- Thomas Stothard
Thomas Stothard (
17 August 1755 -27 April 1834 ) was an English painter andengraver .He was born in
London , the son of a well-to-do innkeeper in Long Acre. Being a delicate child, he was sent at the age of five to a relative inYorkshire , and attended school at Acomb, and afterwards atTadcaster and atIlford , Essex. Showing talent for drawing he was apprenticed to a draughtsman of patterns forbrocade d silks inSpitalfields , and during his spare time he attempted illustrations for the works of his favouritepoet s. Some of these drawings were praised by Harrison, the editor of the "Novelist's Magazine". Stothard's master having died, he resolved to devote himself to art.In 1778 he became a student of the
Royal Academy , of which he was elected associate in 1792 and full academician in 1794. In 1812 he was appointed librarian, having served as assistant for two years. Among his earliest book illustrations are plates engraved forOssian and for Bell's "Poets"; and in 1780 he became a regular contributor to the "Novelist's Magazine", for which he produced 148 designs, including his eleven illustrations to "Peregrine Pickle" and his graceful subjects from "Clarissa" and "Sir Charles Grandison".From 1786, Thomas Fielding, a friend of Stothard's and engraver, produced engravings using designs of Stothard, Angelika Kauffmann, and of his own. Arcadian scenes were especially esteemed. Fielding realized these in colour, using copper engraving, and achieved excellent quality. Stothard's designs had an exceptional aesthetic appeal.
He designed plates for
pocket-book s, tickets for concerts, illustrations toalmanac s, portraits of popular actors--into all these he infused a grace and distinction which make them sought after by collectors. Among his more important series are the two sets of illustrations to "Robinson Crusoe ", one for the "New Magazine" and one for Stockdale's edition, and the plates to "The Pilgrim's Progress " (1788), to Harding's edition of Goldsmith's "Vicar of Wakefield" (1792), to "The Rape of the Lock " (1798), to the works ofSolomon Gessner (1802), toWilliam Cowper 's "Poems" (1825), and to "The Decameron"; while his figure-subjects in the superb editions ofSamuel Rogers 's "Italy" (1830) and "Poems" (1834) prove that even in old age his imagination was still fertile, and his hand firm. He is at his best in subjects of a domestic or a gracefully ideal sort; the heroic and the tragic were beyond his powers.The designs by Stothard were estimated by art historian
Ralph Nicholson Wornum to number five thousand, and of these about three thousand have been engraved. His oil pictures are usually small in size. Their colouring is often rich and glowing, being founded upon the practice of Rubens, of whom Stothard was a great admirer. The "Vintage," perhaps his most important oil painting, is in the National Gallery. He was a contributor toJohn Boydell 's Shakespeare Gallery, but his best-known painting is the "Procession of the Canterbury Pilgrims," also in the National Gallery, the engraving from which, begun by Luigi and continued byNiccolo Schiavonetti and finished by James Heath, was immensely popular. The commission for this picture was given to Stothard byRobert Hartley Cromek , and was the cause of a quarrel with his friendWilliam Blake . It was followed by a companion work, the "Flitch of Bacon," which was drawn insepia for the engraver but was never carried out in colour.In addition to his easel pictures, Stothard decorated the grand staircase of
Burghley House , near Stamford inLincolnshire , with subjects of War, Intemperance, and the "Descent of Orpheus in Hell" (1799-1803); the mansion of Hafod, North Wales, with a series of scenes from Froissart and Monstrelet (1810); thecupola of the upper hall of the Advocates' Library,Edinburgh (later occupied by the Signet Library), with Apollo and the Muses, and figures of poets, orators, etc. (1822); and he prepared designs for a frieze and other decorations forBuckingham Palace , which were not executed, owing to the death of George IV. He also designed the magnificent shield presented to the Duke of Wellington by the merchants ofLondon , and executed with his own hand a series of eight etchings from the various subjects which adorned it. In theBritish Museum is a collection, in four volumes, of engravings of Stothard's works, made byRobert Balmanno .References
A biography of Stothard, by his daughter-in-law, Mrs Bray, was published in 1851.
Albert Crease Coxhead 's "Thomas Stothard, R.A., an Illustrated Monograph" (1906), contains a short biographical chapter, and an accurately dated summary of the various books and periodicals illustrated by Stothard; see also Austin Dobson, "Eighteenth Century Vignettes" 1st series (1892).
*1911
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