Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Thomas Jones Barker

 
Art Encyclopedia: Thomas Jones Barker

(b Bath, 19 April 1813; d London, 27 March 1882). Painter, son of (1) Thomas Barker. He received his first training from his father and entered the Parisian studio of Horace Vernet in 1834. In Paris he produced a large number of history paintings, the most famous being the Bride of Death (1838-9; Bath, Victoria A.G.), which was painted for Princess Marie, daughter of Louis-Philippe, King of France, and won Barker the L?gion d'honneur. After his return to England in 1845, Barker contributed regularly to the Royal Academy and the British Institution, exhibiting historical, literary and hunting scenes. His paintings, like those of Vernet, almost invariably included depictions of horses in action. From 1853 he began work on the large-scale military paintings for which he was best known (e.g. the Relief of Lucknow, 1859; London, N.P.G.). The Duke of Wellington at Sauroren (Stratfield Saye House, Hants), first exhibited at the National Portrait Gallery in 1868, was probably commissioned by the Duke of Wellington. Barker was not favoured by the art critics of his day, nor was he rewarded with membership of the Royal Academy. His later work was painted with the print market in mind, and he enjoyed considerable commercial success. His principal patrons were print dealers such as the Manchester company Agnew & Sons.

Part of the Barker family

See the Abbreviations for further details.



Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Thomas Jones Barker
Top
Thomas Jones Barker by Thomas Jones Barker[1]
"The Relief of Lucknow"

Thomas Jones Barker (1815 – March 27 1882) was an English historical and portrait painter.

Contents

Biography

Born at Bath, in 1815[2]. He was the son of a painter and studied in Paris under Horace Vernet, in 1835-45 exhibited much at the Salon and subsequently at the Royal Academy. Probably influenced by Vernet, some of his earliest military paintings were of scenes from the Napoleonic Wars including his 1853 Royal Academy piece "Wellington at Sobrauren". In his later life he was known especially as a military painter, and observed on the spot the Franco-Prussian War, although it is unclear whether he witnessed the Crimean War, first-hand. He did exhibit a number of paintings depicting this war. One of his most famous paintings from the 1850's was "The Relief of Lucknow" completed in 1859. The picture which was shown to Queen Victoria in May 1860, contained numerous portraits based on sketches taken by the Swedish artist Egron Lundgren, who had traveled to India in 1858. Other significant works by Barker include "The Bride of Death" (1840); "The Meeting of Wellington and Blücher" (1851); "Wellington Crossing the Pyrenees (1857);" "The Mêlée - Charge of Cuirassiers and Chasseurs" (1872); "Balaklava - One of the Six Hundred" (1874); "The Return through the Valley of Death" (1876); "Major General Williams and His Staff Leaving Kars 28 Nov. 1855" (1857); and "Riderless War-Horses after the Battle of Sedan" (1873).

Paintings

References

  1. ^ National Portrait Gallery]]
  2. ^ UCLA

Further Reading

  • Harrington, Peter, 'The Defence of Kars: Paintings by William Simpson and Thomas Jones Barker', Journal of the Society for Army Historical Research, Vol. LXIX, No. 277, Spring 1991, pp. 22-28.
  • Harrington, Peter. British Artists and War: The Face of Battle in Paintings and Prints, 1700-1914, London, Greenhill, 1993.
  • Nilsson, Sten, 'Egron Lundgren, reporter of the Indian Mutiny', Apollo, Vol. XCII, No. 102, August 1970, pp. 138-143.


Sources


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Thomas Jones Barker" Read more