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Thomas Barker was born in
Trosnant, Pontypool, in 1769, the eldest of the four sons of Benjamin
Barker, a spendthrift who took to painting horses and who settled in
Bath as a stable hand about 1783, and Anne, about whom nothing is known.
Thomas' youthful talent for drawing figures and sketching landscape
attracted the notice of the predatory Charles Spackman, a wealthy coach
builder and property developer, who had Thomas educated at Shepton
Mallet Grammar School and took him into his own home. At Spackman's,
Thomas copied and imitated landscapes of the Italian and Flemish schools
as well as those of Gainsborough, who had lived in Bath from 1759 to
1774. Spackman arranged an exhibition
for his protégé in Bath in 1790; this proved profitable to them both.
Subsequently Spackman sent Barker to Rome for three years, where he
studied assiduously, learning the art of fresco painting. A second
exhibition, including work sent back from Rome for Spackman to sell, was
held in Bath in 1793.
Returning to England in
1793 to find Spackman on the verge of bankruptcy, Barker established
himself in London, showing at the Royal Academy of Arts scenes based on
his Italian sketchbooks. Achieving only a moderate success, he resolved to
be a provincial painter and resettled in Bath in 1800. In 1803 he married
Priscilla Jones, with whom he had eight children. Two of them, Thomas
Jones and John Joseph were to become accomplished painters. Barker built a
fine house on Sion Hill with an art gallery where he held frequent
exhibitions of his work, and he also gathered a fine art collection.
Barker specialized in
rustic genre paintings, fancy pictures, studies of local characters, and
landscapes; he executed few portraits. Such figure subjects as the
Woodman (a variant on Gainsborough's theme) were so popular that they
were widely copied on pottery, china, and fabrics.
He exhibited chiefly at the
British Institution, was well patronized by local collectors, and amassed
a considerable fortune. However, he managed his own affairs badly, and at
the end of his life, as the prosperity of Bath declined, he fell on hard
times. He died at Bath on December 11, 1847.
The color palette of our painting, notably
the silvery sky, is wholly characteristic of Barker, as is the subject
matter. Among Barker's most innovative works are in fact
Impressions of Rustic Figures after Nature
(1813), the first one-man collection of lithographs ever printed in England.
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