Monday, May 18, 2009

John Brett - The Hedger


Exhibited at the RA in 1860
signed and dated
35.5 x 27.5"
on the frame and stretcher inscribed "In dim recesses hyacinths drooped / and breadths of primroses lit the air." Angel in the House.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Oliver Rackham writes: "Only one picture, John Brett's "The Hedger", is of a convincing wood, with stools of oak and ash (but the cataloguer calls them "birch"!) and in the foreground a woodbank with a man plashing a hedge on it.
O. Rackham, "Woodlands", Collins, 2010

Anonymous said...

Thank you. I've read Oliver but didn't notice that. The Stonebreaker is also very real in that way.

cheap viagra said...

why he entitled this oeuvre the hedger, this name doesn't haves any sense for what this works means.