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{{short description|English painter}}
{{short description|English painter}}

{{about||the Scottish cricketer|William Wyld (cricketer)}}
{{about||the Scottish cricketer|William Wyld (cricketer)}}

{{Expand French|date=September 2009|William Wyld|topic=bio}}
{{Expand French|date=September 2009|William Wyld|topic=bio}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2020}}
{{Infobox person
{{Infobox person
| name = William Wyld
| name = William Wyld
| image = William Wyld (1806-1886) par E. Carjat vers 1865.jpg
| image = William Wyld (1806-1886) par E. Carjat vers 1865.jpg
| alt = William Wyld
| alt = William Wyld
| caption = William Wyld c. 1865
| caption = William Wyld, c. 1865
| occupation = English painter
| occupation = English painter
| birth_date = {{start-date|1806}}
| birth_date = 1806 <!--{{birth date|YYYY|MM|DD|df=yes}}-->
| death_date = {{Death-date and age|25 December 1889|1806|df=yes}}
| death_date = {{death date and age|1889|12|25|1806|||df=yes}}
}}
}}


'''William Wyld''' (1806 in [[London]] – 25 December 1889 in [[Paris]]) was an English painter.
'''William Wyld''' (1806 in [[London]] – 25 December 1889 in [[Paris]]) was an English painter who participated at the [[Exposition Universelle (1855)|Exposition Universelle]] of 1855. He was a friend of painters [[Ary Scheffer]] and [[Paul Delaroche]].


==Early life and career==
==Life==
Born to a family that had produced rich merchants for several generations, he gained a pronounced taste for drawing very young. On the death of a young uncle (also good at drawing) after a fall from a horse when William was aged 6, William inherited his drawing materials. Aged 20, he lost his father but family relations allowed him to be made secretary to the British Consulate in [[Calais]] thanks to the statesman [[George Canning]]. There he served [[Granville Leveson-Gower, 1st Earl Granville|lord Granville]] and got to know the watercolourist [[François Louis Thomas Francia]] (an admirer of [[Thomas Girtin]] and a teacher of [[Richard Parkes Bonington]]), then living in Calais, and studied under him. When his family's protector, Canning, died on 8 August 1827 it became clear Wyld's diplomatic career could proceed no higher since he had interrupted his studies too soon. One of his friends was John Lewis Brown, active in commerce and also a major collector of Bonington's watercolours, and Brown gained him an opportunity to work as a wine merchant exporting champagne from [[Épernay]] to England. During periods of enforced leisure Wyld used the free time to draw and paint with his friend right across France, from [[Dieppe, Seine-Maritime|Dieppe]] to [[Rouen]] and meeting [[Horace Vernet]], then at the height of his fame.
Born to a family that had produced rich merchants for several generations, he gained a pronounced taste for drawing very young. On the death of a young uncle (also good at drawing) after a fall from a horse when William was aged 6, William inherited his drawing materials. Aged 20, he lost his father but family relations allowed him to be made secretary to the British Consulate in [[Calais]] thanks to the statesman [[George Canning]]. There he served [[Granville Leveson-Gower, 1st Earl Granville|Lord Granville]] and got to know the watercolourist [[François Louis Thomas Francia]] (an admirer of [[Thomas Girtin]] and a teacher of [[Richard Parkes Bonington]]), then living in Calais, and studied under him.


When his family's protector, Canning, died on 8 August 1827 it became clear Wyld's diplomatic career could proceed no higher since he had interrupted his studies too soon. One of his friends was John Lewis Brown, active in commerce and also a major collector of Bonington's watercolours, and Brown gained him an opportunity to work as a wine merchant exporting champagne from [[Épernay]] to England. During periods of enforced leisure Wyld used the free time to draw and paint with his friend right across France, from [[Dieppe, Seine-Maritime|Dieppe]] to [[Rouen]] and meeting [[Horace Vernet]], then at the height of his fame.
Wyld worked for 6&nbsp;years as a champagne merchant from 1827 to 1833, making use of the job's opportunities to network with the local artistocracy and to become well-versed in viticulture. He always wished to become a painter but delayed setting out on that course to allow his younger brother to come of age first so that he could succeed him in the wine business. With his friend the Baron de [[Vialar]] he then set out for [[Algiers]]. The Baron fell in love with the country, bought a house there (where Wyld stayed six months) and became a member of the Conseil Général. This country had only been conquered in 1830 and had already been visited some time ago by [[Jean-Baptiste Isabey|Isabey]] and [[Eugène Delacroix|Delacroix]]. Wyld was about to leave the country when he learned that Vernet was on board a warship anchored in the bay of Algiers en route to Rome to take up his new post as director of the [[French Academy in Rome|Académie de France]] – the two men had only seen each other once in 6&nbsp;years. Wyld presented himself on board the ship, was immediately recognised by Vernet and encouraged by him to become a painter, Vernet never having doubted that Wyld would one day do so. He proposed that Wyld come with him to Rome in an official fashion and promised to find him some means of support there

Wyld worked for 6&nbsp;years as a champagne merchant from 1827 to 1833, making use of the job's opportunities to network with the local artistocracy and to become well-versed in viticulture.

==Travels as a painter==
He always wished to become a painter but delayed setting out on that course to allow his younger brother to come of age first, so that he could succeed him in the wine business. With his friend the Baron de [[Vialar]] he then set out for [[Algiers]]. The Baron fell in love with the country, bought a house there (where Wyld stayed six months) and became a member of the Conseil Général. This country had only been conquered in 1830 and had already been visited some time ago by [[Jean-Baptiste Isabey|Isabey]] and [[Eugène Delacroix|Delacroix]]. Wyld was about to leave the country when he learned that Vernet was on board a warship anchored in the bay of Algiers en route to Rome to take up his new post as director of the [[French Academy in Rome|Académie de France]] – the two men had only seen each other once in 6&nbsp;years. Wyld presented himself on board the ship, was immediately recognised by Vernet and encouraged by him to become a painter, Vernet never having doubted that Wyld would one day do so. He proposed that Wyld come with him to Rome in an official fashion and promised to find him some means of support there.
[[File:Wyld-William israelites-terre-sainte-1841.jpg|thumb|Le Départ d'Israélites pour la Terre sainte (scène algérienne), 1841]]
[[File:Wyld-William israelites-terre-sainte-1841.jpg|thumb|Le Départ d'Israélites pour la Terre sainte (scène algérienne), 1841]]
Arriving in Rome, Wyld received commissions for [[orientalism|orientalist]] paintings from Vernet's entourage, including from the sculptor [[Bertel Thorvaldsen]], whose portrait Vernet had painted some years earlier. Admiring [[Michelangelo]] and [[Raphael]], after 6&nbsp;months in Rome Wyld decided to make a tour of the whole of Italy on foot with a companion (apparently [[Émile-Aubert Lessore]]). On 1 January 1834, they crossed the [[Simplon Pass]] in a cart during a snowstorm and he then set up his studio in Paris, where he was commissioned to produce paintings of orientalist scenes and Venetian architecture. Becoming known to the public, he exhibited a 2m wide canvas "Venice at Sunrise" at the [[Paris Salon]] of 1839, winning the 1st Gold Medal in the 3rd class for it.
Arriving in Rome, Wyld received commissions for [[orientalism|orientalist]] paintings from Vernet's entourage, including from the sculptor [[Bertel Thorvaldsen]], whose portrait Vernet had painted some years earlier. Admiring [[Michelangelo]] and [[Raphael]], after 6&nbsp;months in Rome Wyld decided to make a tour of the whole of Italy on foot with a companion (apparently [[Émile-Aubert Lessore]]).
==Life in France==
On 1 January 1834, they crossed the [[Simplon Pass]] in a cart during a snowstorm and he then set up his studio in Paris, where he was commissioned to produce paintings of orientalist scenes and Venetian architecture. Becoming known to the public, he exhibited a 2m wide canvas "Venice at Sunrise" at the [[Paris Salon]] of 1839, winning the 1st Gold Medal in the 3rd class for it.

Thanks to Vernet he mingled in the highest artistic circles of the [[July Monarchy]] and became friends with [[Ary Scheffer]] and [[Paul Delaroche]] (even though Scheffer and Delaroche would not talk to each other). He seems to have made another foreign trip in 1844, to Algeria and Egypt. In 1845 he travelled to [[Brittany]], where he built friendships, in particular with the Comtesse de Tromelin, born Mathilde Devin de Belleville in 1813, with whom he stayed and to whom he dedicated his "Chemin à Ploujean" (in a dedication that attests to the strength of their relationship). [[File:Wyld, William - Manchester from Kersal Moor, with rustic figures and goats - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|right|''Manchester from [[Kersal Moor]]'']] He travelled to [[Fougères]] in [[Ille-et-Vilaine]], then at [[Morlaix]] in [[Finistère]].

After the [[French Revolution of 1848|1848 Revolution]] he returned to the United Kingdom where he specialized in orientalist subjects, became a member of the [[Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours|New Society of Painters in Water Colours]] and had a major success with the businessmen of [[Manchester]], making paintings crammed full of detail for them. In 1851 his admirer [[Queen Victoria]] commissioned paintings of [[Liverpool]] and Manchester to celebrate her visit there, which remain in the [[Royal Collection]] along with examples of his orientalist works. His ''View of Manchester'' has become an iconic image of the 19th-century [[Cottonopolis]]. In 1852 the Queen invited him to her summer residence at [[Balmoral Castle]] to draw its surroundings.


He then continued to live in Paris and exhibit at various salons. He was invited to the festivities for Queen Victoria's visit to France in 1855 (the first by a British head of state since 1520), at which he produced a monumental view of [[château de Saint-Cloud]]. He participated in the [[Exposition Universelle (1855)|1855 Exposition]] in the Pavillon des Arts at the request of Comte [[Émilien de Nieuwerkerke]], effectively French arts minister, on which occasion he was given the [[Légion d'honneur]].
Thanks to Vernet he mingled in the highest artistic circles of the [[July Monarchy]] and became friends with [[Ary Scheffer]] and [[Paul Delaroche]] (even though Scheffer and Delaroche would not talk to each other). He seems to have made another foreign trip in 1844, to Algeria and Egypt. In 1845 he travelled to [[Brittany]], where he built friendships, in particular with the Comtesse de Tromelin, born Mathilde Devin de Belleville in 1813, with whom he stayed and to whom he dedicated his "Chemin à Ploujean" (in a dedication that attests to the strength of their relationship)


==Death==
[[File:Wyld, William - Manchester from Kersal Moor, with rustic figures and goats - Google Art Project.jpg|thumb|right|''Manchester from [[Kersal Moor]]'']]
He travelled to [[Fougères]] in [[Ille-et-Vilaine]] then at [[Morlaix]] in [[Finistère]]. After the [[French Revolution of 1848|1848 Revolution]] he returned to the United Kingdom where he specialized in orientalist subjects, became a member of the [[Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours|New Society of Painters in Water Colours]] and had a major success with the businessmen of [[Manchester]], making paintings crammed full of detail for them. In 1851 his admirer [[Queen Victoria]] commissioned paintings of [[Liverpool]] and Manchester to celebrate her visit there, which remain in the [[Royal Collection]] along with examples of his orientalist works. His ''View of Manchester'' has become an iconic image of the 19th-century [[Cottonopolis]]. In 1852 the Queen invited him to her summer residence at [[Balmoral Castle]] to draw its surroundings. He then continued to live in Paris and exhibit at various salons. He was invited to the festivities for Queen Victoria's visit to France in 1855 (the first by a British head of state since 1520), at which he produced a monumental view of [[château de Saint-Cloud]]. He participated in the [[Exposition Universelle (1855)|1855 Exposition]] in the Pavillon des Arts at the request of Comte [[Émilien de Nieuwerkerke]], effectively French arts minister, on which occasion he was given the [[Légion d'honneur]]. He remained active until his last breath, dying in his Paris home in 1889. His widow continued to take pupils, among them [[Nina Fagnani]].<ref name="Tufts(U.S.)1987">{{cite book|author1=Eleanor Tufts|author-link=Eleanor Tufts|author2=National Museum of Women in the Arts (U.S.)|author3=International Exhibitions Foundation|title=American women artists, 1830–1930|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EvxPAAAAMAAJ|year=1987|publisher=International Exhibitions Foundation for the National Museum of Women in the Arts|isbn=978-0-940979-01-7}}</ref>
He remained active until his last breath, dying in his Paris home in 1889. His widow continued to take pupils, among them [[Nina Fagnani]].<ref name="Tufts(U.S.)1987">{{cite book|author1=Eleanor Tufts|author-link=Eleanor Tufts|author2=National Museum of Women in the Arts (U.S.)|author3=International Exhibitions Foundation|title=American women artists, 1830–1930|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EvxPAAAAMAAJ|year=1987|publisher=International Exhibitions Foundation for the National Museum of Women in the Arts|isbn=978-0-940979-01-7}}</ref>


==Works==
==Works==
[[File:The grave of William WYLD and Richard Howard TRIPP in Montmartre cemetery.JPG|thumbnail|The grave of William WYLD and Richard Howard TRIPP in Montmartre cemetery 18th division, under the bridge Caulaincourt.]]
[[File:The grave of William WYLD and Richard Howard TRIPP in Montmartre cemetery.JPG|thumbnail|The grave of William WYLD and Richard Howard TRIPP in Montmartre cemetery, 18th division, under the bridge Caulaincourt]]
*"The Tivoli Falls" – [[V&A Museum]]
*"The Tivoli Falls" – [[V&A Museum]]
*"The Tuileries", "The Panthéon" – [[Musée Carnavalet]], Paris
*"The Tuileries", "The Panthéon" – [[Musée Carnavalet]], Paris
*"Riva Schiavoni in Venice" – several copies, including [[Williamson Art Gallery and Museum]], Birkenhead; Moorlands House, Leek;<ref>{{cite web |title= Discover Artworks - Venice - William Wyld| url=https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/venice-20959/search/keyword:william-wyld--referrer:global-search| publisher=artuk.org}}</ref> and private collections
*"Rive Schiavoni in Venice" – Birkenhead Williamson Art Gallery and Museum
*"St Cloud", watercolour – San Francisco Museum of Fine Arts, California
*"St Cloud", watercolour – San Francisco Museum of Fine Arts, California
*"Nuremberg" gouache, watercolour on paper – [[Harris Museum]], [[Preston, Lancashire|Preston]]
*"Nuremberg" gouache, watercolour on paper – [[Harris Museum]], [[Preston, Lancashire|Preston]]
Line 45: Line 57:


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
*Gérard. M. Ackerman: "''Les Orientaliste de l'École Britannique''"
*Gérard. M. Ackerman: "''Les Orientaliste de l'École Britannique''".
*P. G. Hamerton: "''Sketches in Italy by William Wyld''" Portfolio vol III 1877 pp;64–67, 126–129, 140–144, 160–164, 178–180, 193–196.
*P. G. Hamerton: "''Sketches in Italy by William Wyld''". Portfolio, vol III, 1877, pp. 64–67, 126–129, 140–144, 160–164, 178–180, 193–196.
*[[Marcia Pointon]] : "''Bonington Francia and Wyld''" London 1985
*[[Marcia Pointon]]: "''Bonington Francia and Wyld''", London, 1985.
*Marcia Pointon : "''The Bonington circle''" Sussex 1985
*Marcia Pointon: "''The Bonington circle''", Sussex, 1985.
*Nabila Oulebsir : "''Les usages du patrimoine''" Algeria 2004 pp: 82
*Nabila Oulebsir: "''Les usages du patrimoine''", Algeria, 2004, pp. 82.


==External links==
==External links==
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Wyld, William}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Wyld, William}}
[[Category:Chevaliers of the Légion d'honneur]]
[[Category:Knights of the Legion of Honour]]
[[Category:19th-century English painters]]
[[Category:19th-century English painters]]
[[Category:English male painters]]
[[Category:English male painters]]
[[Category:French people of English descent]]
[[Category:British emigrants to France]]
[[Category:1806 births]]
[[Category:1806 births]]
[[Category:1889 deaths]]
[[Category:1889 deaths]]
[[Category:Members of the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours]]
[[Category:Members of the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours]]
[[Category:19th-century English male artists]]

Latest revision as of 20:54, 1 May 2024

William Wyld
William Wyld
William Wyld, c. 1865
Born1806
Died25 December 1889(1889-12-25) (aged 82–83)
OccupationEnglish painter

William Wyld (1806 in London – 25 December 1889 in Paris) was an English painter who participated at the Exposition Universelle of 1855. He was a friend of painters Ary Scheffer and Paul Delaroche.

Early life and career[edit]

Born to a family that had produced rich merchants for several generations, he gained a pronounced taste for drawing very young. On the death of a young uncle (also good at drawing) after a fall from a horse when William was aged 6, William inherited his drawing materials. Aged 20, he lost his father but family relations allowed him to be made secretary to the British Consulate in Calais thanks to the statesman George Canning. There he served Lord Granville and got to know the watercolourist François Louis Thomas Francia (an admirer of Thomas Girtin and a teacher of Richard Parkes Bonington), then living in Calais, and studied under him.

When his family's protector, Canning, died on 8 August 1827 it became clear Wyld's diplomatic career could proceed no higher since he had interrupted his studies too soon. One of his friends was John Lewis Brown, active in commerce and also a major collector of Bonington's watercolours, and Brown gained him an opportunity to work as a wine merchant exporting champagne from Épernay to England. During periods of enforced leisure Wyld used the free time to draw and paint with his friend right across France, from Dieppe to Rouen and meeting Horace Vernet, then at the height of his fame.

Wyld worked for 6 years as a champagne merchant from 1827 to 1833, making use of the job's opportunities to network with the local artistocracy and to become well-versed in viticulture.

Travels as a painter[edit]

He always wished to become a painter but delayed setting out on that course to allow his younger brother to come of age first, so that he could succeed him in the wine business. With his friend the Baron de Vialar he then set out for Algiers. The Baron fell in love with the country, bought a house there (where Wyld stayed six months) and became a member of the Conseil Général. This country had only been conquered in 1830 and had already been visited some time ago by Isabey and Delacroix. Wyld was about to leave the country when he learned that Vernet was on board a warship anchored in the bay of Algiers en route to Rome to take up his new post as director of the Académie de France – the two men had only seen each other once in 6 years. Wyld presented himself on board the ship, was immediately recognised by Vernet and encouraged by him to become a painter, Vernet never having doubted that Wyld would one day do so. He proposed that Wyld come with him to Rome in an official fashion and promised to find him some means of support there.

Le Départ d'Israélites pour la Terre sainte (scène algérienne), 1841

Arriving in Rome, Wyld received commissions for orientalist paintings from Vernet's entourage, including from the sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen, whose portrait Vernet had painted some years earlier. Admiring Michelangelo and Raphael, after 6 months in Rome Wyld decided to make a tour of the whole of Italy on foot with a companion (apparently Émile-Aubert Lessore).

Life in France[edit]

On 1 January 1834, they crossed the Simplon Pass in a cart during a snowstorm and he then set up his studio in Paris, where he was commissioned to produce paintings of orientalist scenes and Venetian architecture. Becoming known to the public, he exhibited a 2m wide canvas "Venice at Sunrise" at the Paris Salon of 1839, winning the 1st Gold Medal in the 3rd class for it.

Thanks to Vernet he mingled in the highest artistic circles of the July Monarchy and became friends with Ary Scheffer and Paul Delaroche (even though Scheffer and Delaroche would not talk to each other). He seems to have made another foreign trip in 1844, to Algeria and Egypt. In 1845 he travelled to Brittany, where he built friendships, in particular with the Comtesse de Tromelin, born Mathilde Devin de Belleville in 1813, with whom he stayed and to whom he dedicated his "Chemin à Ploujean" (in a dedication that attests to the strength of their relationship).

Manchester from Kersal Moor

He travelled to Fougères in Ille-et-Vilaine, then at Morlaix in Finistère.

After the 1848 Revolution he returned to the United Kingdom where he specialized in orientalist subjects, became a member of the New Society of Painters in Water Colours and had a major success with the businessmen of Manchester, making paintings crammed full of detail for them. In 1851 his admirer Queen Victoria commissioned paintings of Liverpool and Manchester to celebrate her visit there, which remain in the Royal Collection along with examples of his orientalist works. His View of Manchester has become an iconic image of the 19th-century Cottonopolis. In 1852 the Queen invited him to her summer residence at Balmoral Castle to draw its surroundings.

He then continued to live in Paris and exhibit at various salons. He was invited to the festivities for Queen Victoria's visit to France in 1855 (the first by a British head of state since 1520), at which he produced a monumental view of château de Saint-Cloud. He participated in the 1855 Exposition in the Pavillon des Arts at the request of Comte Émilien de Nieuwerkerke, effectively French arts minister, on which occasion he was given the Légion d'honneur.

Death[edit]

He remained active until his last breath, dying in his Paris home in 1889. His widow continued to take pupils, among them Nina Fagnani.[1]

Works[edit]

The grave of William WYLD and Richard Howard TRIPP in Montmartre cemetery, 18th division, under the bridge Caulaincourt

Museums holding his works[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Eleanor Tufts; National Museum of Women in the Arts (U.S.); International Exhibitions Foundation (1987). American women artists, 1830–1930. International Exhibitions Foundation for the National Museum of Women in the Arts. ISBN 978-0-940979-01-7.
  2. ^ "Discover Artworks - Venice - William Wyld". artuk.org.
  3. ^ 4 artworks by or after William Wyld, Art UK. Works in British public collections

Bibliography[edit]

  • Gérard. M. Ackerman: "Les Orientaliste de l'École Britannique".
  • P. G. Hamerton: "Sketches in Italy by William Wyld". Portfolio, vol III, 1877, pp. 64–67, 126–129, 140–144, 160–164, 178–180, 193–196.
  • Marcia Pointon: "Bonington Francia and Wyld", London, 1985.
  • Marcia Pointon: "The Bonington circle", Sussex, 1985.
  • Nabila Oulebsir: "Les usages du patrimoine", Algeria, 2004, pp. 82.

External links[edit]