William Linton 1800s Antique Engraving “Landscape with Sheep” Signed Framed COA

$349.00

Artist: William Linton (British, 1791–1876)
Title: Hall I’th’ Woods, Near Balton
Medium: Antique engraving on wove paper after the original by master engraver Thomas Higham (British, 1796-1844).
Year: c. 1845
Signature: Signed in the plate.
Condition: Excellent
Dimensions: Image Size 4 1/4 x 6 3/8 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 13 x 15 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
Hall i’ th’ Wood is an early 16th-century manor house in Bolton, Greater Manchester, England. It is a Grade I listed building and is currently used as a museum by Bolton Metropolitan Borough Council. It was the manor house for the moiety of the Tonge with Haulgh township held by the Brownlows in the 16th century. The original building is timber framed and has a stone flagged roof; there were later additions to the house, built from stone, in 1591 and 1648. The name represents “Hall in the Wood’ The house was not used as a gentry house but rather given over to multiple occupation by families engaged in industry. Four (previously five) separate dwellings can be identified, each with its own entrance and staircase. One part was let to Samuel Crompton during the 18th century, where he designed and built the first spinning mule. About 1779, Crompton succeeded in producing a mule-jenny, a machine which spun yarn suitable for use in the manufacture of muslin. It was known as the muslin wheel or the Hall i’ th’ Wood wheel from the name of the house. Hall i’ th’ Wood was bought by William Lever (later Lord Leverhulme) in 1899 and was restored by Jonathan Simpson and Edward Ould. Lever gave the house to the Corporation of Bolton in 1900. An episode of the television programme Most Haunted was filmed in the hall in 2008. In Fisher’s Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1833, is a poetical illustration by Letitia Elizabeth Landon to an engraving of a painting of the hall by William Linton.This dwells on the changes the hall has seen over the centuries. The hall closed in 2021 for essential maintenance, due to severe structural issues, including timber decay, damp, rot, and damage caused by vandalism. But in December 2024 it was announced that Historic England had pledged £47,500 towards Bolton Council’s £95,000 plan for essential survey work.
William Linton RBA (1791–1876) was a British landscape artist. Born in Liverpool, Linton grew up at Lancaster and Cartmel, and went to school at Windermere where later he spent holidays. At the age of sixteen he was placed in a merchant’s office. He however did not like the job. For his own pleasure, he started to copy works by Claude Gellee (Lorrain, 1600–1682) and Richard Wilson (1714–1782). Eventually he made art his profession. Linton’s later works still bear strong influence of Claude Lorrain’s manner with its investigation of natural light effects, of Richard Wilson with his large-scale panoramic compositions, and particularly of Claude-Joseph Vernet (1714–1789) with his inclination to an idealised classical landscape. By 1817 Linton settled in London and started to exhibit at the Royal Academy and British Institution. At that time, his subjects often presented scenery in Scotland and in the North of England, especially in the vicinity of the Lakes. He took an active part in the founding of the Society of British Artists in 1823-1824 and was its President in 1837. In 1828-1829, he undertook a long sketching tour through Italy, travelling from the North to the South coast. On his second, more extended tour, he travelled around the Mediterranean, visiting the South of France, Sicily, Italy, Malta and Greece. The result of these journeys was a great number of sketches. These sketches were successful on their own right, but also they formed a basis for his large-scale landscape oil paintings which firmly established his reputation as a leading landscape artist in classical style. Linton’s large-scale architectural phantasy ‘Delos’ (Wolverhampton Art Gallery) was engraved by William Miller in 1831. The contemporaries praised Linton as “the new Richard Wilson”. He was compared with his contemporary J. M. W. Turner. The real aspect of Venice itself and of the Grand Canal has never been more faithfully rendered, even by Canaletti (sic!), than by Mr W.Linton. We admire the breadth, repose, and sobriety of the tone which are so favourable to architectural effect in his pictures, and Mr Linton never resorts to those artifices of light by which so many modern artists attempt to throw a strained and unnatural interest over their compositions. Linton had wealthy patrons, and his large-scale painting ‘Positano, Gulf of Salerno’ (Wolverhampton Art Gallery) was commissioned by the Earl of Ellesmere. At the same time, Linton also presented himself as a man-of-letters: in 1832, he published a book ‘Sketches in Italy: being a selection from upwards of five hundred of the most striking and picturesque scenes in various parts of Piedmont: the Milanese, Venetian, and Roman States; Tuscany; and the Kingdom of Naples; sketched during a tour in the years 1828-1829.’(London, 1832). In the same year, he also published Scenery of Greece and its Islands, illustrated by fifty engravings and collaborated with celebrated children writer Mrs Barbara Hofland (1770–1844) on the book ‘Poetical illustrations of the various scenes represented in Mr. Linton’s “Sketches in Italy”. He was a talented chemist and published in 1852 the Ancient and Modern Colours, from the Earliest Periods to the Present Time, with their Chemical and Artistical Properties. In 1831, he married Julia Adelina Swettenham (1806–1867), a niece to the Countess of Winterton. They settled down in Marylebone, London, where in the 1840s he opened a Gallery at 7, Lodge Place, London. From the 1860s, he started to sell his works through Christie’s. Large sales of his collection were held at the Christie’s in 1860, and again after his retirement in 1865. William Linton died in December 1876. His paintings can be found at the Tate Britain, Fitzwilliam Museum, Warrington Museum & Art Gallery, Wolverhampton Art Gallery, and some other collections. The British art historian Colonel M.H. Grant said of Linton: “We know of few painters whose life’s work, if collected together into one Gallery, would make a more splendid appearance than this”.

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Salvador
Salvador
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Barry
Barry
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Barry
Barry
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Levinfl
Levinfl
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Bobbi
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Agarfield50
Agarfield50
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 mtgtreasurecompany
mtgtreasurecompany
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william linton 1800s antique engraving "landscape with sheep" signed framed coaWilliam Linton 1800s Antique Engraving “Landscape with Sheep” Signed Framed COA
$349.00