The Rookery

Image credit: Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery

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This painting shows Dalston Hall, near Carlisle, surrounded by ancient trees on a summer's day. A young couple wearing seventeenth-century dress walk along the path leading to the hall, their backs to the viewer. To the right, a second couple sit and another woman stands in parkland beside the trees which surround the hall. Distant fells rise beyond sloping woodland. The figures cast strong shadows and almost have a photographic quality. The painting was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1854. In this painting the artist's characteristic and very unusual painting style can be seen. The trees are almost three-dimensional. Blacklock is one of Cumbria's most important landscape painters. He painted the scenery of Cumbria, the Lake District and the Borders, particularly favouring remote areas, in his own uniquely precise style.

Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery

Carlisle

Title

The Rookery

Date

1854

Medium

oil on canvas

Measurements

H 52.2 x W 98 cm

Accession number

1946.67.1

Acquisition method

bequeathed by Clara Houlgate, 1946

Work type

Painting

Inscription description

W J Blacklock 1854

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Normally on display at

Tullie House Museum and Art Gallery

Castle Street, Carlisle, Cumbria CA3 8TP England

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