I hadn't visited the Hastings Museum and Art Gallery (website) in Bohemia Road for quite a while, but wanted to know when they were going to exhibit their (or our's really) Turner water-colour of Hastings Fish Market, so was very lucky to discover today, that it had just been added to the current "All at Sea" exhibition in the Long Gallery!
Hastings Museum & Art Gallery
There was a piece of luck! They were literally just checking the security alarm and fittings as I turned up, as it has replaced 2 smaller pieces... The All at Sea exhibition in that long gallery features water-colour and oil paintings, plus a few pen & ink drawings and sketches, of marine vessels and Sussex coastal scenes. What is very noticeable, from the works of art on show, is that Hastings, and the local fishing industry in particular, has been very busy over the last few centuries!
Turner: Fish Market on the Sands
Joseph Mallard William Turner (1775-1851) is the best known of the watercolourists I wrote about a couple of months ago, who regularly painted in, and of, Hastings in the early 19th century. His 'Fish Market on the Sands' (1824) has to be the most significant of the 19th century water-colours on show here, but there are other water-colours too, including a couple painted by Richard Henry Nibbs from Brighton (1816-1893).
Williams: Misty Morning
There are more oil paintings than water-colours present in the exhibition, including 'Misty Morning' (1856) by Walter Williams (1835-1906), 'Rescue at Hastings' (1814) by William George Moss, and 'Hastings from the East Cliff' (1881) by William Henry Borrow.
Borrow: Hastings from the East Cliff
William Henry Borrow (1840-1905) was born and bred in Hastings, and I noted 4 works of art by him in the room, but I particularly like this view from the East Cliff, with the then recently built Hastings Pier in the background.
There are also 20th century artists on show, a couple of excellent 18th century pen & ink drawings (one with water-colour too) by Joseph Barrington (1747-1821), notably 'Hastings Fishermen' (1785), apparently set below the East Cliff, and a number of sketches by Samuel Prout (1783-1852), who was also mentioned in the 19th Century Watercolourists blog in January; Prout lived in George Street from 1836 to 1845.
Lancaster: Marine Parade
I'm leaving comment about this oil painting to last, the enigmatic 'Marine Parade' by Richard Hume Lancaster (1773-1853). I looked at the inner frame, and the provenance from that looks quite dodgy, which I discussed with the Curator, Cathy Walling (I think it was, if I'm incorrect, apologies to her and whoever it was!). This provides 2 pieces of suspect information, that this was painted in 1818, and it was exhibited at the Royal Academy that same year. The museum obviously has doubts too, with the painting catalogued as painted in 1825.
Now, I have quite an interest in St Mary in the Castle, and Pelham Crescent, and shall be writing about them soon too. Pelham Crescent is very obvious in this painting, yet the building of Pelham Crescent did not begin until 1824, and wasn't finished until 1828 at the earliest, indeed, the buildings to the west of St Mary in the Castle definitely were not completed by 1825... So, one can only guess that an early seller of this painting fabricated its provenance a wee bit for pecuniary reasons!
Whatever, I thoroughly enjoyed my visit, my first viewing of the Turner, which I love, obviously, many other interesting and beautiful works of art, and what a wonderful delight the whole 'Marine Parade' enigma is, I truly like the painting, and it's a real poser regarding the history of the painting...
Quality... With many thanks to the Museum!
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