Highland Loch Scene

£78.00

Watercolour of a highland loch scene (signed E. Earp).

Width: 70cm - Height: 45cm

Edwin Earp (1851 - 1945)

Edwin Earp is believed to be the eldest son of Henry Earp senior, head of a large family of artists. Edwin was perhaps the most prolific of the family and painted across the British Isles and in Europe, with paintings in Scandinavia and Germany just two of the areas recorded. He favoured landscapes and especially mountainous scenes in Scotland, Wales and the Lake District. His paintings would have found a ready market and are equally popular today. He is also believed to have painted under the pseudonym L. Lewis, probably as a result of being contracted to an art dealer, or more likely, a publishing house.

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Watercolour of a highland loch scene (signed E. Earp).

Width: 70cm - Height: 45cm

Edwin Earp (1851 - 1945)

Edwin Earp is believed to be the eldest son of Henry Earp senior, head of a large family of artists. Edwin was perhaps the most prolific of the family and painted across the British Isles and in Europe, with paintings in Scandinavia and Germany just two of the areas recorded. He favoured landscapes and especially mountainous scenes in Scotland, Wales and the Lake District. His paintings would have found a ready market and are equally popular today. He is also believed to have painted under the pseudonym L. Lewis, probably as a result of being contracted to an art dealer, or more likely, a publishing house.

Watercolour of a highland loch scene (signed E. Earp).

Width: 70cm - Height: 45cm

Edwin Earp (1851 - 1945)

Edwin Earp is believed to be the eldest son of Henry Earp senior, head of a large family of artists. Edwin was perhaps the most prolific of the family and painted across the British Isles and in Europe, with paintings in Scandinavia and Germany just two of the areas recorded. He favoured landscapes and especially mountainous scenes in Scotland, Wales and the Lake District. His paintings would have found a ready market and are equally popular today. He is also believed to have painted under the pseudonym L. Lewis, probably as a result of being contracted to an art dealer, or more likely, a publishing house.