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Overview
Working within the landscape tradition established by artists such as John Constable and J.M.W. Turner, Breanski Snr. sought to develop a distinct personal approach.
Alfred de Breanski Snr. was a British landscape painter, best known for his idyllic depictions of rural Wales and Scotland. Born in Greenwich, London, the eldest son of Leopold Breanski, a Polish émigré. His younger brother and sister, Gustave and Juliet were also painters. After his academic and artistic training, he began exhibiting his paintings in 1869 and made his debut at the Royal Academy in 1872 and continued to exhibit there until 1918.
By the 1870s, Breanski had already embraced landscape as his preferred subject matter. Breanski specialised in painting dramatic Welsh and Scottish landscapes, especially highland lochs at sunset, which often exude a golden rosy light. He also painted views on the Thames and the idyllic landscape of the Burnham Beeches in Buckinghamshire. He travelled to the isolated regions of Wales and Scotland in search of wilderness landscapes, depicted with his unique blend of romanticism and realism. Breanski had a great passion for the Highlands, and perhaps more than any other artist, captured the atmospheric influences of the undulating landscape. Often bathed in a flood of golden light, these landscapes usually feature a loch with cattle or sheep on its grassy banks; sometimes a solitary figure is seen the distance. Breanski was deeply inspired by both John Constable and William Turner but sought his own style of expression. He was fascinated by the texture of rock, earth and foliage and would focus on the minute details of a particular plant or craggy rockface.
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Works
Alfred de Breanski Snr. British, 1852-1928
GlencoeOil on Canvas76.5 x 51 cms / 30 x 20 inchesSigned 'Alfred de Breanski' (lower right)1of 3Contact FormSend me more information on Alfred de Breanski Snr.