Artist: Clarkson Frederick Stanfield (English, 1793-1867)
Medium: Antique heliogravure on wove paper after the original by a Master Engraver.
Signature: Signed in the plate lower left, dated lower right.
Dimensions: Sheet size 7 3/4 x 10 3/4 inches
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 17 x 20 inches
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
Innsbruck is the capital city of Tyrol in western Austria. It is in the Inn valley, at its junction with the Wipp valley, which provides access to the Brenner Pass some 30 km to the south. Located in the broad valley between high mountains, the so-called North Chain in the Karwendel Alps to the north, and the Patscherkofel and Serles to the south. Innsbruck is an internationally renowned winter sports centre, and hosted the 1964 and 1976 Winter Olympics as well as the 1984 and 1988 Winter Paralympics. Innsbruck also hosted the first Winter Youth Olympics in 2012. The name translates as “Inn bridge”.
Stanfield was regarded as the greatest British marine artist of his day. The public preferred the immediacy and high finish of his sea paintings, to the misty visions of J. M. W. Turner’s later years, and John Ruskin praised him at length in Modern Painters (1843–60), drawing particular attention to his truthfully observed skies and his astonishing ability to render the movement and transparency of water. His most impressive work is the vast Battle of Trafalgar (1836; London, United Services Club). It combines his expertise at drawing ships with the scene painter’s talent for working on a large scale. In addition to his oil paintings, Stanfield produced many watercolours. He also furnished illustrations for several books. In 1847 he and his family moved into the Green-Hill, a large house in Hampstead. It became a meeting-place for writers and artists including William Makepeace Thackeray, Edwin Henry Landseer, C. R. Leslie and Charles Dickens. Stanfield’s second son, George Clarkson Stanfield (1828–78), attended the Royal Academy Schools and became a successful landscape painter, exhibiting at the Royal Academy from 1844 to 1876 and at the British Institution from 1844 to 1867. He painted some coastal scenes but is chiefly known for his topographical views of the Rhine valley, Switzerland and the Italian lakes.