William Leighton Leitch
William Leighton Leitch (2 Nov 1804 – 25 April 1883) was a master Scottish landscape watercolour painter and illustrator. He was Drawing Master to Queen Victoria for 22 years. He was Vice President of the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours, on Pall Mall in London, for twenty years.
Life
Leitch was born in
In 1824 he was engaged as a scene-painter at the
After exhibiting two drawings at the Society of British Artists in 1832, he travelled to the continent in 1833, passing through the Netherlands, Germany, and Switzerland to Italy. While in Venice he met and became friends with the Hungarian painter, Miklós Barabás; They toured and painted in the Lago Maggiore region in 1834, and Leitch was a great influence on Barabás's future work. After an absence of four years, during which Leitch supported himself mainly by teaching, and had visited the principal cities of Italy, and made numerous sketches there and in Sicily, he returned to London in July 1837.
He now devoted himself almost entirely to teaching and working in
Leitch exhibited occasionally at the
Leitch died in April 1883 at his home in
Work
Leitch was a master of his art, which was based on a profound study of nature and of the great masters, especially Turner in his prime. His works are marked by their graceful composition, their pure colour, and the brilliant effects of atmosphere.
Among the books illustrated with engravings from his drawings are the Rev. Robert Walsh's "Constantinople and the Turkish empire" (1838); George Newenham Wright's "The Rhine, Italy and Greece" (1840), and "Shores and islands of the Mediterranean" (1841), William Brockedon's "Italy" (1843), Sir T. D. Lauder's "Memorial of the royal progress in Scotland" (1843), and John Parker Lawson's "Scotland delineated" (1847–54). The sketches in his possession at his death, with a very few finished drawings and oil pictures, were sold at Christie's in March 1884, and brought upwards of 9,000 pounds.
References
- ^ Tooley, p. 246.
- Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Leitch, William Leighton". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
Further reading
- MacGeorge, Andrew. William Leighton Leitch, landscape painter (London, Blackie, 1884)
- Tooley, Sarah A. Lives, Great and Simple (Walter Scott, 1887) pp. 237–246.
External links
- Examples of Leitch's work (The National Gallery in London)
- Examples of Leitch's work (Her Majesty's Government Art Collection)
- Biography of Leitch (visitrannoch.com)
- Examples of Leitch's work (The Tyne and Wear Museums)
- Examples of Leitch's work (Indianapolis Museum of Art)
- Examples of Leitch's work (Cleveland Museum of Art)
- Examples of Leitch's work (The Metropolitan Museum in New York)
- A painting of Baptismal Font, Cathedral of Palermo., engraved by James Sands for Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1841 with a posthumous poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon.