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Seashore with Fishermen by Thomas Gainsborough

Seashore with Fishermen

Thomas Gainsborough·c. 1781/1782

Historical Context

Seashore with Fishermen, painted around 1781–1782, is one of Gainsborough’s imaginative coastal landscapes composed in his studio from memory and arrangement of studio props. The fishermen on the shore provide human scale and narrative interest in a composition dominated by the dramatic sea and sky. Gainsborough’s late seascapes, like his mountain landscapes, were created from imagination rather than direct observation, reflecting his ambition to produce landscapes of poetic power. These works demonstrate Gainsborough’s conviction that landscape painting could express emotional and aesthetic truths independent of topographical accuracy.

Technical Analysis

Soft, atmospheric handling creates a hazy coastal light that envelops the figures and fishing boats. Gainsborough's palette of muted blues, grays, and sandy tones captures the specific quality of sea light, with the figures serving as warm accents in the cool-toned landscape.

Look Closer

  • ◆Look at the soft, hazy coastal atmosphere — Gainsborough renders the seaside light with a cool, silvery palette quite different from the warmer woodland scenes of his landscape paintings.
  • ◆Notice the fishermen and their boats — the coastal working figures rendered as atmospheric presences within the larger sea and sky composition rather than as carefully detailed figures.
  • ◆Observe the imaginary quality of the scene — Gainsborough's coastal landscapes, like his woodland scenes, were composed in the studio from memory and arrangement, not observed from the coast.
  • ◆Find the atmospheric unity — Gainsborough blends figures, boats, and coastal scenery into a single atmospheric sensation, the different elements sharing the same silvery, diffused light.

Provenance

Possibly by descent to Margaret Gainsborough.[1] Probably Augustine Greenland. (sale, Christie, Manson & Woods, London, 25-28 January 1804, 4th day, no. 43); bought by Charles Birch. Probably with (William Dermer), who sold it in 1805 to Sir John Leicester, Bt., later 1st baron de Tabley [1762-1827];[2] (sale, Christie, Manson & Woods, London, 7 July 1827, no. 27); bought by Smith[3] for Sir George Richard Philips, 1st Bt. [b. 1789], Weston House, Shipston-on-Stour; bequeathed to his eldest daughter, who married Adam, 2nd earl of Camperdown, Gleneagles, Perthshire; by descent to Robert, 3rd earl of Camperdown [1841-1918], Gleneagles; (sale, Christie, Manson & Woods, London, 21 February 1919, no. 134); (M. Knoedler & Co., London); sold 1920 to Andrew W. Mellon, Pittsburgh and Washington, D.C.; gift by 1937 to his daughter, Ailsa Mellon Bruce [1901-1969], New York; bequest 1970 to NGA. [1] _The Farington Diary, \c by Joseph Farington, R.A. [1747-1821]_, James Grieg, ed., 8 vols., London, 1923-1928: 1153 (entry for 8 February 1799). [2] Douglas Hall, "The Tabley House Papers," _The Walpole Society_, 38 (1962): 70. [3] Possibly John Smith, the picture dealer of 137 New Bond Street, author of the catalogue raisonné of Dutch pictures.

See It In Person

National Gallery of Art

Washington, D.C., United States

Visit museum website →

Quick Facts

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
overall: 101.9 × 127.6 cm
Era
Neoclassicism
Style
British Neoclassicism
Genre
Landscape
Location
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
View on museum website →

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