Edward Lear 
(1812–1888), Monastery of Konstamonitou, 1856. Pen, brown ink and 
watercolour with bodycolour on buff paper, 29.7 x 45.7 cm© Private 
Collection, courtesy of Agnews.
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Blue and Yellow Macaw
OXFORD.-
The bicentenary of the birth of Edward Lear is being celebrated with events and exhibitions throughout the English-speaking world. As the home of the largest and most comprehensive collection of his work in the UK, the Ashmolean is mounting a retrospective exhibition covering all aspects of his career. From early natural history illustrations and extraordinary landscape sketches, to the nonsense drawings and verses for which Lear is so well known, the exhibition presents 100 works of art from the Ashmolean’s own Lear collection and important loans from the Bodleian Library and works from private collections, many of which will go on public display for the first time. Edward Lear is one of the most notable artists and popular writers of the Victorian period. Although best known for his literary nonsense in poetry and prose, Lear saw himself primarily as an artist.
Study of Palm Trees
HAPPY BIRTHDAY EDWARD LEAR presents his work chronologically, with watercolours, oil paintings, manuscripts, and illustrated books carefully selected to reflect every aspect of his artistic output. Among the highlights are watercolours of animals and birds; sketches made during his travels in Greece, Italy, Egypt and the Near East, and India; and a group of the Tennyson illustrations on which he spent the last twenty years of his life. Lear’s work as a painter in oils is represented by rarely seen evocations of Beachy Head, Venice, and landscapes in the Near East; and the great view of Jerusalem, painted in 1865, now in the Ashmolean. More than 30 loans from the University of Oxford’s libraries and private collections will bring together editions of the books Lear illustrated early in his career. These include copies of Lear’s travel books; the natural history publications to which he contributed; and the principal editions of his nonsense books. The exhibition also shows examples of the sketches and self-portraits he gave to his friends, as well as a nonsense alphabet composed for Ruth Decie, who was only a few days old, on 22 June 1862.
A Book Of Nonsense, 1862 edition
“Edward Lear is one of the most extraordinary figures in Victorian England. He was one of the greatest of all natural history illustrators, a highly original artist who travelled more widely and recorded the landscape more faithfully than almost any other, and also an endearing writer whose experiments with words long predate those of Lewis Carroll.” Colin Harrison, Senior Curator for European Art at the Ashmolean. Edward Lear was the 20th child born to Jeremiah and Ann Lear on 12 May 1812, in Holloway, London. He became one of the most extraordinary figures in Victorian England.
Gozo, Malta
Sociable and immensely engaging, he was also an epileptic, prone to long fits of melancholy, and once declared that “I HATE LIFE unless I WORK ALWAYS”. Lear’s earliest work was as an ornithological draughtsman, his outstanding achievement being the Illustrations of the Family of Psittacidae, or Parrots (1830–32). Between 1831 and 1837, he was a regular visitor to Knowsley Hall, where the 13th Earl of Derby kept the most important menagerie in Europe, and Lear’s studies of the animals were privately published as Gleanings from the Menagerie at Knowsley in 1846. While he was at Knowsley, he began to invent nonsense rhymes and drawings to amuse Lord Derby’s children. These were first gathered together as A Book of Nonsense in 1846, but it was not until the third edition of 1862, including wood engravings, that Lear’s nonsense began to enjoy the extraordinary popularity it still does today.
Plain of Thebes With Two Colossi
It was landscape painting which Lear himself most valued and for which he wished to be remembered. From 1837 onwards, he travelled more extensively than any other painter of the 19th century, recording the landscape as he went in an apparently endless succession of topographical drawings in pencil, which he annotated with the date, time, and a running number for each tour. These he later inked out and kept as a dictionary of compositions for his more commercial work, the finished watercolours he made in long series and, from the early 1850s, the oil paintings he made on commission.
NO NONSENSE !! I WISH I COULD BOARD A PLANE TO ENGLAND IMMEDIATELY TO SEE THIS EXHIBITION!!
A View Of The Roman Compagna
The Owl And The Pussycat
Please See Also:
Letter To Anna Duncan -- January 3, 1865 (Link)
'Gozo my child is the isle of Calypso' (Edward Lear) (Link)
There Was An Old Person Of Sheen (Edward Lear Selection) (Link)
OXFORD.- The 
bicentenary of the birth of Edward Lear is being celebrated with events 
and exhibitions throughout the English-speaking world. As the home of 
the largest and most comprehensive collection of his work in the UK, the
 Ashmolean is mounting a retrospective exhibition covering all aspects 
of his career. From early natural history illustrations and 
extraordinary landscape sketches, to the nonsense drawings and verses 
for which Lear is so well known, the exhibition presents 100 works of 
art from the Ashmolean’s own Lear collection and important loans from 
the Bodleian Library and works from private collections, many of which 
will go on public display for the first time.
Edward Lear is one of the most notable artists and popular writers of 
the Victorian period. Although best known for his literary nonsense in 
poetry and prose, Lear saw himself primarily as an artist. HAPPY 
BIRTHDAY EDWARD LEAR presents his work chronologically, with 
watercolours, oil paintings, manuscripts, and illustrated books 
carefully selected to reflect every aspect of his artistic output. Among
 the highlights are watercolours of animals and birds; sketches made 
during his travels in Greece, Italy, Egypt and the Near East, and India;
 and a group of the Tennyson illustrations on which he spent the last 
twenty years of his life. Lear’s work as a painter in oils is 
represented by rarely seen evocations of Beachy Head, Venice, and 
landscapes in the Near East; and the great view of Jerusalem, painted in
 1865, now in the Ashmolean.
More than 30 loans from the University of Oxford’s libraries and private
 collections will bring together editions of the books Lear illustrated 
early in his career. These include copies of Lear’s travel books; the 
natural history publications to which he contributed; and the principal 
editions of his nonsense books. The exhibition also shows examples of 
the sketches and self-portraits he gave to his friends, as well as a 
nonsense alphabet composed for Ruth Decie, who was only a few days old, 
on 22 June 1862.
“Edward Lear is one of the most extraordinary figures in Victorian 
England. He was one of the greatest of all natural history illustrators,
 a highly original artist who travelled more widely and recorded the 
landscape more faithfully than almost any other, and also an endearing 
writer whose experiments with words long predate those of Lewis 
Carroll.” Colin Harrison, Senior Curator for European Art at the 
Ashmolean.
Edward Lear was the 20th child born to Jeremiah and Ann Lear on 12 May 
1812, in Holloway, London. He became one of the most extraordinary 
figures in Victorian England. Sociable and immensely engaging, he was 
also an epileptic, prone to long fits of melancholy, and once declared 
that “I HATE LIFE unless I WORK ALWAYS”. Lear’s earliest work was as an 
ornithological draughtsman, his outstanding achievement being the 
Illustrations of the Family of Psittacidae, or Parrots (1830–32). 
Between 1831 and 1837, he was a regular visitor to Knowsley Hall, where 
the 13th Earl of Derby kept the most important menagerie in Europe, and 
Lear’s studies of the animals were privately published as Gleanings from
 the Menagerie at Knowsley in 1846. While he was at Knowsley, he began 
to invent nonsense rhymes and drawings to amuse Lord Derby’s children. 
These were first gathered together as A Book of Nonsense in 1846, but it
 was not until the third edition of 1862, including wood engravings, 
that Lear’s nonsense began to enjoy the extraordinary popularity it 
still does today.
It was landscape painting which Lear himself most valued and for which 
he wished to be remembered. From 1837 onwards, he travelled more 
extensively than any other painter of the 19th century, recording the 
landscape as he went in an apparently endless succession of 
topographical drawings in pencil, which he annotated with the date, 
time, and a running number for each tour. These he later inked out and 
kept as a dictionary of compositions for his more commercial work, the 
finished watercolours he made in long series and, from the early 1850s, 
the oil paintings he made on commission.
More Information: http://artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=57806#.UFnd164b56A[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org
More Information: http://artdaily.org/index.asp?int_sec=2&int_new=57806#.UFnd164b56A[/url]
Copyright © artdaily.org







 
 
 

Scott -- Thank you so much for contacting me. I have seen and used wahooart previously and have enjoyed it and found it useful. I expect you are aware of the Web Gallery of Art image collection, but if not, here it is:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.wga.hu/
Please visit and write again.
Curtis