JOHN ALFRED ARNESBY BROWN
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John Alfred Arnesby Brown Biography
John Alfred Arnesby Brown (1866 - 1955)
Born in Nottingham on 29th March 1866, Sir John Arnesby Brown went on to study at Nottingham School of Art under the landscape artist Andrew MacCallum, where he learnt about the observation of nature and subtle effects of light and colour. Between 1889 and 1892 he studied at Hubert von Herkomer's Bushey School of Art in Hertfordshire. He later joined the colony of artists living and working in St Ives. There, he began to paint outdoors.
From 1890 Arnesby Brown began exhibiting works at the Royal Academy and the Tate Gallery in London, as well as in galleries of Nottingham, Liverpool and Cape Town. He was elected a member of the Royal Academy in 1915 and spent the years following this alternating between Haddiscoe in Norfolk and St. Ives in Cornwall, before taking a house in Chelsea. In 1935 Norwich Castle Museum held a retrospective of his work and in 1938 he received a knighthood.
Arnesby Brown is particularly celebrated for his Norfolk and Suffolk landscape paintings and pastoral subjects which he depicts with a timeless naturalism. After 1905, he also began to paint the industrial landscape and was particularly interested in the rail yards and brickworks in the region around Kings Lyn.
Much of his work has been placed in prestigious public collections such as The Royal Academy and the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge.
Public Collections
The Royal Academy London,
Lady Lever Art Gallery Port Sunlight,
Tate Gallery - London,
Worcester City Museum,
The Fitzwilliam Museum - Cambridge,
Norwich Castle and Museum,
Nottingham Castle Art Gallery,
Harris Art Gallery - Preston,
Tyne and Wear Museum,
Birmingham City Art Gallery,
Queensland Art Gallery - Australia, Christchurch