Harriet Gouldsmith

Harriet Gouldsmith (1787 – 6 January 1863) was an English landscape painter and etcher.

Biography

Gouldsmith was a pupil of William Mulready, with whom she has been romantically linked, and through him met John Linnell, who was an influence on her work.[1] She painted in both oils and watercolour, first exhibiting her work in 1807 at the Academy and continuing to show there until 1859 (contributing Landscape with Woodcutters' Cottages in Kent). She also exhibited at the Water Colour Society (up to 1820), of which she was elected a member in 1813, the British Institution and, occasionally, the Suffolk Street Gallery.[2]

Apart from landscapes, she also painted a few portraits[3] and one subject picture on the theme of "Don Quixote". In 1819, she published four landscape etchings of Claremont,[4] and in 1824, four landscape lithographs.[2] She was said to be an expert etcher and "drew on stone for lithographer Hullmandel".[5]

In 1839, she married Captain Arnold, R.N., and from then on exhibited under her married name.[2] In that year she published, anonymously, a book illustrated with her work, A Voice from a Picture.[6]

Harriet Arnold died on 6 January 1863, aged 76.

See also

English women painters from the early 19th century who exhibited at the Royal Academy of Art

References

  1. Biography (Christies, 8 Feb 2011)
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Ellen Creathorne Clayton. English Female Artists, volume 1] (Tinsley Brothers, 1876) p. 397.
  3. Portrait of Sir John Ross (National Portrait Gallery).
  4. The Concert Cottage. in Claremont Park (etching, 1819 – Grosvenor Prints)
  5. Redgrave. A history of water-colour painting in England (SPCK, 1905) p. 140.
  6. A voice from a picture (John Booth, 1839). The book was reviewed in The Art Journal, January 1840, who revealed its authorship.

This article incorporates text from the article "ARNOLD, Harriet" in Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers by Michael Bryan, edited by Robert Edmund Graves and Sir Walter Armstrong, an 1886–1889 publication now in the public domain.

External links