WILSON, Richard - b. 1714 Penegoes, d. 1782 Colommendy - WGA

WILSON, Richard

(b. 1714 Penegoes, d. 1782 Colommendy)

One of the earliest major British landscape painters, whose works combine a mood of classical serenity with picturesque effects.

In 1729 Wilson studied portraiture with Thomas Wright in London and after about 1735 worked on his own in this genre. From 1746 his work shows a growing interest in landscape that, soon after his arrival in Italy late in 1750, became almost exclusive. Staying at first in Venice, he met the landscape painter Francesco Zuccarelli. Early in 1752 he went to Rome and became part of an art circle that included the painters Joseph Vernet and Anton Raphael Mengs. He remained in Rome until 1757, working mostly for aristocratic English tourists. He produced not only large landscapes in the manner of Nicolas Poussin, Salvator Rosa, and Claude Lorrain but also numerous drawings of Roman sites and buildings, which he used in composing Italianate landscapes after his return to England. The finest of these is a set of drawings made for Lord Dartmouth and dated 1754. They show how Wilson tempered his delicate observation of light and distance with the discipline of such 17th-century classical Baroque painters as Poussin and Claude. Returning to London probably in 1757, he became influential as a teacher and, after 1760, as an exhibitor with the Society of Artists and the Royal Academy. He was a founding member of the academy in 1768 and, from 1776, its librarian, a post he took to relieve his poverty.

Though continuing to produce Italian landscapes, Wilson now turned to depicting his own country, especially Wales and the rural environs of London. The order and clarity rather than the classical apparatus of Italy survive, and Wilson’s exact and tranquil recording of clear or suffused air, distance, and varied lights predominates, as in his famed Snowdon. His landscapes of this period exerted considerable influence on J.M.W. Turner, John Constable, and John Crome. Wilson’s later works, such as Minchenden House, tend to abandon formal composition, using tonal methods of recording space. Many works ascribed to him, especially late ones, are partly the work of his pupils.

The Mawddach Valley and Cader Idris
The Mawddach Valley and Cader Idris by

The Mawddach Valley and Cader Idris

Wilson was a pupil of Thomas Wright in London and, like his master, specialised in portrait painting to begin with. His visit to Italy (1750-1758) took him first to Venice, then to Rome. While in Italy he decided to abandon portrait painting for landscape, later becoming the first great British landscape painter. The principal sources of his inspiration were Poussin, Lorrain and Vernet, and he also owed something to Dutch landscape painting of the late 17th century Among his finest works are his English landscape and Welsh mountain scenes, which are executed with topographical accuracy and show great skill in composition and a finely graded palette in the way they convey the expanse and peace of the lakes and hills.

The Vale of Narni
The Vale of Narni by

The Vale of Narni

It was in Britain that a new, emotional response to landscape first appeared in art. Though he spent his formative years in Rome and made his name with classic evocations of an ideal Italy, the Welsh-born Richard Wilson brought a new appreciation of light and atmosphere to even his grandest compositions. His beautiful Vale of Narni, with its arching stone pines and tender light, could never be described as ‘superior wallpaper’. For the Romantic generation of Turner and Constable, Wilson was the one earlier compatriot they took seriously.

The White Monk
The White Monk by
View of Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle
View of Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle by

View of Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle

Wilson composes his landscape entirely in blues, greens and browns linked together in finely transparent shading. The atmosphere carries itself and no longer depends on individual pictorial components as its vehicle. The outlines of the mountains, trees, and shoreline, and the mirror image on the water, create their own system of movement and counter-movement that requires no stabilizing compositional techniques.

View of Syon House across the Thames near Kew Gardens
View of Syon House across the Thames near Kew Gardens by

View of Syon House across the Thames near Kew Gardens

Syon House was formerly a convent, founded by Henry V. in 1414, for sixty virgins of the order of St Bridget of Zion, thirteen priests, four deacons, and eight lay-brothers; each sex to live in separate convents, and not to be allowed to come out, except by the Pope’s special licence.

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