John Atkinson Grimshaw
(1836 - 1893)
Scarborough from the seats near The Grand Hotel
Signed and dated, lower left: Atkinson Grimshaw.1879; inscribed, on the reverse: ‘Scarboro’ from seats near Grand Hotel/Atkinson Grimshaw 1878+
Oil on canvas
19⅞ x 29⅞ in – 50.7 x 76 cm
Frame size
27¼ x 37½ in – 69.2 x 95.2 cm
Oil on canvas
19⅞ x 29⅞ in – 50.7 x 76 cm
Frame size
27¼ x 37½ in – 69.2 x 95.2 cm
Tel.: +44 (0)20 7839 7693
Provenance
Private collection, UK

Alexander Robertson, Atkinson Grimshaw, London, 2000, pl.67, illustrated in colour, p.64, pl.51
Biography
John Atkinson Grimshaw was born in Leeds, the son of an ex-policeman. He worked as a clerk for the Great Northern Railway, marrying his cousin Frances in 1858, from which date he turned to painting.
Grimshaw’s early work owes a debt to the writing of the influential critic John Ruskin (1819-1900) and to the paintings of the Pre-Raphaelites, one of whose circle was the Leeds born landscape painter John William Inchbold (1830-1888) famed for the jewel-like detail of his landscapes. From the late 1860’s Grimshaw took to painting nocturnal urban scenes, set in Glasgow, Liverpool, Whitby, London and Scarborough where he rented a house. In 1870 the artist moved with his young family to Knostrop Hall in Leeds. This house would become the basis for many subsequent compositions, a Jacobean house, a wall, a country lane and a figure, by moonlight or dusk. The 1870’s also saw Grimshaw’s first exhibit at the Royal Academy in 1874 where he continued to show through to 1885.
In 1880 he suffered a financial crisis, following which he rented a studio in London where he painted extensively, from the City and the Thames to Hampstead. Grimshaw was very much an artist of his time, influenced by the Pre-Raphaelites, a magnificent painter of landscape and historical genre in the manner of James Jacques Joseph Tissot (1836-1902); he was commercially highly successful. He took advantage of technology in the form of photography and the camera obscura, enabling him to repeat compositions. He is known above all as a painter of urban nocturnes, highly detailed works suffused with atmosphere.
His works can be found in museums in: Bradford; Gateshead; Halifax; Harrogate; Huddersfield; Hull; Kirklees; Leeds; Liverpool, Walker Art Gallery; London, Tate Gallery and the Guildhall Art Gallery; Preston; Scarborough; Wakefield; Whitby; Hartford; Kansas; Minneapolis; New Haven; New Orleans; Rhode Island; Victoria and Port Elizabeth.