Newlyn School

E636543

The Newlyn School was a late 19th- and early 20th-century artists’ colony in Cornwall, England, known for its naturalistic, plein air depictions of local fishing village life.

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Label Occurrences
Newlyn School canonical 1

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf art movement
artists' colony
activePeriod early 20th century
late 19th century
artisticStyle naturalism
plein air painting
associatedInstitution Newlyn Art Gallery NERFINISHED
associatedPlace Penzance NERFINISHED
associatedWith New English Art Club NERFINISHED
country United Kingdom
documentedIn art history literature on British painting
focus local fishing village life
genre British Impressionism NERFINISHED
hasHeritage influence on Cornish art
inception late 19th century
influencedBy Barbizon School NERFINISHED
French plein air painting
Realism NERFINISHED
languageOfName English
locatedIn Cornwall NERFINISHED
England
location Newlyn NERFINISHED
movementOrigin artist colony tradition in Europe
movementType rural artist colony
notableMember Charles Walter Simpson NERFINISHED
Edwin Harris NERFINISHED
Elizabeth Forbes NERFINISHED
Frank Bramley NERFINISHED
Fred Hall NERFINISHED
Harold Harvey NERFINISHED
Henry Scott Tuke NERFINISHED
Norman Garstin NERFINISHED
Ralph Todd NERFINISHED
Stanhope Forbes NERFINISHED
Thomas Cooper Gotch NERFINISHED
Walter Langley NERFINISHED
paintingTechnique outdoor painting from life
region West Cornwall NERFINISHED
socialTheme fishing industry
working-class life
timePeriod Edwardian era NERFINISHED
Victorian era
typicalSubjectMatter coastal landscapes
everyday life
fishing communities
genre scenes
marine scenes

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Newlyn hasCulturalMovement Newlyn School