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Fenland Reed Cutters
REF
2217
Height
59 cm (23 1/4")
Width
79 cm (31")
Framed Height
82 cm (32 1/4")
Framed Width
102 cm (40 1/4")
ROBERT WALKER MACBETH, RA
(1848-1910)
Fenland Reed Cutters
Signed with initials and dated 1900
Oil on canvas
59 by 79 cm., 23 ¼ by 31 in.
(frame size 82 by 102 cm., 32 ¼ by 40 in.)
Provenance:
Agnews;
Fine Art Society, London.
Macbeth was born in Glasgow, the son of the Scottish portrait painter Norman Macbeth, RSA. He first studied at the Royal Scottish Academy, before moving to London in 1870 to join the staff of The Graphic. On his arrival in London he first exhibiting at the Dudley Gallery. He soon became acquainted with Hubert von Herkomer, Fred Walker, George Pinwell and George Heming Mason who together would loosley form a group known as the Idyllists who tended to paint rustic and realist scenes, often including depictions of rural poverty. He first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1873 and also showed at the Royal Watercolour Society and Grosvenor Gallery.
Macbeth was fond of depicting the hard life of the labourers working in the Fenlands of East Anglia. In spite of the dramatically beautiful light in the flat fen landscape and there is no mistaking the heavy toil and hardship of the life of these rural workers, yet in spite of this the figures still retain their own nobility.
(1848-1910)
Fenland Reed Cutters
Signed with initials and dated 1900
Oil on canvas
59 by 79 cm., 23 ¼ by 31 in.
(frame size 82 by 102 cm., 32 ¼ by 40 in.)
Provenance:
Agnews;
Fine Art Society, London.
Macbeth was born in Glasgow, the son of the Scottish portrait painter Norman Macbeth, RSA. He first studied at the Royal Scottish Academy, before moving to London in 1870 to join the staff of The Graphic. On his arrival in London he first exhibiting at the Dudley Gallery. He soon became acquainted with Hubert von Herkomer, Fred Walker, George Pinwell and George Heming Mason who together would loosley form a group known as the Idyllists who tended to paint rustic and realist scenes, often including depictions of rural poverty. He first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1873 and also showed at the Royal Watercolour Society and Grosvenor Gallery.
Macbeth was fond of depicting the hard life of the labourers working in the Fenlands of East Anglia. In spite of the dramatically beautiful light in the flat fen landscape and there is no mistaking the heavy toil and hardship of the life of these rural workers, yet in spite of this the figures still retain their own nobility.
Height
59 cm (23 1/4")
Width
79 cm (31")
Framed Height
82 cm (32 1/4")
Framed Width
102 cm (40 1/4")
Year | 1900 |
---|---|
Medium | Oil on canvas |
Country | United Kingdom |
Signed | Signed with initials and dated 1900 |
Provenance | Agnews; Fine Art Society, London. |
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