Edward Prentis

The basics

Quick Facts

A.K.A.E. Prentis
A.K.A.E. Prentis
PlacesGreat Britain United Kingdom
wasPainter
Work fieldArts
Gender
Male
Genres:Genre painting
Birth1797
Death1854 (aged 57 years)
The details

Biography

Edward Prentis RBA (1797–1854) was an English genre painter. His scenes from contemporary domestic life were popular in his time.

The Sick Bed (1836) by Edward Prentis

Life

In 1825 Prentis contributed three pictures to the first exhibition of the Society of British Artists, of which, in the following year, he was elected a member. From that time he was a steady supporter of the society, and all his works were shown in the Suffolk Street gallery.

Prentis died in December 1854, leaving a widow and eleven children.

Works

Prentis first exhibited in 1823, at the Royal Academy, sending A Girl with Matches and A Boy with Oranges. His works for the Society of British Artists included such subjects as The Profligate's Return from the Alehouse, 1829; Valentine's Eve, 1835; The Wife and The Daughter, 1836 (engraved, as a pair, by John Charles Bromley, 1837); and A Day's Pleasure, 1841 (engraved). The Folly of Extravagance, 1850, was the last picture he exhibited.

Prentis also executed for the British Museum a series of drawings of the ivory objects and bronze bowls found at Nimrud. Some were engraved on wood by John Thompson, and published in Austen Henry Layard's Monuments of Nineveh (1849). He donated some old master drawings to the museum.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 30 Jun 2020. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.