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Antique Scottish
Large Scottish Highlands Loch Landscape, 19th century Victorian Oil Painting

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  • Antique Scottish Highland Loch Scene at Sunset with Cottage Golden Mountains
    By Francis E. Jamieson
    Located in Cirencester, Gloucestershire
    "The Loch Keepers Cottage" by F. E. Jamieson (British 1895-1950) signed, lower corner oil painting on canvas, framed canvas: 16 x 24 inches framed: 20 x 28 inches Fine quality antiq...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Victorian Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Canvas

  • Loch Lomond Large Antique Scottish Framed Highlands Oil Painting
    By Francis E. Jamieson
    Located in Cirencester, Gloucestershire
    "Loch Lomond" by F. E. Jamieson (British 1895-1950) signed lower corner inscribed verso oil painting on canvas, framed canvas: 16 x 24 inches frame: 20 x 28.5 inches Fine quality antique oil painting by the much admired and celebrated British artist F. E. Jamieson (1895-1950). The painting is signed by Jamieson to the lower corner with his pseudonym. The painting captures the beautiful and reknown Loch Lomond. F. E. Jamieson (1895-1950) We are extremely fortunate to have been handling the works of the enigmatic British artist, F. E. Jamieson since the year we began art dealing, 1989. Over this time, coupled with our love of the Scottish landscape, we have bought and sold many hundreds of his paintings, in all their various guises and subjects and are considered by many to be a leading authority on the artist and his work. We are also in the early stages of publishing the Catalogue Raisonne for this artist, of which this painting will be featured. Mr. Jamieson was largely a painter of Scottish landscapes and loch scenes. Born in 1895, Jamieson lived on the south coast of England and was contracted to a large department store to supply them with his paintings. He was an ambitious man and keen to sell more works than through just one shop. In order to do this, he started to sign his works with pseudonyms other than his own name, in order that he could sell his work to a wider audience. It worked and it is considered that Jamieson at least 15 different pseudonym names on his paintings. In addition to selling through furniture shops, Jamieson would travel door to door offering his paintings to housewives and private buyers. In our years of researching the artist, we heard one story related to us by an old customer who remembers that Jamieson started selling door...
    Category

    Early 20th Century Victorian Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Canvas

  • Mother & Daughter Walking Coastal Pathway, Antique English Oil Painting
    Located in Cirencester, Gloucestershire
    Artist/ School: British School, late 19th/ early 20th century Title: Mother & Daughter walking along the coastal path, with the sea beside them. Medium: oil painting on canvas, f...
    Category

    Late 19th Century Victorian Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

  • Fine Large Victorian Oil Painting Scottish Loch Scene & Mountains at Sunset
    Located in Cirencester, Gloucestershire
    Artist/ School: British School, late 19th century, signed Title: Sunset in the Scottish Highlands Medium: oil on canvas Framed: 25 x 35 inches Canvas: 20 x 30 inches Provenance: ...
    Category

    19th Century Victorian Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Canvas

  • Fine 19th Century British Oil Painting Fishing Boats Choppy Seas leaving Port
    By Victorian School
    Located in Cirencester, Gloucestershire
    Fishing boats leaving port Millson Hunt (Late 19th Century) British signed oil on canvas ,framed canvas: 18 x 13.5 inches framed: 22 x 18 inches the painting is in overall very good...
    Category

    19th Century Victorian Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Canvas

  • Huge Victorian English Oil Painting for Restoration Family Playing Games Outside
    Located in Cirencester, Gloucestershire
    English School 18th/ 19th century signed oil on canvas, framed framed: 35 x 40 inches canvas: 28 x 36 inches provenance: private collection, England condition: the painting requires ...
    Category

    19th Century Victorian Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Canvas

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  • Victorian landscape painting of Scottish fishing boats moored in a bay
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    A very tranquil scene of fishing boats moored in harbour with a sunlit sea beyond. Painted with a most attractive palette of blues and greens and with a pleasing composition that le...
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  • 19th Century seascape oil painting of Penzance harbour, Cornwall
    By William Edward Webb
    Located in Moreton-In-Marsh, Gloucestershire
    William Edward Webb British, (1862-1903) Penzance Harbour Oil on canvas, signed Image size: 29 inches x 45.5 inches Size including frame: 38 inches x 54.5 inches A pleasing coastal painting of Penzance Harbour at low tide by William Edward Webb. In the foreground, a fisherman sells his catch to a woman and her daughter, whilst figures in horses and carts wait for others to unload their boats. William Edward Webb was born in Cheltenham, Gloucestershire in 1862 to William Benjamin Webb and Ellen Butler. His father was a printer and an artist and it is highly likely he received tuition from him. Following the death of his mother, his father remarried and moved the family to Manchester sometime after 1871. By the 1880’s, Webb had started working as an artist and later set up a studio at 30 Exchange Buildings in Manchester. He began exhibiting at the Manchester City Art Gallery from 1890, where he showed more than 60 paintings during his lifetime. He also exhibited at the Royal Academy and Walker Art Gallery Liverpool from 1892. He married Clara Foster in 1899 and the couple lived at 1 Sylvan Grove, Chorlton Upon Medlock in South Manchester with their daughter Florrie. He became friends with the artist Walter Emsley (1860-1938) who also lived in Manchester. Although he spent the rest of his life in Manchester, Webb travelled throughout the UK painting coastal and marine scenes around the main ports and harbours. He spent a great deal of time in the Isle of Mann painting numerous scenes along the coast including views of Peel and Douglas Harbour, subjects he frequently returned to. Webb painted in a highly distinctive style; loose and informal but which manages to retain the sense of perspective. He struggled with ill health and depression throughout his life which sadly led to his suicide 9 November, 1903. In 1974, a retrospective exhibition was held at The Old Customs House and Old Solent House in Lymington, which brought a new found interest in his work. His paintings are now highly sought after and are represented in many collections and Museums including the Astley Hall...
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    19th Century Victorian Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Canvas

  • 19th Century genre oil painting of a woman in a garden with two girls
    By William Stephen Coleman
    Located in Moreton-In-Marsh, Gloucestershire
    William Stephen Coleman British, (1829-1904) By the Fish Pond Oil on canvas, signed & dated 1898 Image size: 23 inches x 35 inches Size including frame: 30.25 inches x 42.25 inches A beautiful painting by William Stephen Coleman of a woman with two girls in a semi classical style by a Mediterranean pond. The woman is depicted resting on a terrace with her young daughter asleep on her lap, whilst another child catches goldfish in a bowl. This tour de force would have most likely been painted by Coleman as an exhibition piece. William Stephen Coleman was a figurative painter who was born in Horsham in 1829. He was one of 12 children born to a physician named William Thomas Coleman and his wife Henrietta (née Dendy). Three of his siblings Rebecca Coleman (b1837), Helen Cordelia Angell (1847–1884) and George Coleman also became artists, inheriting their artistic talent from their mother’s side of the family. Coleman developed an interest in nature from an early age, producing drawings as a hobby. Despite his ability, he initially followed in his father’s footsteps and trained as a surgeon. However, this proved unsuccessful and by the age of 21 he had turned back to art, later gaining employment with the Dalziel Brothers, a firm of wood engravers who specialised in natural history illustrations. Sometime during the late 1850’s he moved to London where he married his first wife Henrietta Augusta Boultbee in 1858. Around the same time, he began producing illustrations for books; the first of which was entitled ‘Common Objects of the Country’ and published in 1858. He subsequently published two of his own books ‘Our Woodlands. Heaths, and Hedges’ in 1859 and ‘British Butterflies’ in 1860. After the death of his wife in 1860, his sister Rebecca and brother George went to live with him in Garway Road, Paddington. Rebecca would often assist him with the wood blocks for his illustrations. As well as working as an engraver, he also began producing classically influenced paintings featuring figures in landscapes. Initially these were executed in watercolours but later extended to oil paintings. He began exhibiting at the Dudley Gallery in 1865 and was one of the original committee members. He continued to exhibit there until 1879 and was a committee member up until 1881. By 1869, he had also begun to work on pottery decoration and in 1871 was asked by Minton’s to establish an Art Pottery Studio at Kensington Gore. Whilst at Minton’s, he produced figure designs for their ceramic ware. His sister Rebecca also worked at Minton’s and they moved to Belle Vue in Chelsea to be closer to the studio. From 1881, he lived at 3 St John’s Wood Studios, Queens Terrace in Paddington and in 1888 moved to 43 Broadhurst Gardens in Hampstead. In 1893 one of his classically inspired works ‘The Gold Fish Bowl...
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  • 19th Century genre landscape oil painting of three boys fishing on a river
    By William Bromley
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  • 19th Century Welsh landscape oil painting of figures by the River Glaslyn
    By David Bates b.1840
    Located in Moreton-In-Marsh, Gloucestershire
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