Sevenoaks Fine Art

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WILLIAM BEATTIE-BROWN (1852-1909)

£1,800.00

Code: 2418

Dimensions:

W: 70cm (27.6")H: 45cm (17.7")



 
William Beattie-Brown RSA (Scottish, 1831-1909)

'' Castle at Sunrise ''

Oil on canvas

27.5 x 17.5 in (70 x 45 cm) framed approx

Description:

Fine 19th century oil on canvas by Scottish Academy artist William Beattie-Brown. Excellent quality and condition landscape depicting a castle on a loch with a dramatic sky at sunrise. Signed lower right and framed.

Condition:

Relined. Ready to hang.

Artist information:

William Beattie-Brown was born in the parish of Haddington in 1831, was son of Adam Brown, farmer, and Ann Beattie. He removed at an early age to Edinburgh and was educated at Leith High School. Having early shown a taste for art, he was apprenticed as a glass -stainer to the well-known firm of Messrs. Ballantine. Here his artistic tastes were so rapidly developed that before his apprenticeship was completed he entered the Trustees' Art Academy, then under the charge of Robert Scott Lauder.

Among his fellow-students of this period and companions of a later time were William Bell Scott, Horatio MacCulloch, Sam Bough,and George Paul Chalmers. In 1848, when only seventeen years of age, he exhibited a picture ' On the Forth' at the Royal Scottish Academy, and from that time until his death he was always represented at the annual exhibitions. 

He found English subjects for his pictures in Surrey, Kent, and Yorkshire, but his main themes were Scottish highland landscapes. He was a pioneer among the Scottish 'out-of-door' artists, frequently completing his pictures directly from nature a practice which explains his vigour and realism. In 1871 he was elected an associate of the Royal Scottish Academy, and in 1884 an academician.

His diploma picture, dated 1883, is a characteristic highland landscape 'Coire-na-Faireamh' now in the Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh. Representative works by him are in the public galleries at Liverpool, Manchester, Oldham, and Bolton. He was a frequent exhibitor at the Royal Academy, London, and also at Glasgow and other Scottish exhibitions. In his later years he adopted a more glowing scheme of colour than in his earlier work; but his pictures were always noticeable for their realistic line and tone, and for their technical excellence. Beattie-Brown died at Edinburgh on 31 March 1909.