Showing posts with label John Callcott Horsley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Callcott Horsley. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Pot-pourri

Daniel Maclise: Noah's Sacrifice (1847-1853)
  
 Ernest Walbourn: A Walk along the River
  
 George Goodwin Kilburne: The London to York Stagecoach on a Cobbled Street (1905)
  
 Haynes King: Home
  
 Henry Holiday: First Meeting of Dante and Beatrice (1877)
  
 James Webb: Kew Bridge (1874)
  
 John Byam Liston Shaw: Silent Noon (1894)
  
 John Callcott Horsley: Father's Words
  
John Martin: Macbeth (1820)

Sunday, September 1, 2013

John Callcott Horsley

A Certain Cure
  
 A Secret Message
  
 Celia Brunel James (1878)
  
 Critics on Costume, Fashions Change (1880)
  
 First Steps
  
 Going to a Party (1866)
 
 The Rival Performers (1839)
  
Wedding Rings (1883)

Friday, May 24, 2013

Miscellanea

Another posting of works by previously featured artists.

 Edwin Longsden Long: Jephthah’s Vow (The Martyr) (1885)

 George Elgar Hicks: The Goldfinch (1875)

 George Vicat Cole: A River in Wales

 John Callcott Horsley: Showing a Preference (1860)

 John Callcott Horsley: The Waiting Maid (1875)

 Maria Spartali Stillman: Blossom

 Robert Alexander Hillingford: Gifts for the War Chest

 Sir Joseph Noel Paton: Dionysus and Sea Nymphs (1853)

 William Powell Frith: Charles Dickens (1859)

 William Powell Frith: The Fair Toxophilites (1872)

William Powell Frith: The Rejected Poet: Alexander Pope and Lady Mary Wortley (1863)

Wednesday, November 7, 2012

John Callcott Horsley

John Callcott Horsley (1817-1903) was an English genre painter. According to Wikipedia, he also designed the first Christmas card.

 A Portrait Group of Queen Victoria with Her Children (ca. 1865)

 Pay for Peeping (1872)

 The Banker's Private Room: Negotiating a Loan (1870)

The New Dress (1865)
 The Poet's Theme

 The Pride of the Village (1839)

 The Truant in Hiding (1870)

 The Unwilling Salute (Discipline Oblige) (1878)

Youth and Age

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

A Golden Age?

This blog focuses on Victorian painting of the British Isles. Was this a golden age of British painting? I would argue that it was. There was certainly good painting done before Victoria's reign, and plenty of wonderful work since. But there was an explosion in the volume, sophistication, and, I would argue, the quality of painting produced during the time of Victoria.

It's not my purpose to delve into the causes of this explosion. Others have done so already. This is simply a place to share some of the splendid art of the era (and even the not-so-splendid: not all Victorian art was sublime, but there is some interest and appreciation possible even for the second-tier works).

A broad range of themes and traditions are encompassed by Victorian art. We have the Neoclassics, the Pre-Raphaelites, and the purveyors of rural nostalgia to an increasingly urban and industrial nation undergoing rapid change. And a legion of genre painters brought scenes of everyday life of all classes of society to the canvas.

We'll begin, appropriately, with some paintings of Queen Victoria herself. This is only a small sample of the large number of portraits of the Queen - she was a popular subject (so to speak).

In the first one, a young Victoria is shown receiving the news that she is to be Queen.

 Henry Tanworth Wells: Victoria Regina (1880)

 George Hayter: State Portrait of Queen Victoria (1838)

 George Hayter: The Marriage of Queen Victoria (1840)

This portrait of Victoria with her children was done shortly after the death of her beloved husband Prince Albert. Examination of the painting shows that her oldest son is holding an architectural drawing of the Crystal Palace, built for the Great Exhibition of 1851, and one of the wonders of the age.

 John Calcott Horsley: A Portrait Group of Queen Victoria with Her Children (ca. 1861)

 Alexander Melville: Queen Victoria of England (1845)

 Herbert Smith: Queen Victoria (ca. 1840)

 Sir David Wilkie: Queen Victoria (1840)

 Sir David Wilkie: The First Council of Queen Victoria (1838)