George Vincent (1796-1831)
Artist Name | George Vincent (1796-1831) |
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Title | Norwich School Landscape |
Description | An original oil on canvas by Norwich School artist George Vincent. A rare work, it depicts in Constablesque fashion a man and a dog in the foreground with the wooded landscape and stream as a backdrop. The painting has come via Christie’s and Appleby Bros London and is housed in a fine Norwich School frame. Painted circa 1820, it is a fine example of a British Old Master landscape painting. Housed in a fine Norwich School frame |
Provenance | Christie’s London. Appleby Bros London Gallery |
Medium | Oil on Canvas |
Size | 24 x 20 inches |
Frame | Housed in a gallery frame. 32 inch by 28 inch. In excellent condition and ready to hang. |
Condition | In good condition. |
Biography | George Vincent (1796-1831) was born in Norwich on 27th June, 1796, the son of James Vincent, a cloth manufacturer. After his education at Norwich Grammar School, Vincent became a pupil of John Crome (1768-1821), later known as 'Old Crome', one of the finest English landscape painters who was the founder and inspiration of The Norwich School. Cromes three most important and accomplished students were his son, John BerneyCrome (1794-1842), James Stark (1794-1859) and George Vincent. The three painters were to become close friends, who frequently travelled together and consequently influenced each other's work. In 1816 Vincent visited France with John BerneyCrome and toured Essex with Stark, which resulted in paintings by all three artists. When Vincent first went to London in 1817 he lived in Newman Street, alongside Stark, and they were both admitted as students in the school attached to the British Institution in Pall Mall. In 1819, when Vincent was perhaps at the height of his powers, he toured Scotland, almost certainly in the company of Stark. Following Crome's death in 1821, Vincent married in 1822 and bought himself a good house in Camden Town, partly on the strength of his wife's supposed prosperity. However his income and her wealth must not have lived up to expectations, as by 1824 he had left Camden for a smaller studio and by December of that year his debts had caused him to be incarcerated in the debtor's gallery of the Fleet Prison, from which he was not discharged until February 1827. Vincent was able to paint whilst in prison and continued to do so after his release, exhibiting for the last time in 1831, which is frequently given as the date of his death. However there are records in the British Museum indicating that he inherited part of his father's estate in 1833, so it is likely that died sometime in the mid 1830s. Due to his short life, Vincent's paintings are comparatively rare but it is indicative of the quality of his work that in spite of this he is regarded so highly as an artist and as one of the foremost painters of the Norwich School, which in itself was an important and influential movement in English art. Exhibited : Royal Academy 1814, 1823; British Institution 1815, 1831; Society of British Artists 1824, 1830; Norwich Exhibitions 1811, 1831 Museums : Victoria Albert Museum, London; Castle Museum, Norwich; Nottingham; Sheffield References : East Anglian Painters Volume II, Harold DayPainters of the Norwich School, W. F. Dickes |
Price | SOLD |