|
||||||
Brief Life Atkinson Grimshaw Victorian ArtistGrimshaw Leeds Artist of Civic Architecture Docks and Landscape
Atkinson Grimshaw is remembered for moonlit cityscapes. His works represent contradictions between Victorian industrialisation and a Romantic longing for times past.
Little is known of his life. We do know he was born in 1836 in Leeds, Yorkshire, to struggling, deeply Protestant, working-class parents. His father was a clerk on the railway and his mother ran a grocery shop. Atkinson Grimshaw Early Life In 1852 Grimshaw also became a railway clerk with Great Northern Railway but , against his parents’ wishes, began painting in his spare time despite, it is believed, his mother burning his work and turning the gas off in his room. When Grimshaw married Frances Hubbarde in 1852 the couple lived in a small house in Leeds. Frances, an essential companion to Grimshaw, bore fifteen children,only six of whom reached adulthood. Grimshaw’s artistic success eventually enabled them to occupy larger homes in Leeds and Scarborough. Atkinson Grimshaw and Industrial RevolutionLeeds at this time was a booming Victorian city. A manufacturing elite was reaping the rich harvest of the Industrial Revolution. They demonstrated their new wealth by building gothic houses to rival the landed gentry, furnishing them with original artworks. Grimshaw reflected these times and his work eventually attracted rich industrialists. His patrons ensured Grimshaw a steady flow of work. Not only did he satisfy his clients’ needs by interpreting the civic pride of Northern cities through architectural accuracy but, by his representations of sunsets and moonlight, he touched them with his ability to replicate a feeling of nostalgia and alienation. Despite the triumphs of industrialism, there was a romantic longing for simpler times, a feeling that something of the human spirit was being eroded. The hub of Victorian commercial life depended on the docks. Grimshaw’s paintings, particularly of Liverpool docks, often at twilight, rain-swept, lamp-lit, with their ambiguous figures, were hugely popular. Contemporary Influences on Atkinson GrimshawHis moonlight works became known as ‘poems in paint’ and indeed, he was particularly influenced by Tennyson’s Idylls of the King. Another literary link was mentioned by Grimshaw’s daughter, Elaine, who claimed that her father’s rendition of Whitby by moonlight had influenced Bram Stoker’s description of that town in his novel, Dracula. Even his Scarborough home was named Castle-by-the-Sea from the poem by Longfellow. Other works demonstrated his interest in the artistic and scientific innovations of the day. Grimshaw’s landscapes of North Yorkshire and the Lakes were influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites. Nature is enhanced with a hallucinatory, jewel-like detail of form and colour. Photography helped him achieve such perfection. By contrast, his beach scenes with their small figures and mass of sand and sky, point to Darwinism, the passing of time and humanity’s fleeting presence. Grimshaw rented a studio in Chelsea in 1885. His daughter describes her father’s supposed friendship with James McNeil Whistler as a close one, Whistler acknowledging ‘Grimmy’s’ greater technique when it came to moonlight and perspective. During his London sojourn Grimshaw painted nocturnal views of the Thames and well-known landmarks, as well as more socially aware works featuring prostitutes and their clients. Atkinson Grimshaw Last Years.The paintings executed by Grimshaw towards the end of his life saw the stripping away of inessentials. His work seems to anticipate the St Ives school of the 1920s. His last paintings were snow scenes. In Snow and Mist a solitary figure walks towards a snowy horizon bereft of anything yet completely at one with the bleached out landscape. For a man who represented the contradictions of Victorian society, the expansion of cities coupled with a sense of decay and alienation, these last works seem to represent a Zen-like calm. Atkinson Grimshaw died in Leeds of cancer, aged fifty-eight. Sources:
Relevant Articles:
The copyright of the article Brief Life Atkinson Grimshaw Victorian Artist in Art & Society is owned by Kathleen Duffy. Permission to republish Brief Life Atkinson Grimshaw Victorian Artist in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
|
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
|
||||||