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David Wilkie
Sir David Wilkie (November 18, 1785 - June 1, 1841)
was a Scottish painter.
Wilkie was the son of the parish minister of Cults
in Fife. He developed a love for art at an early age. In 1799, after
he had attended school at Pitlessie, Kettle and Cupar, his father
reluctantly agreed to his becoming a painter. Through the influence
of the Earl of Leven Wilkie was admitted to the Trustees' Academy
in Edinburgh, and began the study of art under John Graham. From
William Allan (afterwards Sir William Allan and president of the
Royal Scottish Academy) and John Burnet, the engraver of Wilkie's
works, we have an interesting account of his early studies, of his
indomitable perseverance and power of close application, of his
habit of haunting fairs and marketplaces, and transferring to his
sketchbook all that struck him as characteristic and telling in
figure or incident, and of his admiration for the works of Carse
and David Allan, two Scottish painters of scenes from humble life.
Among his pictures of this period are mentioned a subject from Macbeth,
Ceres in Search of Proserpine, and Diana and Calisto, which in 1803
gained a premium of ten guineas at the Trustees' Academy, while
his pencil portraits of himself and his mother, dated that year,
and now in the possession of the Duke of Buccleuch, prove that Wilkie
had already attained considerable certainty of touch and power of
rendering character. A scene from Allan Ramsay, and a sketch from
Macneill's ballad of Scotland's Skaith, afterwards developed into
the well-known Village Politicians, were the first subjects in which
his true artistic individuality began to assert itself.
In 1804 Wilkie returned to Cults, established himself
in the manse, and began his first important subject-picture, Pitlessie
Fair, which includes about 140 figures, and in which he introduced
portraits of his neighbours and of several members of his family
circle. In addition to this elaborate figure-piece, Wilkie was much
employed at the time upon portraits, both at home and in Kinghorn,
St Andrews and Aberdeen. In the spring of 1805 he left Scotland
for London, carrying with him his Bounty-Money, or the Village Recruit,
which he soon disposed of for £6, and began to study in the
schools of the Royal Academy. One of his first patrons in London
was Stodart, a pianoforte maker, a distant connection of the Wilkie
family, who commissioned his portrait and other works and introduced
the young artist to the dowager-countess of Mansfield. This lady's
son was the purchaser of the Village Politicians, which attracted
great attention when it was exhibited in the Royal Academy of 1806,
where it was followed in the succeeding year by the Blind Fiddler,
a commission from the painter's lifelong friend Sir George Beaumont.
Wilkie now turned aside into the paths of historical
art, and painted his Alfred in the Neatherd's Cottage, for the gallery
illustrative of English history which was being formed by Alexander
Davison. After its completion he returned to genre-painting, producing
the Card-Players and the admirable picture of the Rent Day which
was composed during recovery from a fever contracted in 1807 while
on a visit to his native village. His next great work was the Ale-House
Door, afterwards entitled The Village Festival (now in the National
Gallery), which was purchased by John Julius Angerstein for 800
guineas. It was followed in 1813 by the well-known Blind Man's Buff,
a commission from the Prince Regent, to which a companion picture,
the Penny Wedding, was added in 1818.
Meanwhile, Wilkie's eminent success in art had
been rewarded by professional honours. In November 1809 he was elected
an associate of the Royal Academy, when he had hardly attained the
age prescribed by its laws, and in February 1811 he became a full
Academician. In 1812 he opened an exhibition of his collected works
in Pall Mall, but the experiment was unsuccessful, entailing pecuniary
loss upon the artist.
In 1814 he executed the Letter of Introduction,
one of the most delicately finished and perfect of his cabinet pictures.
In the same year he made his first visit to the continent, and in
Paris entered upon a profitable and delighted study of the works
of art collected in the Louvre. Interesting particulars of the time
are preserved in his own matter-of-fact diary, and in the more sprightly
and flowing pages of the journal of Haydon, his fellow traveller.
On his return he began Distraining for Rent, one of the most popular
and dramatic of his works. In 1816 he made a tour through Holland
and Belgium in company with Raimbach, the engraver of many of his
paintings. The Sir Walter Scott and his Family, a cabinet-sized
picture with small full-length figures in the dress of Scottish
peasants, was the result of a visit to Abbotsford in 1818. Reading
a Will, a commission from the king of Bavaria, now in the New Pinakothek
at Munich, was completed in 1820; and two years later the great
picture of Chelsea Pensioners Reading the Gazette of the Battle
of Waterloo, commissioned by the Duke of Wellington in 1816, at
a cost of 1200 guineas, was exhibited at the Royal Academy.
Sir David Wilkie's flattering portrait of the kilted King George
IV for the Visit of King George IV to Scotland, with lighting chosen
to tone down the brightness of his kilt and his knees shown bare,
without the pink tights he wore at the event.In 1822 Wilkie visited
Edinburgh, in order to select from the Visit of King George IV to
Scotland a fitting subject for a picture. The Reception of the King
at the Entrance of Holyrood Palace was the incident ultimately chosen;
and in the following year, when the artist, upon the death of Raeburn,
had been appointed Royal Limner for Scotland, he received sittings
from the monarch, and began to work diligently upon the subject.
But several years elapsed before its completion; for, like all such
ceremonial works, it proved a harassing commission, uncongenial
to the painter while in progress and unsatisfactory when finished.
His health suffered from the strain to which he was subjected, and
his condition was aggravated by heavy domestic trials and responsibilities.
In 1825 he sought relief in foreign travel: after visiting Paris,
he went to Italy, where, in Rome, he received the news of fresh
disasters through the failure of his publishers. A residence at
Toplitz and Carlsbad was tried in 1826, with little good result,
and then Wilkie returned to Italy, to Venice and Florence. The summer
of 1827 was spent in Geneva, where he had sufficiently recovered
to paint his Princess Doria Washing the Pilgrims' Feet, a work which,
like several small pictures executed in Rome, was strongly influenced
by the Italian art by which the painter had been surrounded. In
October he passed into Spain, whence he returned to England in June
1828.
It is impossible to over-estimate the influence
upon Wilkie's art of these three years of foreign travel. It amounts
to nothing short of a complete change of style. Up to the period
of his leaving England he had been mainly influenced by the Dutch
genre-painters, whose technique he had carefully studied, whose
works he frequently kept beside him in his studio for reference
as he painted, and whose method he applied to the rendering of those
scenes of English and Scottish life of which he was so close and
faithful an observer. Teniers, in particular, appears to have been
his chief master; and in his earlier productions we find the sharp,
precise, spirited touch, the rather subdued colouring, and the clear,
silvery grey tone which distinguish this master; while in his subjects
of a slightly later period--those, such as the Chelsea Pensioners,
the Highland Whisky Still and the Rabbit on the Wall, executed in
what Burnet styles his second manner, which, however, may be regarded
as only the development and maturity of his first--he begins to
unite to the qualities of Teniers that greater richness and fulness
of effect which are characteristic of Ostade. But now he experienced
the spell of the Italian masters, and of Diego Velázquez
and the great Spaniards.
In the works which Wilkie produced in his final
period he exchanged the detailed handling, the delicate finish and
the reticent hues of his earlier works for a style distinguished
by breadth of touch, largeness of effect, richness of tone and full
force of melting and powerful colour. His subjects, too, were no
longer the homely things of the genre-painter: with his broader
method he attempted the portrayal of scenes from history, suggested
for the most part by the associations of his foreign travel. His
change of style and change of subject were severely criticized at
the time; to some extent he lost his hold upon the public, who regretted
the familiar subjects and the interest and pathos of his earlier
productions, and were less ready to follow him into the historic
scenes towards which this final phase of his art sought to lead
them. The popular verdict had in it a basis of truth: Wilkie was
indeed greatest as a genre-painter. But on technical grounds his
change of style was criticized with undue severity. While his later
works are admittedly more frequently faulty in form and draughtsmanship.
than those of his earlier period, some of them
at least (the "Bride's Toilet," 1837, for instance) show
a true gain and development in power of handling, and in mastery
over complex and forcible colour harmonies. Most of Wilkie's foreign
subjects--the "Pifferari," "Princess Doria,"
the "Maid of Saragossa," the "Spanish Podado,"
a "Guerilla Council of War," the "Guerilla Taking
Leave of his Family" and the "Guerilla's Return to his
Family"--passed into the English royal collection; but the
dramatic" Two Spanish Monks of Toledo," also entitled
the "Confessor Confessing," became the property of the
marquis of Lansdowne. On his return to England Wilkie completed
the "Reception of the King at the Entrance of Holyrood Palace,"--a
curious example of a union of his earlier and later styles, a "mixture"
which was very justly pronounced by Haydon to be "like oil
and water." His "Preaching of John Knox before the Lords
of the Congregation" had also been begun before he left for
abroad; but it was painted throughout in the later style, and consequently
presents a more satisfactory unity and harmony of treatment and
handling. It was one of the most successful pictures of the artist's
later period.
In the beginning of 1830 Wilkie was appointed to
succeed Sir T Lawrence as painter in ordinary to the king, and in
1836 he received the honour of knighthood. The main figure-pictures
which occupied him until the end were "Columbus in the Convent
at La Rabida" (1835); "Napoleon and Pius VII. at Fontainebleau"
(1836); "Sir David Baird Discovering the Body of Tippoo Sahib"
(1838); the "Empress Josephine and the Fortune-Teller"
(1838); and "Queen Victoria Presiding at her First Council"
(1838). His time was also much occupied with portraiture, many of
his works of this class being royal commissions. His portraits are
pictorial and excellent in general distribution, but the faces are
frequently wanting in drawing and character. He seldom succeeded
in showing his sitters at their best, and his female portraits,
in particular, rarely gave satisfaction. A favourable example of
his cabinet-sized portraits is that of Sir Robert Listen; his likeness
of W. Esdaile is an admirable three-quarter length; and one of his
finest full-lengths is the gallery portrait of Lord Kellie, in the
town hall of Cupar.
In the autumn of 1840 Wilkie resolved on a voyage
to the East. Passing through Holland and Germany, he reached Constantinople,
where, while detained by the war in Syria, he painted a portrait
of the young sultan. He then sailed for Smyrna and travelled to
Jerusalem, where he remained for some five busy weeks. The last
work of all upon which he was engaged was a portrait of Mehemet
Ali, done at Alexandria. On his return voyage he suffered from an
attack of illness at Malta, and died at sea off Gibraltar on the
morning of the 1st of June 1841. His body was consigned to the deep
in the Bay of Gibraltar.
An elaborate Life of Sir David Wilkie, by Allan
Cunningham, containing the painter's journals and his observant
and well-considered "Critical Remarks on Works of Art,"
was published in 1843. Redgrave's Century of Painters of the English
School and John Burnet's Practical Essays on the Fine Arts may also
be referred to for a critical estimate of his works. A list of the
exceptionally numerous and excellent engravings from his pictures
will be found in the Art Union Journal for January 1840. Apart from
his skill as a painter Wilkie was an admirable etcher. The best
of his plates, such as the "Gentleman at his Desk" (Laing,
VII), the "Pope examining a Censer" (Laing, VIII), and
the "Seat of Hands" (Laing, IV), are worthy to rank with
the work of the greatest figure-etchers. During his lifetime he
issued a portfolio of seven plates, and in 1875 Dr David Laing catalogued
and published the complete series of his etchings and dry-points,
supplying the place of a few copper-plates that had been lost by
reproductions, in his Etchings of David Wilkie and Andrew Geddes.
The paintings are the excellent portrayal of the events and scenes
that we see around us. The painters are the best cameras of the
world. They reproduce many different types of pictures. They even
draw imaginary pictures that do not exist in this world. We tend
to use both thinned oil paints and dense oil paints. Masterpieces
can be dyed more than once, but each time it may be different from
the existing paintings.h
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