The Evening Sun: View on Ewhurst Hill, near Guildford
Image source: collections.vam.ac.uk

The Evening Sun: View on Ewhurst Hill, near Guildford

Support Type: Canvas
Paint Type: Oil Paint
Current Location: Victoria and Albert Museum

The painting The Evening Sun: View on Ewhurst Hill, near Guildford depicts a shepherd resting on a grassy slope, surrounded by his sheep, in the sunset, at Ewhurst Hill near Guildford in Surrey, where John Clayton Adams, the painter, lived between 1873 until his death in 1906. Beyond the shepherd are farmers gathering hay, evident in the full haycart, which is drawn by two horses. The provided text stresses the vastness of the landscape, both forest and pasture, that stretches away into the distance. While this painting stresses the fertility and richness of nature, there is also an element of human influence, such as farming land with sheep, a windmill, production of flour by the miller, and a church. Adams’s works, most of which depicted the landscape in Surrey and southern England, were exhibited at the Royal Academy and other galleries between 1863 and 1893. Idyllic landscape scenes, such as this work and many other works by Adams, were widely popular in the late Victorian era, and the description on the website provides historical context to explain the reason behind the popularity of these works by Victorians. Because of the rapid urbanisation that occurred during the 1870s and 1880s, Victorians turned to rural life for nostalgia.

Sources:

Description Sources: collections.vam.ac.uk
Location source: collections.vam.ac.uk

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Information Compiled by Victoria Sofia Jung
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