Thomas Barker (painter) explained

Thomas Barker
Birth Date:1769
Birth Place:Trosnant (near Pontypool), Wales
Death Date:1847
Death Place:Bath, England
Nationality:Welsh

Thomas Barker or Barker of Bath (1769 – 11 December 1847), was a British painter of landscape and rural life.

Early life

Barker was born in 1769, at Trosnant near the village of Pontypool, in Monmouthshire.[1] His father, Benjamin Barker, was the son of a barrister, and practiced as an artist, but never attempted more than the portraits of horses. He eventually took up employment as a Japanware decorator.[2]

From an early age Barker showed a remarkable talent for drawing figures and designing landscapes, although he never took a lesson in either drawing or painting and was entirely self-taught. When he was sixteen his family moved to Bath where the patronage of an opulent coach-builder named Charles Spackman allowed him to follow his talent as an artist. During the first four years he employed himself in copying the works of the old Dutch and Flemish masters. At the age of twenty-one he was sent to Rome with ample funds to maintain his position there as a gentleman. While there he painted very little, contenting himself with society life.

Life as an artist

Barker was an occasional exhibitor at the Royal Academy and the British Institution for almost fifty years, during which period he exhibited nearly one hundred pictures. He was a prolific artist, and painted a wide range of subjects. Few pictures of the English school are more generally known and appreciated than The Woodman, of which it appears two were painted, both of them from nature, and of life size: the first was sold to Mr. Macklin for 500 guineas; the second, for the same amount, became the property of Lord W. Paulett. In 1821 he painted the Trial of Queen Caroline, which included portraits of many celebrated men; but perhaps the best effort of Barker's pencil skill was the fresco, 30 feet in length, and 12 feet in height, representing The Inroad of the Turks upon Scio, in April, 1822, painted on the wall of his residence, Sion Hill, Bath.

When Barker's talents were in full vigour, no artist of his time had a greater hold on popular favour; his pictures of The Woodman, Old Tom (painted before he was seventeen years of age), and gipsy groups and rustic figures, were copied onto almost every possible material: Staffordshire pottery, Worcester china, Manchester cottons, and Glasgow linens. At one time he amassed considerable property by the sale of his works, and spent a large sum in building a mansion for his residence, enriching it with sculpture and other works of art. He died at Bath in 1847.

Barker was one of the first British artists to use Lithography as a print medium and contributed two prints Young Boy Seated,[3] and Tilemakers [4] to Specimens of Polyautography,[5] the first British publication of a collection of Lithographic plates, originally published by Philipp André in 1803,[6] and then reissued in an enlarged edition by Vollweiler in 1806-07.[7] Barker's series of Rustic figures after nature published in Bath in 1813 in a small edition,[8] is the first series of lithographs by a British single artist. Some of Barker's stones survive.[9]

Works

There are six paintings by Barker in the Tate Gallery, including A Woodman and his Dog in a Storm (originally presented to the National Gallery in 1868)[10] and several landscapes.[11]

The British Museum holds a number of Barker's drawings and prints.

Three of Barker's paintings, Italian Landscape 1808, Landscape with a Waterfall and Landscape with Cattle are in Wolverhampton Art Gallery.

A painting of Wooded landscape with gipsies round a camp fire turned out to be probably the work of Barker painted over an earlier work by Michael Dahl, was featured on the BBC television series Fake or Fortune? in 2019. Barker's work on this subject was heavily inspired by Gainsborough's, and he painted several copies of The Gipsies, as well as many gypsy works of his own.He used the grouping from Gainsborough's The Gipsies as the background to one of his 1789 self-portraits.

In an episode of BBC's Britain's Lost Masterpieces broadcast in November 2019, a forest scene thought to be a copy of a famous painting by Gainsborough, was located at Birmingham Art Gallery. Following a full restoration by Simon Gillespie, the work was attributed Barker.[12]

In 1825, Thomas Barker painted a fresco depicting the Chios Massacre on the walls of Doric House, Bath, Somerset.[13]

Family

As well as Thomas Barker, the Barker family produced several artists of note. As well as his father's ability, Thomas' younger brother Benjamin Barker II (1776–1838) was also a talented artist known for his landscape work. Benjamin II exhibited at the Royal Academy and many of his works were engraved by Thales Fielding in aquatint. Barker's son, Thomas Jones Barker (1815–1882), followed his father and uncle into painting, studying at the studio of Horace Vernet in Paris. Many of Jones Barker's works were of a military nature, including Lord Clive's relief of Lucknow and The Allied generals before Sebastopol.[1]

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. s-BARK-PON-1700 . Rees, Thomas Mardy. BARKER family, of Pontypool, etc., artists.. 21 October 2021.
  2. http://www.museumwales.ac.uk/en/rhagor/timelines/faces/?version=text Faces of Wales
  3. Web site: Young Boy Seated. British Museum.
  4. Web site: Tilemakers . British Museum.
  5. Book: Specimens of Polyautography, Consisting of Impressions taken from Original Drawings, Made on Stone purposely for this Work' . 1803. Philipp André. London.
  6. Web site: The beginnings of Lithography – "Polyautographs". Elizabeth Harvey Lee .
  7. Web site: Note on Specimens of Polyautography. British Museum.
  8. Book: Forty lithographic impressions from drawings by Thomas Barker, selected from his studies of Rustic Figures after Nature. Published by subscription at Bath. December 1813 . 1813. Wood & Co, City printing Office. Bath.
  9. Thomas Barker's Lithographic Stones. Journal of the Printing Historical Society. Wyman . Michael. 82 . 1–32 . 1978.
  10. Web site: A Woodman and his Dog in a Storm. The Tate Gallery. 5 July 2012.
  11. Web site: Thomas Barker of Bath. The Tate Gallery. 5 July 2012.
  12. Web site: Britain's Lost Masterpieces - Series 4: 2. Birmingham. www.bbc.co.uk.
  13. YJC Cartledge, 'The Chios Massacre (1822) and early British Christian-humanitarianism', Historical Research, vol. 93, no. 259 (February 2020), pp. 52-72, at pp. 60-61.