Quick Search
Select Language

Select a Language

Close
Afrikaans
Chinese
Czech
Danish
Dutch
English
Finnish
French
German
Greek
Italian
Japanese
Norwegian
Polish
Portuguese
Romanian
Russian
Spanish
Swedish
Bookmark and Share
login | contact
Lacewing Fine Art
The Studio at Farthing Cottage
Stratford-sub-Castle
Salisbury
Wiltshire
SP1 3LB

Telephone +44 (0)1722 330328
Mobile +44 (0)7710 735712
Website www.lacewing.co.uk

WILLIAM BARRAUD (1810-1850) - Receive artist alerts » - More items from this artist »

A Grey in a Stable (1840 England)
Reference no. 40373

Medium

oil on canvas

Signed/Inscribed/Dated

signed & dated 1840

Dimensions

76.00cm wide    64.00cm high    (29.92 inches wide  25.20 inches high)

Literature

Bibl Includes: Dictionnaire des peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs et graveurs by E. Benezit

Exhibition History

Barraud exhibited his first picture at the RA in 1828, aged 18, becoming a regular exhibitor from 1829-1850. He also exhibited at BI & SS.

Condition

Excellent

Description / Expertise

WILLIAM BARRAUD (1810-1850)

‘A Grey in a Stable’
oil on canvas - signed & dated 1840 - 64x76cms

William Barraud was the elder brother of Henry Barraud; William was baptized on April 4th 1810 at St Mary’s Church, Lambeth, where he spent much of his childhood before moving to Camberwell. He is reputed to have followed his father into employment at the Customs House, but there are no records to confirm this and he is known to have been painting seriously from an early age.
He became a pupil of Abraham Cooper, as did his brother, Edward (1817-1901). In 1842 he married Mary Ratcliffe, but she died soon after the birth of their son Clement in 1843. At about the same time, his father died and he became the head of the large Barraud family, marrying Margaret Harrison the year before his death.

With T Fairland, he compiled a book entitled ‘The book of animals drawn from nature‘ published after his death, in 1864, by C Tilt. In about 1850 another book, ‘Sketches of figures & animals’, was published by H Graves, on which he combined with his brother Henry.
He died on October 1st 1850 at Kensington, from dysentery and typhoid fever. In his obituary in the Art Journal, November 1850, he was described as “ …upright and sincere, and while unsparingly rigid to himself, he was indulgent and considerate towards others”.