Sir Frank Dicksee PRA (1853 - 1928)
RA Collection: Art
This watercolour sketch entitled 'Rescue' shows four figures on a cliff top. A woman kneels on the left with her hands over her face while two men appear to be stopping a young woman from jumping over the edge of the cliff.
The drawing was carried out at the Langham Sketching Club. This had been founded in 1838 and Dicksee joined in the 1870s while still a student at the Royal Academy Schools. He, and a number of other artists, are known to have developed some of their successful oil paintings for exhibition from sketches produced at Langham meetings or as the Art Journal put it, 'many a well-known painting, afterwards distinguished on the walls of the Royal Academy, has been inspired by a Langham sketch'.
These watercolour sketches were all produced at meetings of the Langham Sketching Club. The club was founded in 1838 and Dicksee joined in the 1870s while still a student at the Royal Academy Schools.
The club ran various drawing sessions including a life class but these watercolours are clearly from the regular Friday evening meeting during which members drew scenes from memory. On each occasion a subject was set, often a single word as seems to have been the case with these examples ('Mercy', 'Repose' etc) and members were then allowed 'two hours, over pipes and coffee' to complete their work. Punch magazine observed; 'marvellous these rapid acts of sketchmanship! The Impressionists nowhere!'. Although some of the sketches were landscapes or animal studies, in general members of the club favoured narrative and often historical scenes. The Art Journal noted that: 'Historical and rustic entirely defines the aims of these honest searchers for the picturesque. If the word picturesque wasn't invented already, it must have been created for the use and pleasure of the Langham Club'.
130 mm x 172 mm