Alfred Priest

Alfred Priest
Born 1810
Norwich
Died 1850
Norwich
Nationality English
Education Henry Ninham and others
Known for Landscape painting
Movement Norwich School of painters

Alfred Priest (1810–1850) was an English painter of landscapes and a member of the Norwich School of painters.

Life

Beach Scene 1849, Norfolk Museums Collections

Priest was born in Norwich in 1810, the son of a chemist, who educated him to follow his profession. Acting against his father's wishes, he left Norwich. He returned to his home city after a period at sea and then briefly worked as an apprentice to a surgeon in the nearby town of Downham Market. He studied etching under the water-colourists Henry Ninham and James Stark, and the etcher E. W. Cooke. He specialised in marine painting and is noted for his depictions of water and waves. He moved to London in 1835, but returned to Norwich in 1848, living there for a further two years before he died of tuberculosis in 1850, aged forty.[1]

Priest exhibited at the Society of British Artists in 1837 and 1838, and at the Royal Academy in 1939, painting river scenes so as to demonstrate his ability to depict flowing water. The works he exhibited were Scene at Taverham, Norfolk, Water Mill, Maple Durham, near Reading and Iffley Mill, near Oxford.[2]

His choice of subject matter in his oli paintings and watercolours was shared with Miles Edmund Cotman, who visited him in Reading, and it seems that the artists worked closely together for a period. During the 1840s their styles diverged, with Priest working less meticulously than his colleague.[2]

References

  1. Walpole, Art and Artists of the Norwich School, p.156.
  2. 1 2 Moore, The Norwich School of Artists, p. 136.

Bibliography

  • Moore, Andrew W. (1985). The Norwich School of Artists. HMSO/Norwich Museums Service.
  • Walpole, Josephine (1997). Art and Artists of the Norwich School. Woodbridge: Antique Collectors' Club. ISBN 1-85149-261-5.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.