Sir James Thornhill 1675 or 76–1734 English painter. The - TopicsExpress



          

Sir James Thornhill 1675 or 76–1734 English painter. The great English exponent of Baroque decorative painting, he was the only one to compete successfully with foreigners for the relatively few large-scale decorative commissions available in England during the first quarter of the 18th century. His skill in this field was remarkable, since his training was irregular and his trips abroad came only after he had reached maturity as an artist. In 1689, aged 14, he was apprenticed to Thomas Highmore (1660–1720), a distant relative and specialist in non-figural decorative painting, which included trompe loeil effects. While working for Highmore in great houses such as Chatsworth, Derbys, in the 1690s, Thornhill was exposed to the work of foreign decorative painters. His first major commission was in 1707 for the newly constructed Royal Naval Hospital (now College), Greenwich. For the next 19 years he worked there intermittently. Although he was thus engaged at Greenwich for most of his career, Thornhills work there was sporadic, and he often sought other employment. He competed successfully to secure one of his most prestigious commissions: the interior of the dome of St Pauls Cathedral, London. In 1715 he worked at Hampton Court Palace, near London. Although Thornhill specialised in large-scale, illusionistic wall and ceiling paintings, he occasionally worked in other fields. Thornhill was highly successful and well rewarded in his own day. He became the first English-born artist to be knighted. His last years were spent producing copies of Raphaels cartoons, presumably for the instruction of future students. Bibliography Colvin W. Osmun: A Study of the Work of Sir James Thornhill (diss., U. London, 1950) C. Lloyd: ‘The Decoration of the Royal Hospital, Greenwich, i: The Painted Hall, Trans. Greenwich & Lambeth Antiqua. Soc., v/1 (1957), pp. 6–14 E. Croft-Murray: Decorative Painting in England, 1537–1837, i (London, 1962), pp. 69–78, 263–74 Sketches by Thornhill in the Victoria and Albert Museum (exh. cat. by E. de N. Mayhew, London, V&A, 1967) T. P. Hudson: ‘Moor Park, Leoni, and Sir James Thornhill, Burl. Mag., cxiii (1971), pp. 657–61 K. Fremantle, ed.: Sir James Thornhills Sketch-book Travel Journal of 1711: A Visit to East Anglia and the Low Countries (Utrecht, 1976) B. Allen: ‘Thornhill at Wimpole, Apollo, cxxii (1985), pp. 204–11
Posted on: Sat, 25 Oct 2014 14:15:26 +0000

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