Kensington Gravel Pits | |
---|---|
Artist | John Linnell |
Year | 1811–12 |
Type | Oil on canvas, Landscape painting |
Dimensions | 71.1 cm× 106.7 cm(28.0 in× 42.0 in) |
Location | Tate Britain, London |
Kensington Gravel Pits is an 1812 landscape painting by the British artist John Linnell. [1] [2] [3]
Kensington Gravel Pits was a village located on the rural western outskirts of London, now part of Notting Hill at the junction of Bayswater Road and Kensington Church Street. It took its name from the gravel pits located there, used for as building materials for the capital's expanding West End. [4] The workers are shown digging out the gravel and then sieving it out into various grades in order to be used in the varying forms of construction. [5] Linnell and another young artist William Mulready lived in the village, which was popular with other artists during the Regency era including Augustus Wall Callcott and Thomas Webster. Linnell likely completed it after moving to new lodgings on the Edgware Road. [6]
It was exhibited at the British Institution in 1813. Today it is in the collection of the Tate Britain in Pimlico having been acquired in 1947. [7]
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Kensington Gravel Pits was an old village located at the junction of what are now known as Bayswater Road and Kensington Church Street. This area is now known as Notting Hill Gate. The village was named after gravel quarries located between the village and the town of Kensington. It was a popular location for artists during the early nineteenth century with John Linnell, Thomas Webster and others living in the area. Another painter Augustus Wall Callcott was born there. Linnell's 1812 landscape painting Kensington Gravel Pits depicts the gravel pits during the Regency era.
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