Life at the Sea-Side (Ramsgate Sands)

  • About the work
    Location
    Country: UK
    City: London
    Place: Government Art Collection

    This engraving shows the popular Victorian painting ‘Life at the Sea-Side, more commonly known as ‘Ramsgate Sands’, which was painted between 1852 and 1854 by William Powell Frith. The original is the smallest of Frith’s complex panoramas showing contemporary Victorian life. Frith used a novel viewpoint for this scene, which is painted as though the artist is in a boat at sea, looking towards the shore.

    When the painting was first exhibited in 1854, at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition, Queen Victoria expressed her desire to purchase it. However, Frith had already sold the work to the art dealers Messrs Lloyd for 1000 guineas. On hearing of the Queen’s interest in the painting, the dealers offered it to her for the same price they had paid. The one condition was that they borrow the picture for three years in order to make an engraving - a lengthy process for a painting of this complexity.

    The plate was made by engraver Charles William Sharpe and sold to the Art Union of London, who published this engraving in 1859. During the Victorian period paintings and their engraving rights were frequently sold separately by the artist and Frith was one of the first artists to enjoy the financial benefits of this practice.

  • About the artist
    William Powell Frith was born near Ripon in Yorkshire. He studied at the Royal Academy Schools and was elected an Academician in 1852. During the 1840s he was a member of the artists' group 'The Clique'. Although his early subjects were historical or literary, Frith claimed to have been ‘strongly drawn’ to contemporary genre. He first painted the subject following a visit to Ramsgate of 1851, which resulted in ‘Ramsgate Sands’ (exhibited 1854). He went on to paint ‘Derby Day’ (1858), ‘The Railway Station’ (1862) and ‘Private View Day at the Royal Academy’ (1883). His 19 children - twelve with his wife and seven with his mistress - caused considerable financial difficulties. Frith died of pneumonia aged 90, at his home in St John's Wood.
    Charles William Sharpe was born in Birmingham; the son of engraver William Sharpe. His sisters, Eliza and Louisa, were both watercolourists. Sharpe worked as a line, stipple and mixed method engraver based in Islington, London, engraving works by well-known contemporary artists. His works included portraits and sporting, historical, genre and sentimental subjects. By 1871 he had moved to Burnham in Berkshire, where he lived with his wife, Ellen, and some of their eight children. Sharpe’s profession was given as ‘historical line engraver’ in most census records. However, by 1891 he was still based in Burnham but presumably retired, as he is described as ‘living on own means’.
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  • Details
    Title
    Life at the Sea-Side (Ramsgate Sands)
    Date
    published 1859
    Medium
    Coloured engraving
    Acquisition
    Purchased from the Parker Gallery, March 1973
    GAC number
    10104