Carrying Corn thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Carrying Corn

Oil Painting
c.1846-55 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Oil painting, 'Carrying Corn', Eduard Schleich, German School, c.1846-1855


Object details

Category
Object type
TitleCarrying Corn (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Oil on canvas
Brief description
Oil painting, 'Carrying Corn', Eduard Schleich, German School, c.1846-1855
Dimensions
  • Approx. height: 43.2cm
  • Approx. width: 53.3cm
Dimensions taken from Catalogue of Foreign Paintings, II. 1800-1900, C.M. Kauffmann, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 1973
Style
Marks and inscriptions
'Ed. Schleich' (Signed by the artist, lower left)
Credit line
Bequeathed by Rev. Chauncey Hare Townshend
Object history
Rev. C. H. Townshend. Listed in the 1868 post-mortem register of the contents of Townshend's London house (V&A R/F MA/1/T1181) in 'the Fossil and mineral room' as by E. Schleich; Bequeathed by Rev. Chauncey Hare Townshend, 1868.

Ref : Parkinson, Ronald, Catalogue of British Oil Paintings 1820-1860. Victoria & Albert Museum, HMSO, London, 1990. p.xix.

'Chauncy Hare Townshend (1798-1868) was born into a wealthy family, only son of Henry Hare Townsend of Busbridge Hall, Godalming, Surrey. Educated at Eton and Trinity Hall, Cambridge (BA 1821). Succeeded to the family estates 1827, when he added 'h' to the Townsend name. He had taken holy orders, but while he always referred to himself as 'Rev.' on the title pages of his books, he never practised his vocation... . Very much a dilettante in the eighteenth-century sense, he moved in the highest social and literary circles; a great friend of Charles Dickens (he was the dedicatee of Great Expectations) with whom he shared a fascination of mesmerism... Bulwer Lytton described his life's 'Beau-deal of happiness' as 'elegant rest, travel, lots of money - and he is always ill and melancholy'. Of the many watercolours and British and continental oil paintings he bequeathed to the V&A, the majority are landscapes. He is the first identifiable British collector of early photographs apart from the Prince Consort, particularly landscape photography, and also collected gems and geological specimens.'

Historical significance: This is a characteristic example of the type of harvest scene set in a flat Bavarian landscape which was initiated around 1846-55 by Schleich, and subsequently became a popular genre of the Munich school. These include harvest waggons drawn by oxen (as here), as well as by horses or even a combination of both. (See Siegfried Wichmann,Meister, Schueler, Themen. Muenchener Landschaftsmaler im 19. Jahrhundert , Herrsching 1981,pp.166-75, figs. 375-6, 378, 382, 387, 390.)
Historical context
Eduard Schleich (1812-74) studied at the Munich Academy, and privately. He was initially influenced by the landscape style of Carl Rottmann (1797-1850) and Christian Morgenstern (1805-1867, and painted clear and simple mountain landscapes of Upper Bavaria and the Tyrol, conditioned by his study of 17th century Dutch landscapes. In 1851 he visited Paris with Karl Spitzweg in 1851, where he was impressed at the Salon by the works of the Barbizon School, and London, where he visited the Great Exhibition and encountered paintings by John Constable and Richard Parkes Bonington. Subsequently he settled in Munich and became one of the leading landscape painters of the Munich school. The figures in his landscapes were often added by friends, such as Friedrich Voltz (1817-86).

The term ‘Biedermeier’ refers to bourgeois life and art in Germanic Europe, an extensive area embracing such cities as Copenhagen, Berlin, Vienna and Prague, from 1815 (the Congress of Vienna) to the revolutions of 1848. Biedermeier painters were ideologically opposed to academic and religious painting and favoured such subject matter as portraits, landscapes and genre scenes, with still-lifes, especially of flowers. They share a similar technique in the use of separate, clear tones and a high degree of finish, reminiscent of Neo-Classicism while they tend to convey a greater sentimentality. By the 1880s, the influence of this artistic movement was on the wane and was even used pejoratively to characterize the reactionary bourgeois elements in society, which remained quite indifferent to social problems and cultivated a sense of order and sobriety, especially in the private sphere and the domestic realm.
Bibliographic reference
Kauffmann, C.M. Catalogue of Foreign Paintings, II. 1800-1900 . London: Victoria and Albert Museum, 1973, pp. 93-94, cat. no. 205. For a general account of the artist, see: Erika Roediger-Diruf & Helga Walter-Dresser, Biedermeier und Vormaerz. Gesichter einer Epoche. Spitzweg, Schwind, Schleich , exhibition catalogue, Staedtische Galerie, Karlsruhe 1984, pp.34-5, 144-50, 240-48. Siegfried Wichmann, Meister, Schueler, Themen. Muenchener Landschaftsmaler im 19. Jahrhundert , Herrsching 1981, pp.50-51, 68-9, 82-3, 110-130, 135-139, 142-3, 153, 168-178, 182-185, 269.
Collection
Accession number
1569-1869

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Record createdApril 16, 2007
Record URL
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