Francis Danby

Francis Danby

era. [Eric Adams, "Francis Danby: Varieties of Poetic Landscape", New Haven, Yale University Press, 1973.] [Edward G. Malins and Morchard Bishop, "James Smetham and Francis Danby: Two 19th Century Romantic Painters", London, Stevens, 1974.]

Born in the south of Ireland, he was one of a set of twins; his father, James Danby, farmed a small property he owned near Wexford, but his death, in 1807, caused the family to move to Dublin, while Francis was still a schoolboy. He began to practice drawing at the Royal Dublin Society's schools; and under an erratic young artist named James Arthur O'Connor he began painting landscapes. Danby also made acquaintance with George Petrie, and all three left for London together in 1824.

This expedition, undertaken with very inadequate funds, quickly came to an end, and they had to get home again by walking. At Bristol they made a pause, and Danby, finding he could get trifling sums for water-color drawings, remained there working diligently and sending to the London exhibitions pictures of importance. There his large oil paintings quickly attracted attention.

Danby painted "vast illusionist canvases" comparable to those of John Martin — of "grand, gloomy and fantastic subjects which chimed exactly with the Byronic taste of the 1820s." [Lionel Lambourne, "Victorian Painting", London, Phaidon Pess, 1999; pp. 156, 161.]

"The Upas Tree" (1820) and "The Delivery of the Israelites" (1825) brought him his election as an Associate Member of the Royal Academy. He left Bristol for London, and in 1828 exhibited his "Opening of the Sixth Seal" at the British Institution, receiving from that body a prize of 200 guineas; and this picture was followed by two others on the theme of the Apocalypse.

In 1829 Danby's wife deserted him, running off with the painter Paul Falconer Poole. [Christopher Wood, "Victorian Painting", Boston, Little, Brown & Co., 1999; p. 20.] Danby left London, declaring that he would never live there again, and that the Academy, instead of aiding him, had, somehow or other, used him badly. For a decade he lived on the Lake of Geneva in Switzerland, becoming a Bohemian with boat-building fancies, painting only now and then. He later moved to Paris for a short period of time.

He returned to England in 1840, when his sons, James and Thomas, both artists, were growing up. Danby exhibited his large (15 feet wide) and powerful "The Deluge" that year; the success of that painting, "the largest and most dramatic of all his Martinesque visions," [Wood, p. 21.] revitalized his reputation and career. Other pictures by him were "The Golden Age" (c. 1827, exhibited 1831), "Rich and Rare Were the Gems She Wore" (1837), and "The Evening Gun" (1848).

Some of Danby's later paintings, like "The Woodnymph's Hymn to the Rising Sun" (1845), tended toward a calmer, more restrained, more cheerful manner than those in his earlier style; but he returned to his early mode for "The Shipwreck" (1859). He lived his final years at Exmouth in Devon, where he died in 1861. Along with John Martin and J. M. W. Turner, Danby is considered among the leading British artists of the Romantic period. [Lambourne, pp. 161-3; Wood, pp. 76-7.]

Both of Danby's sons were landscape painters. The elder, James Francis Danby (1816–75), exhibited at the Royal Academy. "He excelled in depicting sunrise and sunset." [Michael Bryan, "Dictionary of Painters and Engravers", Vol. 1, revised edition edited by Robert Edmund Graves, London, George Bell, 1886; p. 348.] The younger, Thomas Danby (1817–86), specialized in watercolors of Welsh scenes. In 1866, Thomas Danby was nominated as an Associate of the Royal Academy, but he missed election by one vote.

References

ee also

* Royal West of England Academy

External links

* [http://www.phryne.com/artists/48-27-10.HTM Phryne's list of pictures in accessible collections in the UK]


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