James Eckford Lauder
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James Eckford Lauder (August 15, 1811 - March 27, 1869), was a notable mid-Victorian Scottish artist, famous for both portraits and historical pictures.
A younger brother of artist Robert Scott Lauder, he was born at Silvermills House, Edinburgh, the 5th and youngest son of John Lauder of Silvermills (proprietor of the great tannery there) by his spouse Helen née Tait. Under the guidance and encouragement of his elder brother Robert, an early love of art was rapidly developed.
James Eckford Lauder attended Edinburgh Academy from 1824 to 1828. In 1834 he joined Robert in Italy, and remained there nearly four years. Upon his return to Edinburgh he became an annual contributor to the Exhibitions of the Royal Scottish Academy, and exhibited occasionally at the Royal Academy in London, where his works attracted much attention.
In 1839 he was elected an associate, and in 1846 became Fellow, of the Royal Scottish Academy. In 1847 he sent to the competition in Westminster Hall The Parable of Forgiveness for which he was awarded a premium of two hundred pounds. One of his most successful works, The Wise and Foolish Virgins, was engraved by Lumb Stocks for the Association for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Scotland.
He never married and died from "exhaustion", at 16 Salisbury Street, Edinburgh.
The following are said to be amongst his principal pictures:
- Hagar
- The Unjust Servant (see Parable of the Unjust Steward)
- The Wise and Foolish Virgins
- Scene from The Two Gentlemen of Verona (1841)
- Cherries (1842)
- Hop-Scotch (1843)
- Night and Day (1845)
- Bailie Duncan McWheeble at Breakfast (1854)
- James Watt and the Steam Engine(1855) (today in the National Gallery of Scotland)
- James Eckford Lauder (self-portrait)
- Sir Walter Scott
[edit] References
- Bryan’s Dictionary of Painters and Engravers, edited by George C.Williamson, London 1927, (5 volumes).
- The Edinburgh Academy Register, Edinburgh, 1914.
- Testaments of John Lauder of Silvermills & Helen Tait, in the National Archives of Scotland.