Francis Oliver Finch

Francis Oliver Finch, The Dell of Comus (illustrating John Milton's Comus), watercolour c. 1835

Francis Oliver Finch (1802–1862), was an English watercolour painter, and a member of The Ancients, the group of young artists formed around Samuel Palmer and the elderly William Blake in the 1820s.

Life

Finch was the son of Francis Finch, a merchant in Friday Street, Cheapside, London, was born on 22 November 1802, and spent his boyhood at Stone, near Aylesbury. When twelve years of age, at that time fatherless, he was placed under John Varley, with whom he worked altogether five years, a friend having paid a premium of £200. Among his earliest patrons was [[John Rushout, 2nd Baron Northwick|Lord Northwick]], a patron of the fine arts, who employed FInch in making views of his mansion and grounds. Some time after leaving his master's studio the same friend who had assisted in placing him there afforded him the benefit of a tour through Scotland.[1]

After his return he doubted for some time whether he should continue the practice of landscape or enter as a student at the Royal Academy. He joined Sass's life academy and produced several portraits, but circumstances drawing him back to landscape-painting he became a candidate for admission into the then newly formed Society of Painters in Water Colours. On 11 February 1822 he was elected an associate, and on 4 June 1827 a member of that society. He first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1817, at that period living at 44 Conduit Street, Bond Street. He married in the spring of 1837, and lived in Charlotte Street for some time, and later in Argyle Square, Euston Road.

He possessed a fine voice, and was a talented musician, and a poet. He printed a collection of sonnets entitled An Artist's Dream.[1]

Works

Among his best works may be counted Garmallon's Tomb, (oil 1820); View of Loch Lomond (1822); View on the River Tay (1827); View of Windsor Castle (1829); View of the College of Aberdeen (1832); The Dell of Comus (1835); Alpine Scene, Evening (1838); A Watch Tower (1840); The Thames near Cookham, Berkshire (1845); Ruined Temple, Evening (1852); Rocky Glen, Evening (1855); The Curfew - Gray's Elegy (1860); Pastoral Retreat (1861); and Moonlight over the Sea (1862). His portrait was engraved by A. Roffe.[1]

Death

On 10 October 1861 Finch lost the use of his limbs, and died 27 August 1862.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Fagan, Louis Alexander (1889). "Finch, Francis Oliver". In Stephen, Leslie. Dictionary of National Biography. 19. London: Smith, Elder & Co.

Sources

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Finch, Francis Oliver". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. 

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