The Penny Wedding
About this artwork
This painting is one of Carse's most ambitious and elaborate exercises in social genre. It was first shown to the public at the British Institution in 1819 while the artist was living in London. Carse evidently revelled in the raucous merriment and boisterous vitality associated with this distinctively Scottish custom whereby guests covered the costs of the wedding feast and any surplus was used to set up the couple in their new home. Carse filled his composition with all sorts of humorous narratives. On the right of the picture two farmers or shepherds are gorging themselves on ham, while a third pulls down his bonnet to say grace. Behind them a pair of men are bickering over their voluntary contributions as the hat is passed round.
Updated before 2020
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artist:Alexander CarseScottish (about 1770 - 1843)
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title:The Penny Wedding
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date created:About 1819
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materials:Oil on canvas
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measurements:88.20 x 131.50 cm; Framed: 98.20 x 141.20 x 7.80 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased with the aid of the Cowan Smith Bequest Fund, 2008
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accession number:NG 2833
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gallery:
Alexander Carse
Alexander Carse
Carse was an assistant to David Allan before the artist's death in 1796, and undoubtedly received preliminary artistic training from him. Allan's influence on Carse's small, vivacious genre scenes is evident. In 1801, he attended the Trustees' Academy in Edinburgh, but this training did not yield...