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Robert Price - A Bridge in a Landscape

A Bridge in a Landscape

Robert Price (English, 1717–1761)
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License: All public domain files can be freely used for personal and commercial projects.
Why is this image in the public domain?
The Artist died in 1761 so this work is in the public domain in its country of origin and other countries where the copyright term is the Artist's life plus 70 years or fewer.
Robert Price

Robert Price was an English gentleman, known as an artist for his drawings, and as a musical amateur. He contributed to the garden design at the family property of Foxley, Herefordshire, was an art patron, and was the father of Uvedale Price, theorist of the picturesque.

He was the son of Uvedale Tomkyns Price and his wife Anne Somerset, daughter of Lord Arthur Somerset who was the second son of Henry Somerset, 1st Duke of Beaufort. He was educated at Winchester College.

Price undertook an extended Grand Tour in Italy and Geneva, from 1738 to 1741. Much of it was in the company of William Windham and his tutor Benjamin Stillingfleet. They were joined also by Richard Pococke. In Rome they took art lessons from Giovanni Battista Busiri, and Price studied music under Andrea Basili.

In Geneva, Price took part in the "Common Room" group of expatriate Britons running amateur dramatics in 1740–1, supplying incidental music and painting scenery. Besides Windham and Stillingfleet, Richard Aldworth was a major contributor to the plays and pantomimes, with George Hervey playing female parts en travesti. Others involved were Thomas Dampier and his pupil Benjamin Tate, and Thomas Hamilton, 7th Earl of Haddington with his brother and tutor. There was an orchestra led by Gaspard Fritz.

Some of the group, including Price, with Pococke and Walter Chetwynd (died 1786, the Fellow of King's College, Cambridge), made a six-day journey in June 1741 to visit Chamonix, the Mer de Glace and other alpine sights.

At the end of that period Price met in Paris Jacques-Philippe Le Bas, and adopted his habit of carrying a sketchbook around with him. At the time he met also the engraver Andrew Lawrence.

In London, Price knew both William Hogarth and the young Thomas Gainsborough. Gainsborough married in 1746 Margaret Burr, illegitimate daughter of Henry Somerset, 3rd Duke of Beaufort who was Price's second cousin on his mother's side. Hamilton suggests that the friendship with Price was significant for Gainsborough, while the Beaufort family connection could be "serendipitous", but again Price may have brought the couple together.

In 1743 the engraver Joseph Wood published an etching from a Gaspard Dughet painting in Price's collection. A broader use of the "Common Room" term is for a classical culture study group that included Arthur Pond, a Grand Tourist of the 1720s. He published Italian Landscapes from 1741, a series of engravings after Claude Lorrain and Dughet. The Price family were good customers of his, and lent paintings for him to engrave.

At Lewes Price encountered the artist and musician John Malchair who was there to teach music to army officers. Price belonged to the musical circle around John Christopher Smith, which included also Stillingfleet and John Stanley, and wrote the libretto for Smith's oratorio Judith.

Foxley House, demolished in 1948, lay between Yazor and Mansell Lacy. The house was built by Francis Smith of Warwick and his brother William, over the period 1719 to 1730.

Robert Price (1653–1733), Price's grandfather, had acquired the Foxley estate in 1681, through marriage to a daughter of Robert Rodd. The setting has been described as a "secluded, wooded, horseshoe-shaped valley", and a "wild demesne".

Price resided at Foxley, after his marriage in 1746. Benjamin Stillingfleet was a frequent visitor to a cottage near the house, and took up botany there. Price and Stillingfleet together sought out picturesque landscape, and from 1757 a plan to develop the estate proceeded. The fashioning of the Foxley estate is largely attributed to Robert Price, and secondarily to his son Uvedale. The "irregular but easy paths leading up to viewpoints" mentioned in the Oxford Companion to Gardens are now attributed to Richard, who used a "triangle and plummet" to equalise gradients.

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