Luss Glen, Loch Lomond
About this artwork
Williams produced a large number of watercolours of Scotland, often selecting views from around Edinburgh, Glasgow, Loch Lomond and Argyllshire. This is one of his many early views of Scotland. A number of his illustrations were included in publications such as John Stoddart’s ‘Remarks on Local Scenery and Manners in Scotland’ (1801), Sir Walter Scott’s ‘Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border’ (1802), and numerous frontispieces for The Scots Magazine. The village of Luss is on the banks of Loch Lomond, and the large buildings on the banks of the river may belong to the cotton mill that had opened in 1790.
Updated before 2020
-
artist:Hugh William WilliamsScottish (1773 - 1829)
-
title:Luss Glen, Loch Lomond
-
date created:Dated 1797
-
materials:Watercolour over pencil on paper
-
measurements:29.90 x 41.40 cm
-
object type:
-
credit line:William Finlay Watson Bequest 1881
-
accession number:D 2407
-
gallery:
Hugh William Williams
Hugh William Williams
H.W. Williams was a pupil of the artist David Allan, whose influence can be seen in the quality of his draughtsmanship. Williams was primarily a landscape painter. His friend and fellow artist, Joseph Mallord William Turner, both influenced and admired him. In 1817, Williams travelled to Italy and...