A. R. Quinton
Alfred Robert Quinton was an English watercolour artist, known for his paintings of English and Welsh towns, villages, and landscapes, many of which were published as postcards.
Early life
Quinton was born in 1853 in Peckham, which was then a hamlet in Camberwell, Surrey, the youngest of seven children of Elizabeth née Cullum and John Allen Quinton, a printer, author and journalist. In the summer of 1869, he was attending C. P. Newcombe's Alexandra Park College, Hornsey. On leaving school, he studied painting at the Heatherley School of Fine Art.Career
Quinton's first work was as a steel engraver, but his ambition was to be a painter. About 1874, he began to work in oils, but soon switched to watercolour, working from a studio in Fleet Street, London, and then from one at Lincoln's Inn. In 1877, Quinton exhibited watercolours at the Royal Society of British Artists. He exhibited several of his watercolours with the Ipswich Fine Art Club in 1882 and 1883.In 1895, Quinton and a friend cycled from Land's End to John O'Groats, and Quinton's paintings resulting from the trip were serialised in the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News. His artwork became more in demand and he was able to buy a house with a studio in Finchley, then in Middlesex. His work routine would be to travel around England and Wales for three months of the year, mostly during the summer months and often by bicycle, during which he would draw sketches and take photographs of locations which he would work up into paintings in his studio during the winter months. Many of his artworks were published as postcards by Raphael Tuck and J Salmon Ltd which remain popular with today's collectors. His paintings have also been published in many calendars. Well over 2,000 of his paintings were published between 1904 and the time of his death. He also illustrated a number of books including The Historic Thames by Hilaire Belloc.
Quinton exhibited at the Birmingham Royal Society of British Artists; Dudley Gallery; Dowdeswell Gallery; Grosvenor Gallery; Liverpool Walker Art Gallery; Manchester City Art Gallery; the Royal Society of British Artists; Royal Hibernian Academy; Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colour and the Royal Institute of Oil Painters. He exhibited at the Royal Academy but he was later banned from exhibiting there as the authorities were not in favour of his 'commercialisation' of art. His original illustrations for the book The Historic Thames and two other of his paintings were bought by the Duke and Duchess of Kent.
Personal life
Quinton married Elizabeth Annie Crompton at Bolton, Lancashire, in May 1885 and with her had two sons: Leonard Quinton and Edgar Allan Quinton.Quinton died in Finchley, Middlesex, on 10 December 1934, and left £9,228 2s 8d in his will to his widow and his surviving son.
Illustrated books
- Belloc, Hilaire. '.
- Bradley, A. G. '.
- Ditchfield, P. H. The Cottages and the Village Life of Rural England.
- Rhys, Ernest. .