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Victorian Art in Britain |
Edmund
Blair Leighton
1853-1922
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Edmund Blair Leighton was a painter of
historical genre pictures, mainly of medieval times, but also regency.
He is now one of the most popular of the painters on this web site,
his pictures being amongst the most frequently reproduced as posters.
Rather like Waterhouse, and Herbert Draper, Leighton the man has virtually
disappeared. The reasons for the continuing popularity of the artist’s
work are not difficult to understand, as they are similar to those
in his lifetime, namely nostalgia for an elegant chivalrous past.
Leighton was also a fastidious craftsman, producing highly- finished,
beautifully painted, decorative pictures. It would appear that he
left no diaries, and I have been unable to locate any mention of him
in biographies, and though he exhibited at the Royal Academy for over
forty years, he was never an Academician or an Associate. I set out
below such information as I have been able to accumulate on the elusive
Leighton.
Edmund Blair Leighton was born on the 21st September 1853, the son of the artist Charles Blair Leighton. He was educated at University College School, before becoming a student at the Royal Academy Schools. Leighton married Katherine Nash in 1885; they had a son and daughter. He exhibited annually at the RA from 1878 to 1920. Leighton was, as might be expected from his historic genre paintings a collector of old musical instruments, art, and furniture. He lived at 14 Priory Road, Bedford Park, London, and died on the 1st September 1922. I set out below a short obituary of Leighton, taken from a magazine published early in 1923. Obituary - The late
Edmund Blair Leighton ROI 1853-1922
"The artist selects as a rule themes which offer an excuse for old-world costume, and an easily read anecdote. To place Mr E Blair Leighton's work in a class to which it makes no pretence to belong, or to contrast it with the masterpieces of the past, or even of the present, would be to do it an injustice. It is the pictorial equivalent of light literature, of belles letters, of graceful novels and vers de societe, of much that is charming of its kind, if by its very nature ephemeral." This is a very perceptive comment about the work of Edmund Blair Leighton, which has always struck me as being like elegantly crafted light music. I think that the writer, who called Leighton's work ephemeral, would be rather surprised by its enduring appeal. Contemporary
article from the Art Journal 1900 by Fred Miller
Death Notice - The Times
Saturday
September 2nd 1922 BLAIR LEIGHTON - On the 1st of September at 14 Pryory Road, Bedford Park, Edmund the very dearly beloved husband of Katherine Blair Leighton, aged 69. Funeral at St Michael’s Church on Monday 4th at 3 ‘O’ clock. Friends please accept this the (only) intimation. Report of The Funeral - The Times Tuesday September 5 MR EDMUND BLAIR
LEIGHTON The funeral took place yesterday afternoon of Mr Edmund Blair Leighton the well-known artist and a member of the Royal Institute of Painters in Water-Colours. The first part of the service took place at St Michael and All Angels Church, Bedford Park, and the interment took place in the family grave at Chiswick Cemetery. Those present included Mr Frank Dicksee RA, Mr J C Dallmar RWS, Mr W B Woller RI, ROI, Mr E J May FRIBA, and Mr James Clark RI, ROI. Among the many wreaths was one from the Royal Academy. Blair
Leighton – Some Paintings
The following paintings are included on
this site, we believe they provide a representative selection of his
work.
A Favour
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