Artist: Samuel Edmund Waller (English, 1850 – 1903)
Medium: Antique engraving on wove paper after the original by master engraver George C Finden (British, 1811-1885).
Signature: Signed in the plate.
Dimensions: Image Size 7 1/4 x 9 1/2 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 16 x 19 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
Winter scene at a mansion, with a man waiting near the entrance on horseback in the snow in foreground, holding the lead of another horse, while a woman in a cape on the ballustraded balcony holds a fainting young woman, watched by three distressed women; a boy nearby holding a whip, looking down at the rider; small dog in foreground at right.
Samuel Edmund Waller was an English painter of genre pictures. Waller, was born at the Spa, Gloucester, on 18 June 1850, to Frederick Sandham Waller, and his wife Anne Elizabeth Hitch. His father, was an architect practicing in Gloucester, who ably restored considerable portions of Gloucester Cathedral in perfect harmony with the original design. Young Waller, was educated at Cheltenham College with a view to the army, but showing artistic inclinations was sent to the Gloucester School of Art, and later went through a course of architectural studies in his father’s office. This training proved of service to him, for many of his pictures have architectural backgrounds. At eighteen he entered the Royal Academy Schools, and three years later (1871) he exhibited his first pictures at Burlington House entitled A Winter’s Tale and The Illustrious Stranger. In 1872 he went to Iceland, and published an illustrated account in 1874 of his travels entitled Six Weeks in the Saddle . In 1873 he joined the staff of The Graphic. The following year he appeared at the Royal Academy with a work called Soldiers of Fortune, and henceforward was a steady exhibitor there until 1902. His chief and best-known pictures were Jealous (1875), now in the National Gallery, Melbourne; The Way of the World (1876), Home? (1877), now in the Art Gallery of New South Wales; The Empty Saddle (1879), with an architectural setting taken from Burford Priory, Oxfordshire; Success! (1881), and Sweethearts and Wives (1882), are both held by the Tate Gallery. Later works include The Day of Reckoning (1883), Peril (1886), The Morning of Agincourt (1888), In his Father’s Footsteps (1889), Dawn (1890), One-and-Twenty (1891), The Ruined Sanctuary (1892), Alone! (1896), Safe (1898), My Hero (1902). Old English country life strongly attracted his imagination, and furnished him with the romantic incidents which formed the subjects of his most notable pictures, and their backgrounds were frequently taken from Elizabethan houses in his native county or elsewhere in England. He died at his studio, Haverstock Hill, London, on 14 June 1903, after a long illness, and was buried at Golder’s Green. He married in 1874 Mary Lemon Fowler, daughter of the Rev. Hugh Fowler of Barnwood, Gloucestershire. His widow, a well-known artist, who often painted pictures of children, also exhibited at the Royal Academy from 1877 to 1904. She died in 1931 and was survived by the couple’s son by just one year.