About this artwork
Burntisland lies between Aberdour and Kinghorn on the south coast of Fife. Much decayed in the eighteenth century, it became popular in the nineteenth century as a holiday resort. Wilson shows a view across the old harbour towards Rossend Castle in the middle distance. The castle had a romantic history with associations with Mary, Queen of Scots, Cromwell and the Jacobites. This serene harbour scene is bathed in a golden diffused light that recalls the classical seaport paintings of Claude Lorraine that were very popular in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Wilson’s picture, however, shows figures and activities from contemporary life. This painting is probably one of a number of views of towns on the Firth of Forth which Wilson exhibited in Edinburgh in 1824.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Andrew Wilson (about 1755 - 1848) Scottish
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title:A View of Burntisland
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date created:About 1823
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materials:Oil on canvas
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measurements:77.90 x 119.00 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Bequest of Duncan MacNeill, Lord Colonsay 1874
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accession number:NG 605
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gallery:
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subject:
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artwork photographed by:Antonia Reeve
Andrew Wilson
Andrew Wilson
Wilson trained as an artist at the Trustees' Academy in Edinburgh and at the Royal Academy Schools in London. He was successful and respected as both a practicing artist and an art dealer. His landscape paintings reflect his Italian voyages, literally in the case of his Italian vistas, but also...