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View in the Wye Valley
Richard Wilson·c. 1748
Historical Context
View in the Wye Valley at the Usher Gallery depicts one of the most celebrated landscapes in Britain, which would later become the subject of Wordsworth’s famous poem. Wilson’s painting of the Wye Valley predates the picturesque tourism that would transform the region in the late 18th century, making it an early artistic record of this iconic landscape. Richard Wilson's Welsh landscapes were the founding works of British landscape painting as a serious artistic genre — the first consistent attempt to apply the formal principles of the classical landscape tradition, learned in Italy from the work of Claude Lorrain and Gaspar Dughet, to the specific qualities of British scenery. Wilson's Wales is not a documentary record but a cultural transformation: the mountains, rivers, and castles of his native country organized within compositions that asserted their equivalence with the grand Roman campagna. His example was foundational for Turner and Constable, both of whom recognized their debt to the painter who first made British landscape worthy of serious artistic attention.
Technical Analysis
The winding river creates a serpentine compositional line through the wooded valley. Wilson’s palette captures the lush green character of the Wye Valley with atmospheric softness in the distant hills.
Look Closer
- ◆The Wye Valley's cliffs are painted in warm buff and ochre, the stone catching late afternoon light that glows against the cooler river below.
- ◆A solitary tree at the cliff's edge creates a strong silhouette that anchors the vertical dimension of an otherwise horizontal composition.
- ◆Wilson renders the river as a silver-grey plane that mirrors nothing specific but suggests sky through its luminosity.
- ◆The middle distance recedes through haze in progressively cooler and lighter tones — a classical atmospheric perspective device.

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