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The Old Welsh Bridge, Shrewsbury
Richard Wilson·c. 1748
Historical Context
The Old Welsh Bridge, Shrewsbury at the National Museum Cardiff records a medieval structure in the Shropshire border town before its replacement in the 1790s. Wilson’s painting thus serves as an important topographical record of a vanished structure while simultaneously demonstrating his ability to transform architectural documentation into classical landscape art. 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 multi-arched bridge dominates the composition, reflected in the calm river below. Wilson captures the weathered medieval stonework with documentary precision while the surrounding landscape provides atmospheric context.

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