The Bristol School is a term applied retrospectively to describe the informal association and works of a group of artists working in Bristol, England, in the early 19th century. It was mainly active in the 1820s, although the origins and influences of the school have been traced over the wider period 1810–40. During the period of his participation in the activities of the Bristol School, Francis Danby developed the atmospheric, poetical style of landscape painting which then initiated his period of great success in London in the 1820s.
Francis Danby, The Avon Gorge, Looking toward Clifton, watercolour, c. 1820.
Francis Danby, View of the Avon Gorge, oil on panel, 1822.
Francis Danby was an Irish painter of the Romantic era. His imaginative, dramatic landscapes were comparable to those of John Martin. Danby initially developed his imaginative style while he was the central figure in a group of artists who have come to be known as the Bristol School. His period of greatest success was in London in the 1820s.
Danby in the 1850s
Panorama of the Coast at Sunset, c. 1813, National Gallery of Art
View of the Avon Gorge, oil on panel, 1822
The Shipwreck, oil on canvas, 1859