JOHN ATKINSON GRIMSHAW (BRITISH, 1836-1893)
JOHN ATKINSON GRIMSHAW (BRITISH, 1836-1893)
JOHN ATKINSON GRIMSHAW (BRITISH, 1836-1893)
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JOHN ATKINSON GRIMSHAW (BRITISH, 1836-1893)

A moonlit landscape

Details
JOHN ATKINSON GRIMSHAW (BRITISH, 1836-1893)
A moonlit landscape
signed 'Atkinson Grimshaw/ ILML/ +' (lower left)
oil on board laid down on panel
14 ¼ x 18 in. (35.8 x 45 cm.)
Provenance
Anonymous sale; Sotheby's, Belgravia, 2 October 1979, lot 271.
The Nicolette Wernick Collection; Christie's, London, 16 June 2010, lot 86, where purchased by the present owner.
Exhibited
Springfield, Massachusetts, George Walter Vincent Smith Art Museum, 19th-century English art: from the collection of Harold and Nicolette Wernick, January 14-March 13th, 1988, no. 60.
Special Notice
This lot has been imported from outside of the UK for sale and placed under the Temporary Admission regime. Import VAT is payable at 5% on the hammer price. VAT at 20% will be added to the buyer’s premium but will not be shown separately on our invoice.

Brought to you by

Alastair Plumb
Alastair Plumb Specialist, Head of Sale, European Art

Lot Essay

This is a rare work from the 1870s, the decade in which Grimshaw established his reputation as a painter of 'nocturnes'. In contrast to some of his later depictions of the lanes of suburban Leeds there is nothing formulaic about it: the artist has responded to the landscape before him with a fresh eye and the greatest sensitivity. The composition is carefully balanced, with a lonely figure wending his way towards the farmstead in the trees to the left. The cloudscape in the 'mackerel' sky is particularly finely judged.

In his early career Grimshaw painted views, notably in the Lake District, with Pre-Raphaelite intensity and attention to detail. Later, in the 1860s, he enjoyed the friendship of John Linnell. Linnell was the father-in-law of Samuel Palmer, and some of Palmer and Linnell's ideas undoubtedly influenced the younger artist, especially after works by Linnell were shown at the Leeds Infirmary in 1868. The present picture falls squarely within this tradition of English Romanticism, an elegy to the particular beauties of the British countryside made magical by the light of a full moon.

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