two children (larger child holding smaller) in the open doorway of a small cottage with thatch roof; birds on roof; two kittens on stone steps; flower garden to left of door

A Wiltshire Cottage, 19th-20th century

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Widowed at age 41 and feeling financial pressure to support her three young children, Helen Allingham stepped up her output of watercolors, most of which featured rural cottages and gardens. Her watercolors were wildly popular yet also polarizing. Their popularity may have arisen from the nostalgic needs of those departing to to far-flung colonies and to industrializing cities now seeking a sense of home. Some critics found in them relief from modern woes. Others disparaged their sentimental presentation of a vanishing way of life. Tellingly, a 1903 volume of her work was entitled Happy England.

This centuries-old, thatched home is identified as being in Wiltshire, a county in southwestern England. The attention to detail seen here is typical of Allingham’s work, as is the avoidance of any sense of squalor or hardship.

Details
Title
A Wiltshire Cottage
Artist Life
1848 - 1926
Role
Artist
Accession Number
2005.133.1
Curator Approved

This record has been reviewed by our curatorial staff but may be incomplete. These records are frequently revised and enhanced. If you notice a mistake or have additional information about this object, please email collectionsdata@artsmia.org.

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two children (larger child holding smaller) in the open doorway of a small cottage with thatch roof; birds on roof; two kittens on stone steps; flower garden to left of door