A rocky coastline
watercolour
29 x 96cm
together with another watercolour by the same hand, Lake Orta, signed and dated 'arthur croft 1874' (lower left) and inscribed (verso), 30 x 56.5cm
(2)
Provenance
The artist, thence by descent to the current owner
Estimate: | £50 - £100 |
Hammer price: | £20 |
Footnote
Arthur Croft (1828-1902) was a British watercolour artist. He was one of six
children of the architect John Croft. Of the children, three became artists
(John, Marian and Arthur), and one (Adolphus) became an architect, and they
received their early training in watercolours by colouring their father’s
architectural sketches.
Besides this early apprenticeship with his father, Arthur
received no formal training, but he gained considerable success for his often
large scale watercolour landscapes, and he exhibited views of Switzerland,
Algeria, America and New Zealand, as well as England and Wales, at the Royal
Academy between 1868 and 1893. In 1883, he exhibited a watercolour that
was among the largest ever shown there (over 8 feet or 2.5 m high).
In mid-life, Arthur met and married the American heiress and businesswoman
Caroline Brewer after meeting her on a painting tour of Europe, and subsequent
to their marriage, he moved from his home in St. John’s Wood to New York, where
he maintained a studio and continued to paint and exhibit. On their eventual
return to the UK, he purchased the estate South Park in Wadhurst, East Sussex,
which had been designed and built by his brother Adolphus Croft, and there he
passed the remainder of his life.
Although Arthur failed to be elected to the Society of Painters in Watercolour,
he was a member of the Alpine Club, London, and his paintings were
popular. After his death, they were sold by auction from South Park,
fetching prices ranging from 50 to nearly 200 guineas. Arthur Croft also
has pictures in the collections of the British Museum, The Victoria and Albert
Museum, and Museum Wales.