Online Encyclopedia

JOHN VARLEY (1778-1842)

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Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 922 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JOHN VARLEY (1778-1842)  ,
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English
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water-colour painter, was born at Hackney,
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London, on the 17th of August 1778 . His
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father, a man of scientific attainments and tutor in the
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family of Lord Stanhope, discouraged his leanings towards
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art, and placed him under a silversmith . But on his parent's
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death Varley escaped from this uncongenial employment, and, after working with a portrait painter, engaged himself at the age of sixteen to an architectural draughtsman, who took him on a provincial tour to sketch the
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principal buildings in the towns they visited . His spare hours were employed in sketching from nature, and in the evenings he was permitted, like Turner and Girtin, to study in the house of Dr Munro . In 1798 he exhibited his first
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work, a " View of
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Peterborough
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Cathedral," in the Royal Academy . In 1799 he visited North Wales, and in its wild mountain scenery found the subjects best suited to his brush . He returned to the same
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district in 1800, and again in 1802, and the impressions then received powerfully influenced the whole course of his art . In 1804 he became a foundation member of the Water-Colour Society, arid contributed over
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forty
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works to its first
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exhibition . He had married in the previous
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year; and, in order to provide for the wants of an increasing family, he was obliged to produce for the dealers much work of a slight and
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commonplace character . He also taught
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drawing, and some of his pupils, such as John Linnell and William Hunt, afterwards became celebrated . He was a
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firm believer in
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astrology, skilful in casting horoscopes; and some curious instances were related of the truth of his predictions . It was at his house that his friend William Blake sketched his celebrated " Visionary Heads." Varley died at London on the 17th of November 1842 .

Varley's landscapes are graceful and

solemn in feeling, and
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simple aad broad in treatment, being worked with a full brush and pure fresh transparent tints, usually without any admixture of
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body-colour . Though his works are rather mannered and conventional, they are well considered and excellent in composition . Some of his earlier water-colours, including his " Views of the
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Thames," were painted upon the spot, and possess greater individuality than his later productions, which are mainly compositions of mountain and lake scenery, produced without
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direct reference to nature . Among his
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literary works are Zodiacal Physiology (1828) ; Observations on Colour and Sketching from Nature (183o); A
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Practical
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Treatise an Perspective, and Principles of Landscape Design for Young Artists .

End of Article: JOHN VARLEY (1778-1842)
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