Derwent Water
James Baker Pyne (1800 - 1870)
Thomas Picken (1815 - 1870)
Colour lithograph
1 June 1859-
About the work
- Location
-
Country: Morocco
City: Rabat
Place: British Embassy
-
About the artist
Landscape painter James Baker Pyne was born in Bristol, where he worked as a self-taught artist until the age of 35. He gave painting lessons to William James Müller, who later became an artist of repute. In 1835 Pyne moved to London, exhibiting his work at the Royal Academy, British Institution and New Watercolour Society over two decades. In his early period he painted views and scenery around Bristol but after 1835 he travelled to Italy and elsewhere on the Continent, gathering material to work up into finished pictures. Pyne was an admirer and imitator of Turner; his dramatic effects and use of pale yellow tones reflecting Turner's influence. Today, his records of works produced from 1840 to 1868 are in the Victoria and Albert Museum.
Landscape lithographer and painter Thomas Picken was the younger brother of draughtsman and lithographer Andrew (1815-1845). The brothers were two of four sons of novelist Andrew Picken (1788-1833) and his wife Janet Coxon (1792-1871). Thomas made lithographs for David Roberts's ‘The Holy Land’ (1842-49), William Payne's ‘The Lake Scenery of England’ (1859), John Parker Lawson's ‘Scotland Delineated’ (1847-54) and other works. He exhibited one painting at the Royal Academy in 1857 and ten at the Society of Artists, Suffolk Street (1846-75). Although generally thought to have emigrated to Australia in 1870, a 2004 entry in the ‘Oxford Dictionary of National Biography’ reports that he was an inmate of the Charterhouse, London, from 1879.
-
Explore
- Places
- England, Lake District, Cumbria
- Subjects
- topography, landscape C19th, lake, shore, man
- Materials & Techniques
- colour lithograph
-
Details
- Title
- Derwent Water
- Date
- 1 June 1859
- Medium
- Colour lithograph
- Acquisition
- Purchased from Baynton-Williams, February 1977
- Inscription
- below image: [centre] DERWENT WATER [remainder of text illegible]
- GAC number
- 12852