Thomas Faed
1 of 19 portraits of Thomas Faed
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Thomas Faed
by Herbert Watkins
albumen print, late 1850s
4 in. x 6 3/4 in. (102 mm x 170 mm)
Purchased, 1985
Primary Collection
NPG P301(45)
Artistback to top
- (George) Herbert Watkins (1828-1916), Photographer. Artist associated with 262 portraits, Sitter in 1 portrait.
This portraitback to top
Born in Scotland, Thomas Faed studied at the School of Design in Edinburgh and came to London in the early 1850s. Between 1856-65 he lived in St John's Wood; he then moved to Campden Hill in Kensington, another district popular with artists. Faed enjoyed an immensely successful career as a painter of Scottish peasant life, exhibiting works with titles such as The Mitherless Bairn (1855) and The Last of the Clan (1865). This photographic portrait of him at work on a painting is unlikely to have been taken in Faed's studio; instead, it is likely that Watkins arranged a number of props to create the effect of an artist's studio.
Linked publicationsback to top
- Saywell, David; Simon, Jacob, Complete Illustrated Catalogue, 2004, p. 212
- Saywell, David; Simon, Jacob, Complete Illustrated Catalogue, 2004, p. 492
Events of 1857back to top
Current affairs
Palmerston passes the Matrimonial Causes Act in the face of parliamentary opposition. The act establishes divorce courts, although women, unlike men, are not allowed to sue for divorce on the grounds of adultery.The Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition is held, a follow-up to the Great Exhibition of 1851, although highlighting Britain's private art collections rather than industry and technology. More than 1.3 million people visit the event.
Art and science
Elizabeth Gaskell publishes The Life of Charlotte Brontë, a year after the author's death. The controversial biography consolidates the myth of the Brontë sisters as isolated geniuses living in remote Yorkshire.Illustrator George Scharf becomes the first Secretary of the National Portrait Gallery, overseeing the collection's growth and its several moves around London before a permanent home is established in 1896, the year after Scharf's death.
International
The Indian Mutiny takes place following the insensitive response of the British army to complaints by Muslim and Hindu sepoys about using animal grease on their gun cartridges, which results in a horrific and violent uprising. The event precipitated a more involved role by the British government in India, taking over responsibility from the East India company.Tell us more back to top
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