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Our Plein Air Heritage
Peter De Wint (British, 1784-1849)Â
Intended to follow in his father’s footsteps and become a physician, Peter De Wint instead pursued his love of art, taking an apprenticeship with the engraver and portrait painter John Raphael Smith. Four years later, he purchased his release from the position with the promise of 18 landscape paintings in 24 months’ time.
From there De Wint would go on to hone his skills under the tutelage of Dr. Monro, a well-known patron of young artists, who admired his sketches. A course of study at the Royal Academy schools a few years later cemented his reputation as a painter. And although he worked extensively in oils, he became best known as one of the finest watercolorists of his generation.
A short visit to Normandy in 1828 marked De Wint’s only journey abroad. As a result, his work is almost entirely devoted to the English countryside. Distinguished by broad washes of deep color and a strong sense of light and shade, his paintings, such as “Waterfall in the Dingle at Badger Hall” (above), were prized for their fidelity to ordinary aspects of nature, which he painted directly in the open air.
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