Contact Seller
Radnorshire Fine Arts Ltd
Tel01597 272 439or07790 208 712Please quote Antiques Atlas.
Thrush Song Bird Watercolour Charles F Tunnicliffe
19th Century English Watercolour
Harry Goodwin (1842–1925) Lucerne Twilight, 1892
Sussex Watercolour Fairlight and Pett.
Early English Watercolour c1800
Coastal Watercolour James Watson
Coastal Watercolour By John Mcdougal
Erotic Watercolour - ‘For My Next Trick’
Erotic Watercolour - ‘Surprise Surprise’
Erotic Watercolour - 'In Reception'
Large Victorian Painting Cornish Ship Wrecked
Scottish Painting Firth of Forth Dysart
Non UK callers :
+44 1597 272 439
or +44 7790 208 712
or +44 7790 208 712
Clarkson Stanfield (1793–1867)


On the Coast
Pencil and watercolour highlighted with white on grey paper.
Indistinctly signed Clarkson Stanfield, bottom right.
Framed and glazed.
To view in close-up please view on my website.
Stanfield was regarded as the greatest British marine artist of his day. The public preferred the immediacy and high finish of his sea paintings, to the misty visions of J. M. W. Turner's later years, and John Ruskin praised him at length in Modern Painters (1843–60), drawing particular attention to his truthfully observed skies and his astonishing ability to render the movement and transparency of water. His most impressive work is the vast Battle of Trafalgar (1836 London, United Services Club). It combines his expertise at drawing ships with the scene painter's talent for working on a large scale.
In addition to his oil paintings, Stanfield produced many watercolours. He also furnished illustrations for several books. In 1847 he and his family moved into the Green-Hill, a large house in Hampstead. It became a meeting-place for writers and artists including William Makepeace Thackeray, Edwin Henry Landseer, C. R. Leslie and Charles Dickens.
PriceSOLD DimensionsImage 7 in x 11 3/4 in. (17.7 cm x 30 cm.) Frame 15 1/4 in x 19 1/2 in. (39 cm x 49.7 cm.) Category Antique Pictures / Engravings / Art > Antique Watercolours Period 19th Century Antiques Material Paper Origin British Condition This watercolour has been cleaned while conserving all original materials, including paper labels. Item code as176a183 Status Sold
SellerRadnorshire Fine Arts Ltd
View all stock from
Radnorshire Fine Arts Ltd

Private dealer
By appointment only
Powys
Mid Wales
Tel : 01597 272 439
or : 07790 208 712
Non UK callers : +44 1597 272 439 or +44 7790 208 712
Pencil and watercolour highlighted with white on grey paper.
Indistinctly signed Clarkson Stanfield, bottom right.
Framed and glazed.
To view in close-up please view on my website.
Stanfield was regarded as the greatest British marine artist of his day. The public preferred the immediacy and high finish of his sea paintings, to the misty visions of J. M. W. Turner's later years, and John Ruskin praised him at length in Modern Painters (1843–60), drawing particular attention to his truthfully observed skies and his astonishing ability to render the movement and transparency of water. His most impressive work is the vast Battle of Trafalgar (1836 London, United Services Club). It combines his expertise at drawing ships with the scene painter's talent for working on a large scale.
In addition to his oil paintings, Stanfield produced many watercolours. He also furnished illustrations for several books. In 1847 he and his family moved into the Green-Hill, a large house in Hampstead. It became a meeting-place for writers and artists including William Makepeace Thackeray, Edwin Henry Landseer, C. R. Leslie and Charles Dickens.
PriceSOLD DimensionsImage 7 in x 11 3/4 in. (17.7 cm x 30 cm.) Frame 15 1/4 in x 19 1/2 in. (39 cm x 49.7 cm.) Category Antique Pictures / Engravings / Art > Antique Watercolours Period 19th Century Antiques Material Paper Origin British Condition This watercolour has been cleaned while conserving all original materials, including paper labels. Item code as176a183 Status Sold
View all stock from
Radnorshire Fine Arts Ltd

Private dealerBy appointment only
Powys
Mid Wales
Tel : 01597 272 439
or : 07790 208 712
Non UK callers : +44 1597 272 439 or +44 7790 208 712
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