This highly illustrated book provides fresh assessments of the life and work of William Powell Frith, one of the most celebrated visual chroniclers of the mid-Victorian scene. William Powell Frith (1819-1909), famous for his picture
The Derby Day which normally hangs at Tate Britain, was not only the most celebrated painter of modern-life subjects in mid-Victorian England, but the most popular British artist of that time. Published to mark the bicentenary of his birth and in association with an exhibition at the Mercer Art Gallery, Harrogate, this richly illustrated volume of essays offers fresh and fascinating perspectives on Friths career and context. Despite dramatic shifts in taste with regard to Victorian painting during subsequent generations, Friths name has never been eclipsed, let alone forgotten unlike those of most of his genre-painter contemporaries as an introductory survey of critical responses to the artists work reveals. This provides a starting point for investigations, drawing on much new and original material, of three of Friths great panoramas of the Victorian world
Life at the Sea-Side (Ramsgate Sands), The Derby Day and
The Private View at the Royal Academy, 1881. Further contributions explore important but hitherto neglected aspects of Friths personal life and professional activity. Of significant biographical interest are studies of Friths close connections with Yorkshire (the county of his birth and also his first wife Isabelles) and his friendships with contemporary writers, notably the Sensation novelist Mary Elizabeth Braddon. The artists less well-known historical genre pictures are reappraised, with focus on the early success of
An English Merry-Making, A Hundred Years Ago, while the key role played by the print trade in the widespread dissemination of Friths images is examined in detail for the first time. An intriguing manifestation of Friths popularisation was the re-creation of certain of his most famous compositions as
tableaux on the London stage, yet another fresh topic in this presentation of The Peoples Painter. Revisiting Frith and his achievement through new approaches, this book confirms his position as the pre-eminent visual chronicler of the mid-Victorian scene and the importance of his place in the history of British art.
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