WARD, James - b. 1769 London, d. 1859 Cheshunt - WGA

WARD, James

(b. 1769 London, d. 1859 Cheshunt)

English painter and engraver. Until about the end of the century he painted mainly anecdotal genre scenes in the manner of his brother-in-law George Morland, but he then turned to the paintings of animals in landscape settings for which he is remembered. They are often dramatic and Romantic in character and their rich colouring was influenced by Rubens (Bulls Fighting, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, c. 1804). His taste for natural grandeur and the Sublime often led him to work on a large scale, as in the enormous Gordale Scar (Tate Gallery, London, 1811-15). Ward had many admirers, including Delacroix and Géricault, but he lived in retirement from the 1830s and ended his life in poverty. His brother William (1766-1826) was an engraver.

A Horse Drinking at a Stream
A Horse Drinking at a Stream by

A Horse Drinking at a Stream

The painting is signed lower right: 1838 J W D R A.

Gordale Scar
Gordale Scar by

Gordale Scar

James Ward tried to express his own emotionally charged faith through a masterpiece of natural observation, his gigantic Gordale Scar finished in 1813. Here the towering expanse of rock and thundering cataract, set beneath a stormy sky, takes on a symbolism of its own. The encircling amphitheatre of the Scar becomes a microcosm, and the beasts who graze or lock antlers before it - few of which had actually roamed there since much earlier times - emphasize its primordial state. The white bull who watches over them is probably a very contemporary mark of British resolve in the face of Napoleonic attack.

Marengo
Marengo by

Marengo

The English painter could not have given a more apt or dramatic depiction of Napoleon’s fall from power than in this psychological image of his tragic fate. Marengo was Napoleon’s horse. We see it fretting to and fro, trembling on the brink, as it looks out over the see for its lost rider. The animal’s emotional state mirrors the catastrophic events. Lonely, riderless, and unsaddled, the stallion’s fear is visible in its eyes, the restless unease expressed in every muscle of its body. The distant horizon present under the darkening evening sky, into which the former wold conqueror has had to flee, leaving his faithful steed behind, is the metaphor in the painting for the historic event.

The Escape
The Escape by

The Escape

This oil sketch is related to James Ward’s 1827 painting on panel, entitled The Escape (private collection).

The Runaway Wagon
The Runaway Wagon by

The Runaway Wagon

James Ward is best known for his accomplished animal studies although he also expertly captured people and landscapes; in this composition, he brings all three components together to create an engaging scene.

The painting is signed and inscribed on the wagon: ‘I.WARD.x/Paddington’.

Feedback