Henry Edridge (1769 - 1821)
Henry Edridge (1768–1821) was a successful portrait draughtsman and miniaturist who increasingly turned to landscape subjects, which he drew for his own amusement. In his former guise, Edridge produced a fine miniature of the young Girtin (TG1928), whilst a more informal study of the artist working from nature was probably made on a sketching expedition around 1801, possibly with others from the circle of Dr Thomas Monro (1759–1833) (TG1923). The style of draughtsmanship employed by Edridge in his landscape drawings shows the influence of the younger artist, whose work he copied on at least one occasion (see TG1892 figure 1), and a number of Girtin’s works have been misattributed to him, including Kirkby Malham (TG1606) and Farm Buildings (TG1432). Edridge was one of the fellow artists who attended Girtin’s funeral and he also subscribed to the posthumously published Picturesque Views in Paris, paying five guineas for a proof set of the etchings (Chancery, Income and Expenses, 1804). A list of subscribers is included in John Girtin’s account of the income he received from the Picturesque Views in Paris, together with the expenses incurred in completing the project. They are transcribed in the Documents section of the Archive (1804 – Item 1). The Eagle Tower, Caernarfon Castle (TG1309) also came from Edridge’s collection.
(?) 1796
Portrait Miniature of Thomas Girtin
TG1928
(?) 1801
Thomas Girtin Sketching
TG1923
1802
Paris: Porte Saint-Denis and the Boulevard Saint-Denis
TG1892
(?) 1800
Kirkby Malham
TG1606
1799 - 1800
Farm Buildings, Probably in Surrey
TG1432
1798 - 1799
The Eagle Tower, Caernarfon Castle
TG1309
Related works
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Henry Edridge
Thomas Girtin Sketching
British Museum, London
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Henry Edridge
Portrait Miniature of Thomas Girtin
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven