Marmaduke Cradock

Marmaduke Cradock (1660 – 24 March 1716) was an English painter of birds and animals. Some older sources[1] give his first name as Luke.

Life

Mallards on a Pond (Dulwich Picture Gallery)

Cradock was an English painter, noted for his depictions of birds, dead game, and other animals.[2] He was born in Somerton, Somerset and moved to London, where he served an apprenticeship to a house-painter. He was, however, self-taught as an artist,[2] becoming skilled in the depiction of birds and animals. Horace Walpole wrote that "I have seen some pieces by his hand which he painted with a freedom and a fire that entitled them to more distinction".[3]

According to Walpole, Cradock deliberately shunned aristocratic patronage.

He worked in general by the day, and for dealers who retailed his works; possessing that conscious dignity of talent which made him hate to be employed by men whose birth and fortune confined his fancy, and restrained his freedom.[3]

Work

According to the RKD his work as a still life and bird painter was influenced by Melchior d'Hondecoeter, Peter Frans Casteels, and Jakob Bogdani.[4]

Sketches in the collection of the British Museum indicate that he based at least some of the birds in his paintings on drawings from life. He tended to paint domestic birds and common wild species, rather than the exotic varieties favoured by some other artists.[5] He sometimes introduced elements of drama such as attacks by predatory animals into his bird paintings, a feature shared with the works of Francis Barlow.[5] Buyers of his paintings often incorporated them into schemes of interior decoration, setting them into panelling above doors or fireplaces.[3][5]

His Peacock and Other Birds in a Landscape is in the collection of the Tate Gallery.[5] It is only one of three known signed works by him.[5]

Death

He died in London in 1717, and was buried at St Mary, Whitechapel.[3]Soon afterwards some of his works were sold at three or four times the price he had received for them in his lifetime.[2]

gollark: Wow!
gollark: Can't trade if you have no magis!
gollark: Wait, you can trade, via grabbing eggs from the apcave.
gollark: Clever...
gollark: Ah, trading. A great way to end up waiting for ages.

References

  1. Including Bryan and Walpole
  2. Bryan 1886
  3. Walpole, Horatio (1798). "Luke Cradock". The Works of Horatio Walpole, Earl of Orford. 3. London: GG. and J. Robinson and J. Edwards. p. 409.
  4. Marmaduke Cradock in the RKD
  5. "A Peacock and Other Birds in a Landscape". Tate Gallery. Retrieved 9 June 2013.

Sources

  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Bryan, Michael (1886). "Cradock, Luke". In Graves, Robert Edmund (ed.). Bryan's Dictionary of Painters and Engravers (A–K). I (3rd ed.). London: George Bell & Sons.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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