Mansion House Antiques have been buying and selling quality antiques for over 25 years and have built up a wealth of knowledge and expertise in multiple categories of antiques,specialising predominantly in fine oil paintings and portraits from the 17th,18th & 19th century period.All our antiques can be exported to most destinations worldwide and all goods are professionally packed in house to the highest of standards.Paintings can also be viewed by appointment and delivery by hand in person is often a service of ours.
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Archibald Thorburn (31 May 1860 - 9 October 1935 Hascombe, Surrey) was a Scottish artist and animal painter and bird illustrator, painting mostly in watercolour. He regularly visited Scotland to sketch birds in the wild, his favourite haunt being the Forest of Gaick near Kingussie in Invernesshire. His widely reproduced images of British wildlife, with their evocative and dramatic backgrounds, are enjoyed as much today as they were by sportsmen and birdlovers of a century ago.
Archibald was born at Viewfield House, Lasswade, Midlothian, the fifth son of Robert Thorburn (1818–1885), portrait miniaturist to Queen Victoria. His first education was at Dalkeith and in Edinburgh, after which he was sent to the newly founded St John's Wood School of Art in London. His stay there was only brief, since on the death of his father he sought the guidance of Joseph Wolf. It was his commission in 1887 to illustrate Lord Lilford's Coloured Figures of the Birds of the British Isles, for which he painted some 268 watercolours, that established his reputation. He illustrated numerous sporting and natural history books, including his own. He taught Otto Murray Dixon and Philip Rickman (both in Nature in Art's collection), and he encouraged the young Donald Watson when he came to visit him in Dumfries and Galloway. Thorburn was friends of other eminent bird illustrators including George Edward Lodge and John Guille Millais with whom he collaborated on a number of works including: Natural History of British Feeding Ducks British Diving Ducks and British Game Birds.
His paintings were regularly exhibited at the Royal Academy and he designed their first Christmas card for the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds in 1899, a practice that he continued until 1935.
He was Vice-President of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. In the 1890s Thorburn became disheartened by the British Institution and had his work shown at A. Baird Carter of 70 Jermyn Street.
On his marriage to Constance Mudie, Thorburn moved to High Leybourne in Hascombe in 1902, where he was to spend the rest of his life. In the 1930s he refused to make use of electric lighting, preferring natural light for his painting, and making use of lamps and candles. His grave is at St John the Baptist church in Busbridge, Godalming
TITLED: A Fosty Dawn, this sought after print reproduced after the original artists watercolour painting is a desirable copy which appears like a genuine original.
SIGNATURE:-
Archibald Thorburn (31 May 1860 - 9 October 1935 Hascombe, Surrey) - Signed lower left bottom and dated 1920.
FRAME:-
Carved oak decorative polished frame
measurements
Height:
18 in
Width:
22 in
measurements
declaration
Mansion House Antiques & Fine Art has clarified that the Archibald Thorburn Print of Grouse (LA114134) is genuinely of the period declared with the date/period of manufacture being Early 20th Century
declaration
condition
condition
Very good condition throughout, preserved under glass.