Silent Witnesses: Trees in British Art

£25.00

Out of stock

Categories: ,

Description

Silent Witnesses:
Trees in British Art, 1760-1870

Christiana Payne

 

 

  • First study of this important theme in British painting
  • Authoritatively researched and written
  • Insights into major artists and writers: John Constable, Samuel Palmer, John Ruskin

 

In the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, naturalists, poets and artists were united in their love of trees. William Gilpin began his influentialRemarks on Forest Scenery (1791) with the bold statement that ‘It is no exaggerated praise to call a tree the grandest, and most beautiful of all the productions of the earth.’ Illustrated books and tree portraits celebrated the beauty, antiquity and diversity of individual, and particularly ancient specimens.  A wide range of drawing manuals showed artists and amateurs how to express their ‘character’ and ‘anatomy’, as if they were human subjects.

 

Paintings of woodland scenes provided welcome relief from city life, and studies of exotic trees reflected the growth of tourism and empire. The arrival of new species from all over the world aroused much excitement and scientific activity. At the same time, the native trees – oak, ash, beech, elm – acquired new resonance as emblems of the rural countryside. Many of Britain’s most important landscape painters, including Paul Sandby, John Constable, Samuel Palmer, Edward Lear, and the Pre-Raphaelites, made themselves experts in the drawing and painting of trees.

 

Christiana Payne is Professor of History of Art at Oxford Brookes University, where she has been teaching since 1994.  Her previous books includeWhere the Sea Meets the Land: Artists on the Coast in Nineteenth-Century Britain (Sansom and Company, 2007) and John Brett, Pre-Raphaelite Landscape Painter (Yale University Press, 2010). She has curated major exhibitions and displays at the Yale Center for British Art, Tate Britain, and the Royal West of England Academy, Bristol.

176pp
270 x 210mm
softback
978-1-911408-12-3