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19th Century English Landscape Painters
History does not as
a rule divide itself into neat lengths exactly coincident
with the centuries, and in a sense the period from William Hogarth to the death of JMW Turner is a single stage of development. But this period does fall, very naturally, into two parts, which correspond roughly with the last seventy-five years of the eighteenth century and the first fifty years of the nineteenth. In the first part the figure-painters, especially the portrait-painters, are dominant, and landscape-painters are struggling for recognition; in the second, landscape comes into its own, and in figure-painting there is a general decline from the standards of Joshua Reynolds and others.
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Sir John Everett Millais
(8 June 1829 –
13 August 1896) was an English painter and illustrator
and one of the founder of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood.
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Photograph of Millais, 1854
Pre-Raphaelite works
This style
was promoted by the critic John Ruskin, who had
defended the Pre-Raphaelites against their critics. Millais' friendship with Ruskin introduced him to Ruskin's wife Effie. Soon after they met she modelled for his painting «The Order of Release». As Millais painted Effie they fell in love. In 1856 Effie and John Millais married. He and Effie eventually had eight children including John Guille Millais, a notable naturalist and wildlife artist.
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John Everett Millais by Thomas Brock at Tate
Britain
Millais died in 1896
from throat cancer.
Memorial statue
Memorial statue was installed at the front of the National Gallery of British Art in 1905.
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Gallery
«Isabella»(1849)
«Christ In The House Of His Parents»
(1850)
«The Order of Release» (1853)
Portrait of Effie
Millais (1873)
The Two Princes Edward and Richard in the Tower (1878)
«Cherry Ripe» (1879)
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«Sir Isumbras at the Ford» (1857)
«The Black
Brunswicker» (1860)
«The Blind Girl» (1856)
«The Boyhood of Raleigh»
(1871)
«The Northwest Passage» (1878)
«Effie Deans»
«Victory O Lord!» (1871)
«Vanessa» (1868)
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Joseph Mallord William Turner
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Joseph Mallord William Turner (23 April 1775 –
19 December 1851) was an English Romantic landscape painter,
watercolourist and printmaker.
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Biography
Turner was born in Maiden
Lane, Covent Garden, London. His father, William Gay Turner,
was a barber and wig maker. His mother, Mary Marshall, became increasingly mentally unstable, possibly due in part to the early death of Turner's younger sister, Helen Turner, in 1786. Mary Marshall died in 1804.
His father's death in 1829 had a profound effect on him, and thereafter he was subject to bouts of depression. He never married, although his two daughters by Sarah Danby were born in 1801 and 1811.
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«The shipwreck of the Minotaur», oil on canvas.
«Chichester
Canal's» (1815).
«Calais Pier»
Turner's 1813 watercolour, «Ivy Bridge»
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John Constable
Self-portrait 1806, pencil on paper, Tate
Gallery London. Constable drew this profile, his only indisputable
self-portrait, by an arrangement of mirrors.
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John Constable (11 June 1776 – 31 March
1837) was an English Romantic painter. Born in Suffolk,
he is known principally for his landscape paintings of Dedham Vale.
«Dedham Vale» (1802)
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Charles Leslie:«His nature was peculiarly social and could
not feel satisfied with scenery, however grand in itself,
that did not abound in human associations. He required villages, churches, farmhouses and cottages».
«Wivenhoe Park» (1816)
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Marriage and maturity
John and Maria's marriage
in October 1816 at St Martin-in-the-Fields.
Maria Bicknell, painted by
Constable in 1816
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«Weymouth Bay» (1816)
«The Hay Wain» (1821)
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The Constable tomb
Constable died on the night of
the 31st March, apparently from indigestion, and was buried
with Maria in the graveyard of St John-at-Hampstead, Hampstead. (His children John Charles Constable and Charles Golding Constable are also buried in this family tomb.