Thomas Lound | |
---|---|
Born | Beeston St Andrew, Norfolk, England | 13 July 1801
Died | 18 January 1861 59) Norwich, England | (aged
Nationality | British |
Known for | Landscape painting |
Movement | Norwich School of painters |
Spouse | Harriot Wetherill (m. 1821;died 1859) |
Thomas Lound (13 July 1801 –18 January 1861) was an amateur English painter and etcher of landscapes, who specialised in depictions of his home county of Norfolk. He was a member of the Norwich School of painters, and lived in the city of Norwich all his life.
Born into a wealthy brewing family, Lound was affluent enough to possess his own photographic equipment as well as to pursue his passion for art. He become an avid collector of works of art, and particularly admired (and collected) the paintings of the Norwich painter John Thirtle. Lound was popular amongst his contemporaries, and close friends with the Norwich artists Robert Leman, Henry Bright and John Middleton. Throughout his life he suffered from ill health, and he died suddenly of apoplexy at the age of 59, a year after the deaths of his wife and son.
Lound is considered by art historians to rank among the best of the watercolourists of the Norwich School. He was trained by John Sell Cotman, but his artistic style was more heavily influenced by the landscapist David Cox. Lound's etchings, never produced for public display, show the influence of drypoint technique of Edward Thomas Daniell. He was also a competent copyist with a talent for imitating the artistic style of other artists. His oil paintings contain both broad brush and fine brushwork; he exhibited 12 works with the Norwich Society of Artists from 1820 to 1833, and showed works in London at the British Institution and the Royal Academy of Arts.
Parish records show that Thomas Lound was born on 13 July 1801, the son of Thomas and Mary Lound, and was christened by his parents in the parish church of Beeston St Andrew, Norfolk on 9 August 1801. [1] Little is known of his childhood. [2]
Lound married Harriot Wetherill on Christmas Day 1821, [3] and there were several children. An amateur artist, he was involved with his family's brewing business in Norwich, Charles Tompson & Sons, which was the source of his wealth. [4] [5] He was later employed as an agent for the insurance company County Fire and Provident Life Office. He lived in comfort, residing throughout his adult life on King Street, in the centre of Norwich. [6]
Popular amongst his peers, [4] Lound was a great friend of the amateur artist Robert Leman. [5] [7] Together with Leman, the artists Henry Bright and John Middleton and Lound were all close friends. [8] Along with Leman and David Hodgson, Lound was a member of the Norwich Amateur Club; he and Hodgson helped to revitalise the Norwich Artists' Conversaziones. [9] [note 1] He used his yacht Kathleen, which was adorned with a number of oil paintings, as a venue for entertaining his friends. [6] He is known to have travelled to Wales with Leman in 1851, and surviving sketchbooks show that he went to Wales and Yorkshire on sketching tours in 1845, 1853 and 1854. [12]
Lound was an avid collector of other artists' works, in particular those painted by the Norwich painter John Thirtle. [13] A great admirer of Thirtle, Lound used his wealth to acquire 75 of the artist's paintings. [6]
A keen photographer, Lound was wealthy enough to possess his own photographic equipment, [14] and was a committee member of the Norwich Photographic Society. [15] Little of his work as a photographer appears to have survived. He exhibited waxed-paper views of Ely Cathedral, Norwich fish market, and the ruins of Bromholm Priory. [4]
Lound's wife Harriot died in 1859, and his son Henry Edwin Lound also predeceased him, dying in 1860. [16] Lound, who suffered from ill health all his life, died suddenly of apoplexy on 18 January 1861 whilst at his Norwich house in King Street. [17] His will was proved in February that year, with his two daughters Ellen and Harriot acting as executors. [18] His large art collection, which was sold the following month, included 39 sketches, 215 watercolours, 46 oil paintings, and 11 etchings. [5] [19] Almost all the volumes from his library sold at auction after his death were art books. [20]
Lound was one of a group of talented amateurs who learnt from the previous two generations of Norwich School artists. [21] He was a pupil of the artist John Sell Cotman, although his influence was not as great as that of the English landscape painter David Cox. [22] [23] Lound became an accomplished draughtsman whose charcoal and chalk drawings resemble those by Joseph Stannard. [22]
Lound was a prolific watercolourist despite working for the family business throughout his working life. [16] [24] He specialised in producing views of his native county of Norfolk. [4] The art historian Josephine Walpole considers Lound as ranking amongst Leman, Bright, Middleton, John Sell Cotman and his sons, and Thirtle as the best of the Norwich School watercolourists, [7] but also notes that Lound lacked the skill and consistent quality displayed by his amateur friends. [2] She describes the many small watercolours he produced as spontaneous, charming, and full of vitality. [24]
Writing in the 1980s, the art historian Andrew Moore has praised View of Norwich (Mill in Foreground) as "the most perfect example of Lound's original compositions". [2] Lound with Leman helped to form the Norfolk and Norwich Art Union, and was a while its president. [5] The art historian Derek Clifford describes his drawings as having "been done before by somebody else; so that every Lound is, as it were, a Thirtle or a Cotman or a Bright or a Cox". [23] Lound's works have at times been confused with those of Cotman, Crome, and Thirtle. [5] The Norwich Mercury praised his powers as an amateur artist. [16] According to Clifford, the "sometimes rather good" material contained in Lound's sketchbooks provides "a glimpse of the man himself". [23]
Lound exhibited twelve works with the Norwich Society of Artists from 1820 to 1833, first exhibiting his painting St Benet's Abbey. [25] He exhibited in London from 1845 to 1859, showing pictures at the British Institution and the Royal Academy of Arts. [5]
Lound was a competent copyist, reproducing works such as Cotman's St. Martin's Gate, Norwich and his Yarmouth Jetty, as well as paintings by John Crome, Robert Dixon, Cox and Joseph Stannard. [26] [27] He had a talent for imitating the artistic style of other artists; the engraving of Thirtle's Devil's Tower—looking towards Carrow Bridge by Lound illustrates his ability as an etcher by the way he conveys the balance of tints and shades in Thirtle's original composition. [13]
Lound's 20 known etchings show the influence of drypoint technique of Edward Thomas Daniell, whose own etchings have a dark, rich quality. [28] Along with Henry Ninham, Lound began to adopt Daniell's technique after 1831. [29] His etchings—and those of Ninham and Miles Edmund Cotman—are very small in comparison with those produced by contemporaries such as Cotman, Daniell and Stannard. [13] They were not produced for public display, but were intended to be viewed closely by Lound's friends. After the mid-1830s Lound seems not to have etched any more, although he continued to paint and draw for another 30 years. [30]
Lound was influenced by Cotman in his style of oil painting. His oils contain both broad brush and fine brushwork, but according to Walpole, his oil paintings are less assured than his watercolours. [22]
John Crome, once known as Old Crome to distinguish him from his artist son John Berney Crome, was an English landscape painter of the Romantic era, one of the principal artists and founding members of the Norwich School of painters. He lived in the English city of Norwich for all his life. Most of his works are of Norfolk landscapes.
John Sell Cotman was an English marine and landscape painter, etcher, illustrator, and a leading member of the Norwich School of painters.
The Norwich School of painters was the first provincial art movement established in Britain, active in the early 19th century. Artists of the school were inspired by the natural environment of the Norfolk landscape and owed some influence to the work of landscape painters of the Dutch Golden Age such as Hobbema and Ruisdael.
Joseph Stannard was an English marine, landscape and portrait painter. He was a talented and prominent member of the Norwich School of painters.
James Stark was an English landscape painter. A leading member of the Norwich School of painters, he was elected vice-president of the Norwich Society of Artists in 1828 and became their president in 1829. He had wealthy patrons and was consistently praised by the Norfolk press for his successful London career.
George Vincent was an English landscape painter who produced watercolours, etchings and oil paintings. He is considered by art historians to be one of the most talented of the Norwich School of painters, a group of artists connected by location and personal and professional relationships, who were mainly inspired by the Norfolk countryside. Vincent's work was founded on the Dutch school of landscape painting as well as the style of John Crome, also of the Norwich School. The school's reputation outside East Anglia in the 1820s was based largely upon the works of Vincent and his friend James Stark.
Edward Thomas Daniell was an English artist known for his etchings and the landscape paintings he made during an expedition to the Middle East, including Lycia, part of modern-day Turkey. He is associated with the Norwich School of painters, a group of artists connected by location and personal and professional relationships, who were mainly inspired by the Norfolk countryside.
John BerneyCrome was an English landscape and marine painter associated with the Norwich School of painters. He is sometimes known by the nickname 'Young Crome' to distinguish him from his father John, known as 'Old Crome'.
James Sillett was an English still life and landscape artist. He showed himself to be one of the most versatile of the Norwich School of painters: although the great majority of his works were still lifes and landscapes, he was also a drawing master and a miniaturist. His botanical paintings illustrations have been praised for their accuracy and attention to detail. These and his still life paintings are considered to be his best work, with some experts ranking him with William Jackson Hooker, whose illustrations were both accurate and charming. Sillett's own accurate depictions of plants were often used for book illustrations. His paintings often have an academic style, influenced by the masters of the eighteenth century in a way that set him apart from his Norwich contemporaries. He exhibited at the Royal Academy between 1796 and 1837.
Miles Edmund Cotman was an English artist of the Norwich School of painters, the eldest son of John Sell Cotman.
John Thirtle was an English watercolour artist and frame-maker. Born in Norwich, where he lived for most of his life, he was a leading member of the Norwich School of painters.
Joseph Clover was an English portrait painter and a member of the Norwich School of painters. He was born in Aylsham, in the English county of Norfolk, one of the twelve children of Thomas and Ann Clover, who owned a drapery business in the town. Few details of his early years are known. He was engaged to be married, but his fiancée, a local girl, died in 1801. He started his career as an engraver but was advised to give it up. Inspired to turn to portrait painting when the artist John Opie painted one of his relatives, he became Opie's pupil, and studied under him for four years. His paintings often use a generous amount of paint, handled freely in a fashion that was characteristic of Opie.
John Middleton was an English artist known for his accomplished watercolour paintings. He was the youngest and the last important member of the Norwich School of painters, which was the first provincial art movement in Britain. As well as being a talented etcher, he produced oil paintings and was an enthusiastic amateur photographer.
The brothers John Cantiloe Joy, and William Joy, were English marine artists, who lived and worked together. They belonged to the Norwich School of painters, considered to be a unique phenomenon in the history of British art and the most important school of painting of 19th century England.
Henry Ninham was an English landscape artist, engraver and heraldic painter. He and his father John Ninham belonged to the Norwich School of painters, a group of artists who all worked or lived in Norwich during all or part of their working lives from around 1800 to 1880. Along with the Norwich School artists John Thirtle and David Hodgson, he was the foremost recorder of Norwich's architectural heritage prior to the invention of photography.
Obadiah Short was an amateur British painter of landscapes. He is associated with the Norwich School of painters, which was the first provincial art movement in Britain. He wrote a detailed account of his childhood memories and produced accurate paintings of Norwich scenes, both of which have provided historians with a record of the city he lived in all his life.
Robert Orgill Leman (1799–1869) was an English painter of landscapes and a member of the Norwich School of painters.
Alfred Priest was an English painter of landscapes and marine artist, and a member of the Norwich School of painters. Born in Norwich, he was educated to follow his father in becoming a pharmacist, but he left home to work at sea, before briefly working as an apprentice surgeon.
David Hodgson was a professional English painter of landscapes and an active member of the Norwich School of painters. He was the son of the amateur artist Charles Hodgson, whom he accompanied on a tour of Wales in 1805, when he was seven. He was taught art by John Crome at Norwich Grammar School.
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