From All Walks of Life: Genre Paintings from the Royal Academy Collection
Genre paintings from the Royal Academy Collection
1 December 2007—7 December 2008
In the John Madejski Fine Rooms
FREE

Stanhope Forbes, RA (1857-1947), The Harbour Window, 1910. Oil on canvas. This display explores the rich variety of genre paintings, or subjects of everyday life, from the Royal Academy’s own collection.
It starts with a group of so-called ‘fancy pictures’ which were popular in the 18th century. Fine examples of this kind of painting are seen in Sir Thomas Lawrence’s Gipsy Girl and the stunning Boy and Rabbit by Sir Henry Raeburn. The display continues with 19th century scenes of rustic life, including works that reflect a nostalgia for the simplicity of country life, such as paintings by Thomas Faed, Sir George Clausen and Stanhope Forbes. Other paintings, like The Outcast by Richard Redgrave, delve into serious contemporary issues, in this case the plight of unmarried mothers.
The later part of the display shows work by artists who recorded daily life in foreign lands, including JF Lewis’s jewel-like The Door of a Café in Cairo and Henry La Thangue’s Violets for Perfume, while many of the 20th century artists celebrate the vibrancy of city life as seen in Bill Jacklin’s The Rink, 3pm.
Opening times of the John Madejski Fine Rooms
1pm–4.30pm Tuesday to Friday
10am–6pm Saturday and Sunday (closed Monday)
Free guided tour 1pm Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday; 3pm Wednesday; 11.30am Saturday
September extended opening hours and guided tours