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All Augustus Earle Oil Paintings


 
 
Augustus Earle Past and Present No 1 oil painting reproduction


Past and Present No 1
1858 Oil on canvas 63.5 x 76.2 cm (20 x 30 in) Tate Gallery London (mk63)
new3/Augustus Earle-294774.jpgPainting ID::  28395
 

 

 
   
      

Augustus Earle
  
Australian Painter , 1793-1838 Nephew of Ralph Earl. He exhibited at the Royal Academy in London between 1806 and 1815, when he began travelling. He visited the Mediterranean between 1815 and 1817, and lived in North America (1818-20) and South America (1820-24). In February 1824, en route to India, he was accidentally abandoned on Tristan da Cunha for eight months. The passing ship that rescued him took him to Australia. Here he lived from 1825 until 1828, a period broken by a seven-month residence in New Zealand. During all of his voyages he made watercolour sketches, particularly of places 'hitherto unvisited by any artist', apparently with the intention of publishing a series of aquatints. These drawings, such as a Bivouac, Daybreak, on the Illawarra Mountains (1827; Canberra, N. Lib.), have a robust autobiographical quality. In Sydney he obtained a number of commissions, including a full-length portrait of Governor Sir Thomas Brisbane (1825-6; Sydney, Govt House). Earle returned to England in 1829 and produced a series of prints, Views in New South Wales, and Van Diemen's Land.
Past and Present No 1
1858 Oil on canvas 63.5 x 76.2 cm (20 x 30 in) Tate Gallery London (mk63)

Related Paintings to Augustus Earle :.
| Large Plane Trees (The Road Menders)2 | Peter Paul Rubens - The Dismissal of the Lictors, 1616-1617 | General Officers of World War I by John Singer Sargent | Petrus Christus--A Goldsmith in His Shop, Possibly Saint Eligius | Giuseppe Cesari, (Il Cavaliere d Arpino) - Madonna and Child with Saints Peter and Paul, 1608-160 | | Saint Mary Magdalene Penitent | A Dutch Yacht Before the Wind in a Harbour | larkfalk och angspiplarka | Episode from the Battle of Tetudn | The Bridge at Narni A study (mk05) |


        

 

 

 

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