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Artist Biography
William Etty (1787-1849),
English
British painter, was born at York, on the 10th of
March 1787. His father had been in early life a miller, but had finally
established himself in the city of York as a baker of spice-bread. After,
some scanty instruction of the most elementary kind, the future painter,
at the age of eleven and a half, left the paternal roof, and was bound
apprentice in the printing-office of the Hull Packet. Amid many trials and
discouragements he completed his term of seven years servitude, and
having in that period come by practice, at first surreptitious, though
afterwards allowed by his master in lawful hours, to know his own
powers, he removed to London.
The kindness of an elder brother and a wealthy uncle, William Etty,
himself an artist, stood him in good stead. He commenced his training by
copying without instruction from nature, models, prints, &c. his first
academy, as he himself says, being a plaster-cast shop in Cock Lane,
Smithfield. Here he made a copy from an ancient cast of Cupid and Psyche,
which was shown to Opie, and led to his being enrolled in 1807 as student
of the Academy, whose schools were at that time conducted in Somerset
House. Among his fellow scholars at this period of his career were some
who in after years rose to eminence in their art, such as
Wilkie,
Haydon,
Collins,
Constable. His uncle generously paid the necessary fee of one hundred
guineas, and in the summer of 1807 he was admitted to be a private pupil
of
Sir Thomas Lawrence, who was at the very acme of his fame. Etty
himself always looked on this privilege as one of incalculable value, and
till his latest day regarded Lawrence as one of the chief ornaments of
British art. For some years after he quitted Sir Thomas's studio, even as
late as 1816, the influence of his preceptor was traceable in the
mannerism of his works. Though he had by this time made great progress in
his art, his career was still one of almost continual failure, hardly
cheered by even a passing ray of success. In 1811, after repeated
rejections, he had the satisfaction of seeing his Telemachus rescuing
Antiope on the walls of the Academy. It was badly hung, however, and
attracted little notice. For the next five years he persevered with quiet
and constant energy in overcoming the disadvantages of his early training
with yearly growing success, and he was even beginning to establish
something like a name when in 1816 he resolved to improve his knowledge of
art by a journey to Italy. After an absence of three months, however, he
was compelled to return borne without having penetrated farther south than
Florence. Struggles and vexations still continued to harass him; but he
bore up against them with patient endurance and force of will. In 1820 his
Coral-finders, exhibited at the Royal Academy, attracted much
attention, and its success was more than equalled by that of
Cleopatra's arrival in Cilicia, shown in the following year. In 1822
he again set out on a tour to Italy, taking Paris on his way, and
astonishing his fellow-students at the Louvre by the rapidity and fidelity
with which he copied from the old masters in that gallery. On. arriving at
Rome he immediately resumed his studies of the old masters, and elicited
many expressions of wonder from his Italian fellow-artists for the same
qualities which had gained the admiration of the French. Though Etty was
duly impressed by the grand chefs-d'oeuvre of
Raphael and
Michelangelo at Rome, he was not sorry to exchange that city for
Venice, which he always regarded as the true home of art in Italy. His own
style as a colourist held much more of the Venetian than of any other
Italian school, and he admired his prototypes with a zeal and
exclusiveness that sometimes bordered on extravagance.
Early in 1824 he returned home to find that honours long unjustly withheld
were awaiting him. In that year he was made an associate of the Royal
Academy, and in 1828 he was promoted to the full dignity of an
Academician. In the interval between these dates he had produced the
Combat (Woman interceding for the Vanquished), and the first of the
series of three pictures on the subject of Judith, both of which
ultimately came into the possession of the Scottish Academy. Etty's career
was from this time one of slow but uninterrupted success. In 1830 he again
crossed the channel with the view to another art tour through the
continent; but he was overtaken in Paris by the insurrection of the Three
Days, and was so much shocked by the sights he was compelled to witness in
that time that he returned home with all convenient speed. During the next
ten years of his life the zeal and unabated assiduity of his studies were
not at all diminished. He was a constant attendant at the Academy Life
School, where he used to work regularly along with the students,
notwithstanding the rem onstrances of some of his fellow-Academicians, who
thought the practice undignified. The course of his studies was only
interrupted by occasional visits to his native city, and to Scotland,
where he was welcomed with the utmost enthusiasm, and feted with the most
gratifying heartiness by his brother-artists at Edinburgh. On the occasion
of one of these visits he gave the finishing touches to his trio of
Judiths. In 1840, and again in 1841, Etty undertook a pilgrimage to the
Netherlands, to seek and examine for himself the masterpieces of
Rubens in the churches and public galleries there. Two years later he
once more visited France with a view to collecting materials for what he
called his last epic, his famous picture of Joan of Arc. This
subject, which would have tasked to the full even his great powers in the
prime and vigour of manhood, proved almost too serious an undertaking for
him in his old age. It exhibits, at least, amid great excellences,
undeniable proofs of decay on the part of the painter; yet it brought a
higher price than any of his earlier and more perfect works, £2500. In
1848, after completing this work, he retired to York, having realized a
comfortable independence. One wish alone remained for him now to gratify;
he desired to see a gathering of his pictures. With much difficulty and
exertion he was enabled to assemble the great majority of them from
various parts of the British Islands; and so numerous were they that the
walls of the large hall he engaged in London for their exhibition were
nearly covered. This took place in the summer of 1849; on the 13th of
November of that same year he died. He received the bonours of a public
funeral in his native city.
Etty holds a secure place among English artists. His drawing was
frequently incorrect, but in feeling and skill as a colourist he has few
equals. His most conspicuous defects as a painter were the result of
insufficient general culture and narrowness of sympathy.
William Etty
Oil
Paintings Reproductions:
The Storm 75cm x 60cm (30" x 24") $289 - Frans Hals Museum
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