William Collins (painter)
William Collins was an English landscape and genre painter. His sentimental paintings of poor people enjoying nature became a posthumous high fashion, notably in the 1870s when his market price rose higher than Constable and stayed so until 1894. Turner, his model, far exceeded him in value.
Portrait of William Collins (1831) by John Linnell
Rustic Civility (1833)
Barmouth Sands by William Collins, 1835, Guildhall Gallery, London
Scene from the Caves of Ulysses, at Sorrento (1841)
George Morland was an English painter. His early work was influenced by Francis Wheatley, but after the 1790s he came into his own style. His best compositions focus on rustic scenes: farms and hunting; smugglers and gypsies; and rich, textured landscapes informed by Dutch Golden Age painting.
George Morland (Henry Robert Morland, c. 1780)
A portrait of George Morland by J. R. Smith (1736–1804). N.B: this picture has also been accredited as J. R. Smith by George Morland.
George Morland – A Party Angling
George Morland – The Anglers' Repast