- Samuel Howitt
Infobox Person
name = HOWITT, SAMUEL
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birth_date = about 1765Dictionary of National Biography now in the public domain]
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death_date = 1822
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children =Samuel Howitt (1765-1822) was an
artist fromEngland .History
Samuel Howitt was born into a wealthy
Quaker family inNottinghamshire ,England . He began painting as a hobby and to amuse his friends. Hunting and racing were his hobbies and he mimicked this interest in his work. Howitt's family experienced financial difficulties, so Howitt decided to move toLondon . [ [http://www.lyonsltd.com/index.cfm/FuseAction/Main.ArtistBio/artistID/566.cfm lyonsltd.com] ] .Career
In London, Howitt made a career out of his talent, flourishing as a professional artist. He was published often in
The Sporting Magazine and went on to illustrate various books. Howitt is best known for his lively and exotic sporting scenes.His superior watercolors and aquatints depict dramatic racing and hunting scenes as well as an array of conventional and exotic animals.
Works
Howitt's work is included in the
Mellon Collection , which possesses no fewer than 160 of his watercolors, and many of his aquatints. Howitt exhibited at theRoyal Academy and illustrated several books, including his own entitledThe British Sportsman c.1812 andBritish Preserve c.1824.Samuel Howitt, "genius, artist, sportsman", concentrated his considerable artistic talents on picturing scenes of horse-racing and hunting in all its aspects. Born in Nottinghamshire, England, Howitt was largely self-taught ,"although he must have been helped by his companionsGeorge Morland , Rowlandson andJohn Raphael Smith . Howitt's watercolours of hunting, shooting and racing have delightful spontaneity. An enthusiastic sportsman himself, he had sufficient family money to paint at first only for his own and his friends pleasure. However, this fortune was quickly dissipated and Howitt moved to London... [He made a living] , partly by etching at which he was extremely skilled. As an artist he was prolific. more than 150 of his designs were published in The Sporting Magazine. He illustrated Beckford's Thoughts on Hunting, and other books, including Orme's Collection of British Field Sports... The light touch of his pen, the delicacy of his brushwork and his experience of field sports ensured all that he drew was animated and accurate." During the nineteenth century, field sports, particularly the hunting of wild game, were a common colonial leisure activity in India and Africa. Large-game hunting, the pursual of animals such as elephants, lions, and tigers, was considered to be the most prestigious, thrilling, and dangerous type of hunting.References
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