Palmer, Samuel

Palmer, Samuel
born Jan. 27, 1805, London, Eng.
died May 24, 1881, Redhill, Surrey

British painter and etcher.

He began exhibiting conventional landscapes at the Royal Academy by 14. After converting to a personal form of High Anglicanism and discovering medieval art, he developed a visionary style, displaying a mystical but precise depiction of nature and an overflowing religious intensity, united by a vivid re-creation of the pastoral conventions. In these works he was encouraged and influenced by William Blake. As his religious fervour faded after 1830, the precarious balance between realism and vision was lost.

* * *

▪ British painter
born Jan. 27, 1805, London, Eng.
died May 24, 1881, Redhill, Surrey
 English painter and etcher of visionary landscapes who was a disciple of William Blake (Blake, William).

      Palmer's father, a bookseller, encouraged him to become a painter. By 1819 he had already exhibited small landscape studies at the Royal Academy. The works that survive from 1819 to 1821 are able but conventional. In the following years, however, there are signs of a profound change in his thinking, perhaps connected with his conversion from the Baptist faith to a personal form of High Anglicanism and with his discovery of medieval art.

      A sketchbook of 1824 (British Museum), rediscovered in 1956, already shows all the elements of his visionary style: a mystical but precise depiction of nature and an overflowing religious intensity, united by a vivid re-creation of the pastoral conventions. In October 1824 the painter John Linnell took him to see William Blake, who encouraged Palmer in the mystical direction he was taking and provided examples of his own work for Palmer to follow. Blake's influence can be seen clearly in the “Repose of the Holy Family” (1824–25) and the series of sepia drawings of 1825.

      In 1826 Palmer visited Shoreham in Kent, and the following year he settled there. His Shoreham paintings became more naturalistic but were still charged with visionary intensity. The years 1827–30 were his most productive, but after 1830 his work shows unmistakable signs of artistic decline. As his religious fervour faded, the precarious balance between realism and vision was lost. He left Shoreham for London in 1834, and expeditions to Wales and Italy confirmed the break with his own past.

      Palmer's real forebears are writers rather than painters. He read with enthusiasm the writings of the German mystic Jakob Böhme, the pastoral poems of John Milton, and above all the works of John Bunyan, whose “Countrey of Beulah” is the nearest equivalent to Palmer's “Valley of Vision.”

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем решить контрольную работу

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Palmer, Samuel — (27 ene. 1805, Londres, Inglaterra–24 may. 1881, Redhill, Surrey). Pintor y aguafuertista británico. Comenzó exhibiendo paisajes convencionales en la Royal Academy a los 14 años de edad. Después de convertirse a una forma personal del alto… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • PALMER, SAMUEL —    English landscape painter, chiefly in water colours (1805 1881) …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • Samuel — samuel. m. C. Rica. Acción de samuelear. || echar un samuel. fr. C. Rica. samuelear. * * * Samuel, Herbert Louis (Šemū´ēl) …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • Samuel Palmer — Cartoon Porträt von Samuel Palmer Samuel Palmer (* 27. Januar 1805 in London; † 24. Mai 1881 in Reigate, Surrey, England) war ein britischer Landschaftsmaler und Radierer der Romantik …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Samuel C. Crafts — Infobox Senator name=Samuel Chandler Crafts width=200px jr/sr=United States Senator state=Vermont party=Democratic Republican, National Republican, Whig term=April 23, 1842ndash March 3, 1843 preceded=Samuel Prentiss succeeded=William Upham date… …   Wikipedia

  • palmer — palmer1 /pah meuhr, pahl /, n. 1. a pilgrim, esp. of the Middle Ages, who had returned from the Holy Land bearing a palm branch as a token. 2. any religious pilgrim. 3. palmerworm. v.i. 4. Scot. and North Eng. to wander; go idly from place to… …   Universalium

  • Palmer — /pah meuhr/ or, for 5, /pahl /, n. 1. Alice Elvira, 1855 1902, U.S. educator. 2. Arnold, born 1929, U.S. golfer. 3. Daniel David, 1845 1913, Canadian originator of chiropractic medicine. 4. George Herbert, 1842 1933, U.S. educator, philosopher,… …   Universalium

  • Samuel — /sam yooh euhl/, n. 1. a judge and prophet of Israel. I Sam. 1 3; 8 15. 2. either of two books of the Bible bearing his name. Abbr.: I Sam., II Sam. 3. a male given name: from a Hebrew word meaning name of God. * * * I (с 11th century BC) Old… …   Universalium

  • palmer — ► sustantivo masculino TECNOLOGÍA Instrumento de precisión para medir diámetros o espesores pequeños. TAMBIÉN pálmer SINÓNIMO calibrador * * * palmer o pálmer (de «Jean Louis Palmer», su inventor) m. Instrumento para medir diámetros o espesores… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • pálmer — ► sustantivo masculino TECNOLOGÍA Instrumento de precisión para medir diámetros o espesores pequeños. TAMBIÉN pálmer SINÓNIMO calibrador * * * palmer o pálmer (de «Jean Louis Palmer», su inventor) m. Instrumento para medir diámetros o espesores… …   Enciclopedia Universal

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”