hillier Parker


[The Ledr River, North Wales]
signed Henry H. Parker l.l.
oil on canvas
18.5 x 27.5"

Alfred Augustus Glendening - Figures on a riverside path


signed A.A.G.73 l.l.
oil on canvas
24 x 36"
.

Walter Williams - A Glimpse of the River


signed Walter Williams l.l.
oil on canvas
18 x 14"

Henry Maidment


[Stepping Stones]
1903
oil on canvas
24 x 12"
.

William Langley


This is one of a pair and I'm not sure which
[Across the lake or The river valley]
both signed William Langley l.l.
oil on canvas
18 x 12"
.
1852-1922

Friday, July 24, 2009

William Henry Mason





[Off Calshot Castle]
signed with initials l.r.
oil on panel
7 3/4 x 12"
.
fl. 1858 - 1885.

George Sant




[Gathering Seaweed]
signed G Sant l.l.
oil on canvas
26 3/4 x 54"
.
fl. 1856 - 1877.

William Mellor - Sheep in a mountainous landscape


signed William Mellor l.r.
oil on canvas
12 x 20"




[Highland Cattle by a loch]
oil on canvas
12 x 20"

pair

Walter Williams (pair)


[Figures on the bank of a river at sunset]
oil on canvas
8 x 14"

Thursday, July 23, 2009

James Webb - A Gypsy encampment, Suffolk


signed and dated James Webb/78 l.l.
painted for Edward Fleet Esq.
oil on panel
9 1/4 x 22.5"

Arthur Johnston Ryle


[The haven under the hill]
signed A Ryle
oil on canvas
50 x 37"
probably exhibited c. 1905
.
1857 - 1915.

John Horace Hooper




[Evening by the June Wood]
[By the Bey, near Godalming]
both oil on canvas
both signed J Horace Hooper
20 x 16"
pair

Albert Goodwin - A Sunlit Stream


signed with monogram
1884
oil on canvas
60 x 36"
.
including works currently for sale

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

William Widgery


[Highland cattle watering at a stream]
signed W. Widgery l.r.
oil on canvas
9 x 17 3/4"
.
1822 - 1893.