23077

Attributed to JOHN ATKINSON GRIMSHAW (British

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Attributed to JOHN ATKINSON GRIMSHAW (British
<B>Attributed to JOHN ATKINSON GRIMSHAW </B></I>(British 1836-1893)<BR><I>Gloucester Dock</B></I>, 1890<BR>Oil on canvas<BR>12 x 18 inches (30.5 x 45.7 cm)<BR>Signed lower left [strengthened]: <I>Atkinson Grimshaw 1890</B></I><BR>Signed, titled and dated on verso<BR> <BR>John Atkinson Grimshaw scholar, Alexander Robertson, has kindly examined the present work from photographs, and has noted that it is one of five versions of this subject known to him, one of which he rejected as an autograph work by the artist some years ago. While he noted that from photographs alone he was unable to give a definitive opinion on this painting's authorship, Mr. Robertson offered the following observations in email correspondence with Heritage on October 28, 2007: "What struck me immediately about the present painting is that the signature has been ‘gone over,‘ which is unusual but has been seen on other Grimshaws when someone has wished to change the attribution to Atkinson from his son Arthur's name. Having said this, however, the underlying name does seem to be Atkinson. The top version is a crude attempt to imitate the artist's usual way of signing. Various other parts of this work are unconvincing especially the cathedral tower which seems very wobbly! Also I do not like the various highlight effects on the end of the barge in rather crude green paint. Of course there is the possibility that this was an unfinished picture left lying around and someone else finished it later." <BR><BR>John Atkinson Grimshaw was a later nineteenth-century British landscape painter who worked in a meticulous manner associated with Pre-Raphaelite painting. He was born in Leeds into modest circumstances and to parents who were strict Baptists. His mother so strongly disapproved of his interest in painting that on one occasion she destroyed all his paints. Despite the resistance of his family, Grimshaw, who worked as a clerk at the Great Northern Railway office in Leeds, eventually decided to become a full-time painter in 1861. He first became popular in Leeds, working initially as a figurative painter (a la Holman Hunt, one of his earliest inspirations), then as a still-life painter, and later specialized in moonlit scenes along the Thames and other waterways, and narrow city streets illuminated by gaslight as well. When William Agnew became his dealer in London, Grimshaw's fortunes changed. By 1870 he was in a position to buy Knostrop Old Hall, a large seventeenth-century manor house two miles from Leeds. There, he and his wife Fanny had fifteen children although only six reached adulthood. <BR><BR>Grimshaw was a major force in establishing the Leeds City Art Gallery. He campaigned for it vigorously since it was first suggested by Edmund Bates in 1862, and after a long struggle it was eventually opened in 1888. The Gallery mounted annual spring exhibitions in which Grimshaw was always represented. <BR><BR>We are grateful to Alexander Robertson, former Senior Curator at Leeds City Art Gallery, for his kind assistance in cataloguing this lot. He is the author of <I>Atkinson Grimshaw 1836-1893</B></I>, exh. cat. Leeds, Southampton and Liverpool, 1980, and <I>Atkinson Grimshaw</B></I>, Phaidon, Oxford, 1988. <B>Condition Report:</B> Original canvas<BR><BR><b>Shipping:</b> Requires 3rd Party Shipping (<a target="_blank" href="http://www.heritageauctions.com/common/shipping.php">view shipping information</a>)