George Adolphus Storey (1834-1919)
Provenance
Miss Gladys Storey, the artist's daughter;
The Stone Gallery, Newcastle;
Sotheby's, London, 11 May 2004, lot 615;
The Maas Gallery, London, December 2004
Stanley Seeger
Like many artists of his age (he attended the RA schools in the early 1850s) Storey admired the Pre-Raphaelites and, in its colour and scope, this little watercolour shows the powerful influence of one of that set, Ford Madox Brown, whose painting An English Autumn Afternoon, Hampstead - Scenery in 1853, had been exhibited in 1855, with a similar high viewpoint to the peripheries of normal vision without turning the head. Ruskin, when he first met Brown, asked him what had made him paint ‘such a very ugly subject’, to which Brown replied: ’Because it lay out of a back window.’ Storey would certainly have seen Brown’s picture. In 1858, Storey was living in Marlborough Place, St. John’s Wood, right on the edge of built-up London as it was the. To the north towards Hampstead it was still countryside, like Brown’s view, and it is possible that this picture was the view from Storey’s house.
The Maas Gallery, 6 Duke Street, St. James's, London, SW1Y 6BN
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