John Laporte – Attributed: Three Landscape Paintings

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Three gouache landscape paintings attributed to John Laporte (1761-1839). All three pictures are painted on blue laid paper and are to be sold as seen in the photos without mounts or frames.

Sizes and condition:

The winding river in the mountainous valley is the largest, measuring 14 1/8 x 19 7/8 in.
The wooded landscape is the next largest, measuring 11 7/8 x 17 7/8 in.
The river landscape with boats is the smallest, measuring 9 7/8 x 13 7/8 in.
All three pictures suffer from creases in various degrees with the largest having one small tear which measures about 1.5 cm from the bottom of the sheet.

Brand

Laporte, John (1761-1839)

Laporte was born into a family of French Huguenot origins, possibly in London or in Ireland, and studied art under the Irish-born Huguenot painter John Melchior Barralet, either in London or Dublin. He became a drawing-master at the Addiscombe Military Seminary, Surrey. He was also a successful private teacher, and Dr. Thomas Monro (the patron of J. M. W. Turner amongst others), was one of his pupils. From 1785 he contributed landscapes to the Royal Academy and British Institution exhibitions in London, and was an original member of the short-lived society called 'The Associated Artists in Watercolours,' from which he retired in 1811. He also painted in oils. Laporte published: Characters of Trees (1798–1801), Progressive Lessons sketched from Nature (1804), and The Progress of a Water-colour Drawing. Between 1801 and 1805 he and his collaborator William F. Wells made seventy-two soft-ground etchings after drawings by Thomas Gainsborough (thirty-three by Laporte, the remainder by Wells). They initially issued these etchings as individual plates, upon completion of each (thus bearing publication dates ranging from 1802 to 1805), and then as hand-coloured and bound sets under the title A Collection of Prints, illustrative of English Scenery, from the Drawings and Sketches of Gainsborough (circa 1805; reissued in 1819 by the publisher H.R. Young but with only around sixty-two plates and the original publication dates removed from these). Laporte's Perdita discovered by the Old Shepherd was engraved by Bartolozzi, and his Millbank on the River Thames by Francis Jukes. Laporte died in London on 8 July 1839, aged 78.