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29 October 2014
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Richard Wilson's Cader Idris copyright Tate, London 2005

The Mystical West: Richard Wilson's Llyn-y-Cau, Cader Idris (1765-6)



Richard Wilson is the father of British landscape painting. It has been said that he discovered Wales for the British public, and landscape painting for British art.

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Wilson started out as a portrait painter in London, but whilst in Italy in the 1750s was greatly influenced by Venetian and Roman landscape paintings and took his inspiration from Masters such as Claude and Dughet. Wilson's masterpiece Cader Idris marks the first great landscape painting in which the British landscape itself is the subject and not just merely a backdrop for some other focus.

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Cader Idris is one of the largest mountains in Snowdonia; Wilson was born just down the road. The name means Throne of Idris: Idris was a legendary Welsh bard and giant. Legend has it that anybody who spends the night up the mountain will wake up either blind, or a poet, or a madman.

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During his lifetime, Wilson was never fully appreciated as a landscape artist. By 1768 his commissions had run dry and he took to drink. Returning home to Wales. he was put up by a cousin near Mold. Not far from here, on the road to Ruthin, it is believed that one of Wilson's final commissions was paid for at the meagre price of a few pints: the sign for the Three Loggerheads Inn. The sign still exists today and you can see it inside the inn where it hangs in a glass frame.

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It was not until after his death that Wilson's work was truly appreciated. Constable once said: "He was one of those appointed to show the world what exists in nature but which was not known till his time." From Turner's tour of Wales in 1798, the works he produced showed unmistakeable signs of the influence of Wilson, and he even went looking for Wilson's birthplace.




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