Winchester College Publication English Watercolours from the Adam Crick Bequest | Page 10

Francis Towne 1739-1816 Waterfall at Chudleigh Rocks, 1787 Pencil, pen and black and brown inks, watercolour 17.1 x 13.7 cm Inscribed recto: ‘F.Towne delt / 1787’; inscribed on artist’s mount verso: ‘Water Fall at Chudleigh Rock / Francis Towne. 1787’ T owne seems to have had a particular fascination with waterfalls: this watercolour is one of four views of Chudleigh Rocks dated 1787. The previous year Towne had travelled to the Lake District and made numerous studies of the waterfalls of Stock Gill near Ambleside. The Lake District views show water tumbling through dense undergrowth. Here Towne depicts bright sunlight on the open, rocky landscape. The foaming water and clouds are represented by unpainted areas of the paper. On his return from Italy in 1782, Towne divided his time between London and Exeter. He had a successful practice as a drawing master in Devon and he was often called upon to paint views of the estates of the local gentry. Towne was disappointed, however, in his attempts to win greater recognition. He was repeatedly frustrated in his desire to be elected an Associate Member of the Royal Academy, and an exhibition of his watercolours held in London in 1805 seems to have been unsuccessful, with very few works sold. Towne’s struggle for recognition during his lifetime was followed by a century of obscurity after his death. His work was rediscovered only in the early 20th century when his approach to landscape coincided with contemporary taste, and he was seen as a precursor to modernism. In the 1940s the art historian Martin Hardie wrote: ‘In his bold simplification of from and emphasis upon structure, Towne seems almost to anticipate Cezanne’. 10 11