- Arthur Melville
Arthur Melville (1858-1904) was a Scottish painter, now probably best remembered for his
Orientalist subjects.He was born in
Scotland , in a village ofHaddingtonshire . He took up painting while working as a grocer's apprentice, then attended theRoyal Scottish Academy Schools and studied afterwards inParis andGreece , he learnt more from practice and personal observation than from school training. The remarkable colour-sense which is so notable a feature of his work, whether inoil s or inwatercolour , came to him during his adventurous travels in Persia,Egypt andTurkey from 1880-82, where he by no means stuck to the major cities, travelling alone on long inland journeys. To convey strong Middle Eastern light, he developed a technique of using watercolour on a base of wet paper withgouache applied to it.Melville, though comparatively little known during his lifetime, was one of the most powerful influences in the contemporary art of his day, especially in his broad decorative treatment with water-colour, which influenced the
Glasgow Boys . Though his vivid impressions of color and movement are apparently recorded with feverish haste, they are the result of careful deliberation and selection. He was at his best in his watercolors of Eastern life and color and his Venetian scenes, but he also painted several striking portraits in oils and a powerful colossal composition of "The Return from the Crucifixion" which remained unfinished at his death in 1904. TheVictoria and Albert Museum has one of his watercolours, "The Little Bull-Fight Bravo, Toro!" and others, like "An Oriental Goatherd" in theWeimar Museum , are in many museums, especially in Scotland. But many of his pictures remain with private collectors.A comprehensive memorial exhibition of Melville's works was held at the
Royal Institute Galleries in London in 1906.References
*1911
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