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Richard Wright (painter)

Richard Wright (c. 1723c. 1775) was an English marine painter. An entirely self-taught artist, he first appeared as an exhibitor in London in 1760, and between that date and 1773 exhibited twenty-five works with the Incorporated Society of Artists and one with the Free Society.[1][2]

Richard Wright
The Battle of Quiberon Bay, 21 November 1759: the Day After
Bornc. 1723
Liverpool, England
Diedc. 1775
AwardsSociety of Arts
1764, 1766, 1768 Best Marine Picture

Works edit

One of Wright's earliest known works is a picture of the St Nicholas Church, Liverpool, known as 'The Sailor's Church', and where Wright himself was probably baptised. The scene depicts the church and surrounding buildings viewed across the River Mersey from "Man's Island". It was one of several works originally executed by Wright for his shoemaker.[3]

Wright first came to public attention 1762 after when he regularly exhibited at the Society of Artists until 1773. Exhibited works included A Storm with a Shipwreck, Sunset, a Fresh Breeze, A Fresh Gale, River with Boats, &c., Moonlight. The latter is thought to be A moonlit river landscape with a windmill, boats and figures, exhibited between 1770 and 1773 and sold at Christie's, London, in 2012 for £6000.[4] In 1764 a fifty guinea premium was offered by the Society of Arts for the best marine picture; this he won, as was the case with similar prizes given by the society in 1766 and 1768.

Wright's career encompassed the latter years of the Seven Years' War and several of his works depict naval battles and the vessels involved. His painting of the Battle of Quiberon Bay, fought on 20 November 1759 and painted in 1760, depicts the wrecked 74-gun Resolution in the right foreground with the 64-gun Essex ahead of her and the French Soleil-Royal and Héros in flames in the right distance. To the left are the captured French 80-gun Formidable, with a two-deck English vessel.[5]

Wright painted a scene from the action off the Isle of Man that took place on the 28 February 1760 in which Aeolus under John Elliot, with Brilliant and Pallas, attacked a French squadron under François Thurot aboard the flagship Marischal de Belle Isle that resulted in Thurot's death and the surrender of all three French frigates.[6][7] Wright also painted an accompanying picture of the ships in Ramsey Bay after the action. Measuring 50.5 in (128 cm) by 36.5 in (93 cm), the paintings were engraved by Millar and Goldar and dedicated to Captain Elliot and the Merchants of the Port of Liverpool respectively.[8] Wright is noted as having been on board the Belle Isle sketching in the aftermath of the battle.[9]

In 1761 Wright painted several pictures of the storms encountered on the journey from Stade to Harwich of the Royal Yacht Fubbs that conveyed Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz to England to marry George III. One in the Royal Collection at Hampton Court Palace, The Royal Yacht bringing Queen Charlotte to England in a Storm is thought to be the picture first exhibited by Wright in 1762 as A View of the Storm when the Queen was on her passage to England.[1][10][11] The flotilla was led by Admiral Lord Anson aboard the Royal Caroline and his wife, Mary, accompanied Princess Charlotte aboard the Fubbs. Joshua Reynolds painted separate portraits of both Anson and his wife and Wright contributed background detail to each of them. The version of Anson's portrait in the National Gallery pre-dates Wright's intervention.[12][13]

 
'Favourite' and 'Active' taking 'Hermione'

In 1762 Wright painted a picture depicting the capture of the Spanish frigate Hermione by the 28-gun frigate HMS Active and the 18-gun sloop-of-war Favourite off the coast of Spain near the port of Cadiz in the action of 31 May 1762.[6]

 
The original version of The Fishery by Richard Wright
 
The Fishery engraved by William Woollett, after Richard Wright

His most notable work is a sea-piece, for which he obtained a premium of fifty guineas in 1764; from it William Woollett engraved his fine plate ‘The Fishery.’[6] No doubt owing to excellence of the engraver's work, a copy of this was published in France, on which the name of Vernet was affixed as painter.[14] The ship has been identified as HMS Neptune (1757). The engraving embellishes the original painting, adding the words "Fish Machine" to a horse-drawn fish cart in the detail of the foreground fishing scene from which the popular name derives.[15]

Around 1767 Wright painted Man of War in a Harbour depicting a Man-of-War of about 60 guns flying an Admiral's flag departing from harbour led by several more distant similar-sized ships and smaller craft in line ahead formation. The ship's figurehead, viewed from the rear, appears to be of a figure wearing kilt and glengarry, suggesting a Scottish name, but the ship has yet to be identified.[16] Like The Fishery, the foreground detail depicts fishermen unloading their catch. The detail of the fish is sufficient to identify the species.[17] Sold by Wright to Jervoise Clarke for sixty guineas the painting remained in the family collection until sold at auction in 1975. It was purchased by the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, in 2006.[15]

An indistinctly-dated oil on panel entitled Shipping in a bay by a ruined tower was sold by Christie's, New York, in 2007 for $2500.[18]

Personal edit

Sources vary in their estimates of Wright's year of birth. Bryan, who many other sources draw on, states 1735, but an article in The Connoisseur observes that this was probably too late, as he would only have been eighteen on the birth of his eldest son.[1][2] It is probable that the 4 April 1723 baptismal entry for Richard Wright, son of Edward Wright, at St. Nicholas Church, Liverpool, relates to him.[19]

The following year Wright's longtime friend, artist George Stubbs, is also thought to have been baptised at St Nicholas.[20][better source needed] Wright was also a near neighbour of William Caddick. Richard initially worked as a house and ship painter and had no formal training as an artist. With little patronage for his trade in Liverpool, he moved to London around 1760, his address being recorded as 'Near King's Road, Pimlico'. There he was able to resume his friendship with Stubbs by 1762.[4]

He was described by Horace Walpole as a man of rough manners and warm temper, and during his membership of the Incorporated Society he took an active lead among those discontented with its affairs.[1][11][21]

With his wife, Louisa, Wright had a son, Edward, and two daughters: Nancy and Elizabeth. All three children were baptised at St Nicholas.[19] Walpole noted that both Wright's wife and children all painted and exhibited, mostly still life and fruit pieces.[14] Louisa, maiden name unknown, exhibited still lifes at the Society of Artists from 1770 to 1777.[2] Edward, (baptised 10 April 1746), and Nancy (born 29 May 1748, baptised 24 June) both exhibited landscapes at the Society of Artists in 1772 and 1773. Elizabeth (born 25 March 1751, baptised 26 April) exhibited landscapes at the Society of Artists between 1773 and 1776.[19] The family friendship with Stubbs is evidenced by Elizabeth's use of Stubbs' address, 24 Somerset Street, Portman Square, on some of her submissions for exhibition.[2]

Edward pre-deceased his father, aged about twenty. Wright died soon afterwards, following an unsuccessful exhibition in York about the same time as his son's death, in about 1775 and was survived by his wife.[2][14]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Bryan, Michael; Williamson, George Charles (1925). Bryan's dictionary of painters and engravers (revised ed.). p. 398. (First edition 1816).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  2. ^ a b c d e Grundy, C.R., ed. (December 1911). "Richard Wright, of Liverpool". The Connoisseur. Vol. 43. London: Otto. pp. 60–61.
  3. ^ "Ancient and Modern Liverpool". The Gentleman's Magazine. February 1823. p. 105.
  4. ^ a b "Richard Wright of Liverpool (Liverpool c. 1720-c. 1775) | A moonlit river landscape with a windmill, boats and figures". Christie's. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  5. ^ "The Battle of Quiberon Bay, 21 November 1759: the Day After". Greenwich: National Maritime Museum. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  6. ^ a b c Smithers, Henry (1825). Liverpool, its commerce, statistics, and institutions: with a history of the cotton trade. T. Kaye. p. 402.
  7. ^ Crimmin, P. K. "Pasley, Sir Thomas". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 23 June 2015. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  8. ^ Feltham, John (1798). A Tour Through the Island of Mann, in 1797 and 1798: Comprising Sketches of Its Ancient and Modern History, Constitution, Laws, Commerce, Agriculture, Fishery, &c. Bath: R. Cruttwell. p. 195.
  9. ^ Roeder, C., ed. (1904). "Francois Thurot (1727-1760) and his naval engagement off the Isle Of Man". Manx Notes & Queries. Douglas: S.K. Broadbent. pp. I–XVI. Retrieved 26 June 2015.
  10. ^ Richard Wright. "Queen Charlotte's passage to England". Royal Collection Trust. Inventory no. 403525.
  11. ^ a b Redgrave, Samuel (1878). A Dictionary of Artists of the English School: Painters, Sculptors, Architects, Engravers and Ornamentists: with notices of their lives and work. London: George Bell and Son. p. 488.
  12. ^ "Philip Mould | Historical Portraits | George Anson, 1st Baron Anson | Sir Joshua Reynolds P.R.A. | Item Details". Philip Mould. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  13. ^ "Princess Charlotte's Passage to England, September 1761". Art UK. Retrieved 2 July 2015.
  14. ^ a b c Edwards, Edward; Walpole, Horace (1808). Anecdotes of painters, who have resided or been born in England: with critical remarks on their productions. Leigh and Sotheby. p. 48.
  15. ^ a b "Background information". Walker Art Gallery. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  16. ^ "Facts about the ship". Walker Art Gallery. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  17. ^ "Identifying the fish in 'Man of War in a Harbour'". Walker Art Gallery. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  18. ^ "R. Wright (British, 18th Century) | Shipping in a bay by a ruined tower". Christie's. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
  19. ^ a b c Nicholson, Albert; Peach, Annette. "Wright, Richard (c. 1720-c. 1775), marine painter". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. Retrieved 26 June 2015. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  20. ^ Stubbs, Peter (31 May 2005). "Researching George Stubbs - the artist". RootsWeb.com.
  21. ^ Graves, Algernon (1884). A dictionary of artists who have exhibited works in the principal London Exhibitions of Oil Paintings from 1760 to 1880. London: George Bell and Sons. p. 262. (NB Digitised copy page missing).{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)

External links edit

  • 7 artworks by or after Richard Wright at the Art UK site. Retrieved 16 September 2012.

richard, wright, painter, other, people, named, richard, wright, richard, wright, disambiguation, richard, wright, 1723, 1775, english, marine, painter, entirely, self, taught, artist, first, appeared, exhibitor, london, 1760, between, that, date, 1773, exhibi. For other people named Richard Wright see Richard Wright disambiguation Richard Wright c 1723 c 1775 was an English marine painter An entirely self taught artist he first appeared as an exhibitor in London in 1760 and between that date and 1773 exhibited twenty five works with the Incorporated Society of Artists and one with the Free Society 1 2 Richard WrightThe Battle of Quiberon Bay 21 November 1759 the Day AfterBornc 1723 Liverpool EnglandDiedc 1775AwardsSociety of Arts 1764 1766 1768 Best Marine Picture Contents 1 Works 2 Personal 3 References 4 External linksWorks editOne of Wright s earliest known works is a picture of the St Nicholas Church Liverpool known as The Sailor s Church and where Wright himself was probably baptised The scene depicts the church and surrounding buildings viewed across the River Mersey from Man s Island It was one of several works originally executed by Wright for his shoemaker 3 Wright first came to public attention 1762 after when he regularly exhibited at the Society of Artists until 1773 Exhibited works included A Storm with a Shipwreck Sunset a Fresh Breeze A Fresh Gale River with Boats amp c Moonlight The latter is thought to be A moonlit river landscape with a windmill boats and figures exhibited between 1770 and 1773 and sold at Christie s London in 2012 for 6000 4 In 1764 a fifty guinea premium was offered by the Society of Arts for the best marine picture this he won as was the case with similar prizes given by the society in 1766 and 1768 Wright s career encompassed the latter years of the Seven Years War and several of his works depict naval battles and the vessels involved His painting of the Battle of Quiberon Bay fought on 20 November 1759 and painted in 1760 depicts the wrecked 74 gun Resolution in the right foreground with the 64 gun Essex ahead of her and the French Soleil Royal and Heros in flames in the right distance To the left are the captured French 80 gun Formidable with a two deck English vessel 5 Wright painted a scene from the action off the Isle of Man that took place on the 28 February 1760 in which Aeolus under John Elliot with Brilliant and Pallas attacked a French squadron under Francois Thurot aboard the flagship Marischal de Belle Isle that resulted in Thurot s death and the surrender of all three French frigates 6 7 Wright also painted an accompanying picture of the ships in Ramsey Bay after the action Measuring 50 5 in 128 cm by 36 5 in 93 cm the paintings were engraved by Millar and Goldar and dedicated to Captain Elliot and the Merchants of the Port of Liverpool respectively 8 Wright is noted as having been on board the Belle Isle sketching in the aftermath of the battle 9 In 1761 Wright painted several pictures of the storms encountered on the journey from Stade to Harwich of the Royal Yacht Fubbs that conveyed Princess Charlotte of Mecklenburg Strelitz to England to marry George III One in the Royal Collection at Hampton Court Palace The Royal Yacht bringing Queen Charlotte to England in a Storm is thought to be the picture first exhibited by Wright in 1762 as A View of the Storm when the Queen was on her passage to England 1 10 11 The flotilla was led by Admiral Lord Anson aboard the Royal Caroline and his wife Mary accompanied Princess Charlotte aboard the Fubbs Joshua Reynolds painted separate portraits of both Anson and his wife and Wright contributed background detail to each of them The version of Anson s portrait in the National Gallery pre dates Wright s intervention 12 13 nbsp Favourite and Active taking Hermione In 1762 Wright painted a picture depicting the capture of the Spanish frigate Hermione by the 28 gun frigate HMS Active and the 18 gun sloop of war Favourite off the coast of Spain near the port of Cadiz in the action of 31 May 1762 6 nbsp The original version of The Fishery by Richard Wright nbsp The Fishery engraved by William Woollett after Richard Wright His most notable work is a sea piece for which he obtained a premium of fifty guineas in 1764 from it William Woollett engraved his fine plate The Fishery 6 No doubt owing to excellence of the engraver s work a copy of this was published in France on which the name of Vernet was affixed as painter 14 The ship has been identified as HMS Neptune 1757 The engraving embellishes the original painting adding the words Fish Machine to a horse drawn fish cart in the detail of the foreground fishing scene from which the popular name derives 15 Around 1767 Wright painted Man of War in a Harbour depicting a Man of War of about 60 guns flying an Admiral s flag departing from harbour led by several more distant similar sized ships and smaller craft in line ahead formation The ship s figurehead viewed from the rear appears to be of a figure wearing kilt and glengarry suggesting a Scottish name but the ship has yet to be identified 16 Like The Fishery the foreground detail depicts fishermen unloading their catch The detail of the fish is sufficient to identify the species 17 Sold by Wright to Jervoise Clarke for sixty guineas the painting remained in the family collection until sold at auction in 1975 It was purchased by the Walker Art Gallery Liverpool in 2006 15 An indistinctly dated oil on panel entitled Shipping in a bay by a ruined tower was sold by Christie s New York in 2007 for 2500 18 Personal editSources vary in their estimates of Wright s year of birth Bryan who many other sources draw on states 1735 but an article in The Connoisseur observes that this was probably too late as he would only have been eighteen on the birth of his eldest son 1 2 It is probable that the 4 April 1723 baptismal entry for Richard Wright son of Edward Wright at St Nicholas Church Liverpool relates to him 19 The following year Wright s longtime friend artist George Stubbs is also thought to have been baptised at St Nicholas 20 better source needed Wright was also a near neighbour of William Caddick Richard initially worked as a house and ship painter and had no formal training as an artist With little patronage for his trade in Liverpool he moved to London around 1760 his address being recorded as Near King s Road Pimlico There he was able to resume his friendship with Stubbs by 1762 4 He was described by Horace Walpole as a man of rough manners and warm temper and during his membership of the Incorporated Society he took an active lead among those discontented with its affairs 1 11 21 With his wife Louisa Wright had a son Edward and two daughters Nancy and Elizabeth All three children were baptised at St Nicholas 19 Walpole noted that both Wright s wife and children all painted and exhibited mostly still life and fruit pieces 14 Louisa maiden name unknown exhibited still lifes at the Society of Artists from 1770 to 1777 2 Edward baptised 10 April 1746 and Nancy born 29 May 1748 baptised 24 June both exhibited landscapes at the Society of Artists in 1772 and 1773 Elizabeth born 25 March 1751 baptised 26 April exhibited landscapes at the Society of Artists between 1773 and 1776 19 The family friendship with Stubbs is evidenced by Elizabeth s use of Stubbs address 24 Somerset Street Portman Square on some of her submissions for exhibition 2 Edward pre deceased his father aged about twenty Wright died soon afterwards following an unsuccessful exhibition in York about the same time as his son s death in about 1775 and was survived by his wife 2 14 References edit a b c d Bryan Michael Williamson George Charles 1925 Bryan s dictionary of painters and engravers revised ed p 398 First edition 1816 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link a b c d e Grundy C R ed December 1911 Richard Wright of Liverpool The Connoisseur Vol 43 London Otto pp 60 61 Ancient and Modern Liverpool The Gentleman s Magazine February 1823 p 105 a b Richard Wright of Liverpool Liverpool c 1720 c 1775 A moonlit river landscape with a windmill boats and figures Christie s Retrieved 25 June 2015 The Battle of Quiberon Bay 21 November 1759 the Day After Greenwich National Maritime Museum Retrieved 26 June 2015 a b c Smithers Henry 1825 Liverpool its commerce statistics and institutions with a history of the cotton trade T Kaye p 402 Crimmin P K Pasley Sir Thomas Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press Retrieved 23 June 2015 Subscription or UK public library membership required Feltham John 1798 A Tour Through the Island of Mann in 1797 and 1798 Comprising Sketches of Its Ancient and Modern History Constitution Laws Commerce Agriculture Fishery amp c Bath R Cruttwell p 195 Roeder C ed 1904 Francois Thurot 1727 1760 and his naval engagement off the Isle Of Man Manx Notes amp Queries Douglas S K Broadbent pp I XVI Retrieved 26 June 2015 Richard Wright Queen Charlotte s passage to England Royal Collection Trust Inventory no 403525 a b Redgrave Samuel 1878 A Dictionary of Artists of the English School Painters Sculptors Architects Engravers and Ornamentists with notices of their lives and work London George Bell and Son p 488 Philip Mould Historical Portraits George Anson 1st Baron Anson Sir Joshua Reynolds P R A Item Details Philip Mould Retrieved 2 July 2015 Princess Charlotte s Passage to England September 1761 Art UK Retrieved 2 July 2015 a b c Edwards Edward Walpole Horace 1808 Anecdotes of painters who have resided or been born in England with critical remarks on their productions Leigh and Sotheby p 48 a b Background information Walker Art Gallery Retrieved 25 June 2015 Facts about the ship Walker Art Gallery Retrieved 25 June 2015 Identifying the fish in Man of War in a Harbour Walker Art Gallery Retrieved 25 June 2015 R Wright British 18th Century Shipping in a bay by a ruined tower Christie s Retrieved 25 June 2015 a b c Nicholson Albert Peach Annette Wright Richard c 1720 c 1775 marine painter Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press Retrieved 26 June 2015 Subscription or UK public library membership required Stubbs Peter 31 May 2005 Researching George Stubbs the artist RootsWeb com Graves Algernon 1884 A dictionary of artists who have exhibited works in the principal London Exhibitions of Oil Paintings from 1760 to 1880 London George Bell and Sons p 262 NB Digitised copy page missing a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint postscript link nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Nicholson Albert 1900 Wright Richard 1735 1775 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 63 London Smith Elder amp Co External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Richard Wright painter 7 artworks by or after Richard Wright at the Art UK site Retrieved 16 September 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Richard Wright painter amp oldid 1216099842, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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