google.com, pub-0288379932320714, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 GRAVIR LES MONTAGNES... EN PEINTURE: Ben Cruachan
Showing posts with label Ben Cruachan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ben Cruachan. Show all posts

Thursday, July 19, 2018

BEN CRUACHAN BY THOMAS MILES RICHARDSON II


THOMAS MILES RICHARDSON II (1813-1890) 
Ben Cruachan (1,126 m- 3,964 ft)
United Kingdom (Scotland) 

  In Ben Cruachan, Loch Etive, 1836, watercolour and gouache, with graphite and gum arabic on brown paper, Portland Art museum 

The mountain 
Ben Cruachan (1,126 m- 3,964 ft) is the highest point in Argyll and Bute, Scotland. It gives its name to the Cruachan Dam, a pumped-storage hydroelectric power station located in a cavern inside the mountain, Cruachan! is the battle cry for Highland clans Campbell and MacIntyre. It is the high point of a ring of mountains, known as the Cruachan Horseshoe, that surrounds the power station reservoir. The horseshoe includes a further Munro (Stob Diamh), a Corbett (Beinn a' Bhuiridh), and several subsidiary summits.

 The painter 
Thomas Miles Richardson  was an English landscape-painter whose first notable picture was a ‘View of Newcastle from Gateshead Fell,’  purchased by the Newcastle corporation. In 1816 he began to illustrate with aquatints his brother's ‘Collection of Armorial Bearings … in the Chapel of St. Andrew, Newcastle-upon-Tyne’ which was published in 1818, and followed in 1820 by a larger work dealing with the church of St. Nicholas. In 1833 and 1834 he was engaged on a work on the ‘Castles of the English and Scottish Borders’ which he illustrated with mezzotints. These publications remained unfinished. Richardson became well known as a contributor to London exhibitions from 1818, when he sent his first picture to the Royal Academy, and was elected a member of the New Watercolour Society. His work was represented in public galleries at South Kensington, at Dublin, and at Liverpool.