Thomas Baker (artist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For other persons named Thomas Baker, see Thomas Baker (disambiguation).

Thomas Baker (October 9, 1809 - August 10, 1864, was a Midlands landscape painter and watercolourist often known as "Baker of Leamington" or "Landscape Baker".

Born in Harborne, Birmingham, and a student of Joseph Vincent Barber (1788-1838) at the Barber family's Charles Street Academy in Birmingham, he was the best known, and most accomplished painter of the extensive Baker family of artists. Exhibiting publicly with the Birmingham Society of Artists from 1827 onwards, he painted landscapes throughout Warwickshire, the Midlands and the Welsh border regions whilst occasionally producing depictions of The Lake District, Scotland and Ireland. More often than not, Baker's landscapes would include cattle, although sheep and human figures are also fairly common in his works.


Baker kept comprehensive records of his work and usually signed each major picture "T Baker", dated it to the year and numbered it on the back. Smaller pieces, studies and pencil sketches tend to be signed "T.B." (sometimes to be found playfully hidden around gravestones, fenceposts, treeroots etc) and dated more precisely. His diaries and notes, which contain an 800-strong list of his major works, are held in the Birmingham City Art Gallery while Royal Leamington Spa Pumprooms has a collection of over 60 Baker landscapes, a couple of which are nearly always on display in the Art Gallery. The local Warwickshire historians Alison Plumridge and Charles Lines have both highlighted how Baker provided artistic tutoring to the local middle classes in order to supplement his earnings from major local patrons such as Lord Leigh. In terms of wider success, Baker exhibited 4 oil paintings at the Royal Academy between 1831 and 1858, with his work appearing more frequently at the British Institution (where he exhibited 19 paintings) and the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists.

After his premature death in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire), at the age of 55 (amid suggestions of murder that led to the suicide of his housekeeper Hannah Hewitt), Baker's body was returned to his birthplace and buried in close proximity to his friend, the famous Midlands landscape artist David Cox, at St. Peter's Church in Harborne, Birmingham.


Of further biographical note, the Birmingham-based photographer and landscape painter Edmund Smith-Baker (usually given as E.S. Baker) was the eldest of Baker's five illegitimate children by a lodging housekeeper from Cubbington named Elizabeth Alice Smith. Edmund, together with his younger brother Thomas William Smith-Baker ran a studio on Bristol Street in Birmingham where - alongside the production of carte de visite Photographs (CdVs) - Edmund is believed to have completed new and previously unfinshed Baker landscapes. Some of these works are signed "E.S. Baker" while others display a rather more decorative signature of "E.S.B" whereby the 'S' is combined with an enlarged 'B'.


As a last point of interest with regard to Thomas Baker 'of Leamington', Charles Lines has suggested that prior to his relationship with Elizabeth Alice Smith, the artist had prviously been married at either Leamingtion All-Saints or Lillington Church and produced two legitimate sons. As of yet, this claim is unverified.