John Atkinson Grimshaw (Leeds 1836-1893)
Property from an Important Private Collection
John Atkinson Grimshaw (Leeds 1836-1893)

A wet road, Knostrop, Yorkshire

Details
John Atkinson Grimshaw (Leeds 1836-1893)
A wet road, Knostrop, Yorkshire
signed and dated 'Atkinson Grimshaw/1886/+' (lower left) and further signed, inscribed and dated 'A wet road/(Knostrop. Yorks.)/Atkinson Grimshaw/1886/+' (on the reverse)
oil on canvas
30 x 25 1/8 in. (76.2 x 63.5 cm.)
Provenance
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, London, 6 November 1995, lot 204.
with Richard Green, London, 1996, from whom purchased by the present owner.

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Clementine Sinclair
Clementine Sinclair

Lot Essay

One of the most recognisable subjects created by Grimshaw is of a quiet lane flanked by high walls, trees, a partly hidden mansion, and a figure, or two, usually female, positioned somewhere along a leaf strewn road, highlighting the peaceful stillness of the moment. The detail is remarkable in the mass of intricate tracery of branches silhouetted against the bold, moonlit sky, masterfully reflected in the windows of the house and in the small pools of water in the lane.

The compositional motif was first created in the early 1870s, when Grimshaw and his family had moved to Knostrop Hall, a seventeenth-century manor house on the River Aire at the eastern edge of Leeds. The house in the present painting is very similar in architectural details to that of Knostrop Hall, particularly in the gabling, entrance porch and gateposts surmounted with spherical ornaments, but these have been placed in the roadside wall, rather than at the entrance to a sweeping circular driveway as was the case at Knostrop.

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