Lewis Pinhorn Wood


Lewis Pinhorn Wood was a British landscapist and watercolourist, best known for his rural scenes of Sussex and Surrey. In the tradition of the Victorian era, his work depicted idyllic scenes of rural life across the home counties.

Personal life

Born in Middlesex in 1848, his father was Lewis John Wood, the 19th-century architectural artist and lithographer renowned principally for his specialisation in architectural scenes from across Belgium and Northern France. In 1875, he married Louisa Howard Watson in the church of St Saviour in Hampstead, Middlesex. They had four children; the illustrator and designer Clarence Lawson Wood, Eveline, Esmond and Enid.
In early married life Pinhorn Wood lived and worked at Burnside in the village of Shere, Surrey, before moving to Highgate, London, and latterly to Homefield Road in Chiswick. In later life he lived in Pevensey, Sussex, where he registered as a member of the Sussex Archaeological Society in 1910, and died on 7 November 1918.

Career

As a young man Wood studied at Heatherley’s School of Fine Art, and learnt to sketch on Hampstead Heath, near to the family home at 38 Park Road, Haverstock in Hampstead. His work was influenced by his father, who he accompanied on sketching trips around the UK, and on several of his painting tours of Northern Europe. His early work from these trips includes Rue de Hallage, Rouen and A Tyrolean Scene. He also studied at the West London School of Art, in Bolsover Street.
From 1873 to 1884 Wood worked as an art master at University College School in Hampstead, a job allowing him to continue his painting tours of the country, particularly during the summer months.
From the 1870s onward, Wood focussed on rural landscapes, working mainly in watercolour, but occasionally in oil, across Sussex, Surrey and some London Boroughs. His work played into the Victorian appetite for idyllic, sentimental scenes of rural life. He exhibited regularly in London at the Royal Academy, the Royal Institute of Painters in Water Colours, the Dudley Gallery, and elsewhere. He exhibited three times at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, with In the Meadows at Arundel, As the tree falls, so must it lie, and Wheat Field, near Fairley, Sussex.
Pinhorn Wood also travelled widely around Britain in pursuit of iconic scenes beyond his mainstay of Surrey and Sussex. From early in his career he compiled an album of his travels entitled Sketches from Nature 1869–1908. Full of dated pencil and watercolour sketches, it provides a record of many of the places to which he ventured, including Cumbria in the summer of 1890, North Wales in the summer of 1891, and as far north as the Trossachs in Perthshire.
In 1892 Wood returned to the continent to paint in towns in Northern France and travelled to Limburg in Germany, which his father had portrayed in his 1862 scene Limburg an der Lahn, Blick in die Altstadt mit dem Dom St. Georg. Paintings from Pinhorn Wood's trip included the substantial :File:Limburg_an_der_Lahn__by_Lewis_Pinhorn_Wood.jpg|Limburg an der Lahn, an idyllic view across the Lahn river towards the castle and cathedral of Limburg.
In 1890, aged 41 and with a young family of four, he wrote a story for children entitled "Harry Goodchild's Day Dream: A Tale". The 28 page book was published by George Stoneman. The monthly magazine The Coming Day reviewed it as "A childish but rather pretty story about two children who were gifted with wings to enable them to fly for once to the moon".
In January 1901 he joined the Savage Club as an 'Art' member.
In April 1906 the Modern Gallery on New Bond Street, London, held an exhibition titled ‘Three Generations’, showing work by LJ Wood, Pinhorn Wood and Lawson Wood together. A similar exhibition of work from the three generations of the family was held by Walker’s Galleries of New Bond Street in February 1912.

Selected works

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