Pickford Robert Waller Miniature Portrait of a Man

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An original c.1860s pen & ink drawing – Pickford Robert Waller, Miniature Portrait of a Man.

A tiny Victorian character study in pen and ink by the distinguished designer and collector Pickford Robert Waller (1849–1930).

Although this drawing is undated, other similar cartoons in the collection by the artist are dated 1865.

On cream wove paper, hinged onto backing paper.

Please note the small size of this artwork.

+ Read the S&W Collection Research

This picture is one of a remarkable collection of works we have for sale by Pickford Robert Waller (1849–1930) which show his great versatility as an artist. Waller produced floral designs for wallpaper and fabrics, but he is best known as a prolific designer of books and bookplates: he produced book designs for authors including Hans Christian Andersen, the Brothers Grimm and the poet and dramatist Laurence Binyon.

Many of the studies in our collection feed into that work: there are naturalistic studies of flowers, which were then worked-up into more stylised designs, and there are many humorous illustrations which could be used in books, including copies of work by Alice in Wonderland illustrator Sir John Tenniel.

Waller was a leading member of the Aesthetic Movement, which championed ‘art for art’s sake,’ emphasising the sensual qualities of art and design rather than any practical, moral or narrative purpose it might have. For a late-nineteenth-century aesthete, though, Waller’s background was unusual: he was the son of a builder. Robert John Waller ran a thriving building firm from Lyall Street in London, and when he died in 1892, Pickford Waller continued to run the business. Eventually, though, the arts came to hold more of his attention than bricks and mortar.

As well as being a practising artist himself, Pickford Waller was also an important collector and patron of the arts. In particular, he was an early supporter of James Abbot McNeill Whistler (1834–1903), who he first met as a young man when he visited Whistler’s studio with the artist Matthew White Ridley. Waller became an avid collector of Whistleriana, and Whistler’s influence can be seen in much of his work.

This collection was accompanied by a rare pamphlet, Bookplates by Pickford Waller, which gives examples of Waller’s book designs, and includes an introduction by W.G. Blaikie Murdoch, discussing Waller's work. According to Blaikie Murdoch, as well as being himself ‘a fecund artist,’ ‘Mr Pickford Waller is mainly known as a connoisseur, especially in modern art.’ He was ‘one of the earliest devotees of Whistler’, with ‘a wonderful collection of Whistleriana.’ For Blaikie Murdoch, though, it is Waller’s work in bookplates that ‘forms an epitome of his capacities.’

+ Artwork Details

Dimensions: Height: 3.8cm (1.5") Width: 3.3cm (1.3")

Presented: Unframed.

Medium: Pen & Ink

Age: Late 19th-century

Signed: No.

Inscribed: No.

Dated: --

Condition: In good condition for its age. The picture may have minor imperfections such as slight marks, toning, foxing, creasing or pinholes, commensurate with age. Please see photos for detail.

Stock number: KC-577