Alexander Runciman
Alexander Runciman (15 August 1736 – 4 October 1785) was a Scottish painter of historical and mythological subjects. He was the elder brother of John Runciman, also a painter.
Life
He was born in Edinburgh, and studied at the Foulis Academy, Glasgow. From 1750 to 1762 he was apprenticed to the landscape painter Robert Norie, later becoming a partner in the Norie family firm. He also worked as a stage painter for the Theatre Royal in Edinburgh.
In 1767, with financial support from Robert Alexander of Edinburgh,[1] he went to Rome, where he spent five years. His brother John accompanied him, but died in Naples in the winter of 1768–69. During Runciman's stay in Italy he became acquainted with other artists such as James Barry, Henry Fuseli and the sculptor Johan Tobias Sergel.[2] Runciman's earliest efforts had been in landscape; he now turned to historical and imaginative subjects, exhibiting his Nausicaa at Play with her Maidens in 1767 at the Free Society of British Artists, Edinburgh.
On his return from Italy after a brief time in London, where in 1772 he exhibited in the
In 1773 he is listed as sharing a studio with a Mr McLarin at the foot of Old Assembly Close off the Royal Mile (facing what is now called the Cowgate).[4] He was a member of the Edinburgh Cape Club.[2]
He enjoyed a strong reputation as a landscape painter in his lifetime.
Runciman died in Edinburgh and is buried in
Known works
- Robert Fergusson
- East Lothian Landscape
- Dunvegan Castle
- The Blind Ossian Singing
- The Landing of St Margaret
- Self portrait with John Brown
- The Witches Showing MacBeth the Apparitions
- Fingal Encounters Carbon Carglass
- Agrippina with the Ashes of Germanicus
- Hubert and Arthur
- Agrippina Landing at Brundisium
- A View near Perth
- Italian River Landscape with a Hermit
- David Steuart Erskine
- Temple of the Sibyl at Tipoli
- Murals in the east apse in St Patrick's Church South Gray's Close, Edinburgh.St Patrick's, Cowgate, Edinburgh
References
- National Galleries of Scotland, p. 25
- ^ ISBN 978-1-84822-633-3
- ISSN 0264-0856
- ^ Edinburgh and Leith Post Office Directory 1773-74
- ^ 10 artworks by or after Alexander Runciman, Art UK
- ^ "Alexander Runciman". www.nationalgalleries.org. Retrieved 20 July 2021.
- Duncan Macmillan, "Runciman, Alexander (1736–1785)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 25 June 2007
- public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Runciman, Alexander". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
Further reading
- ISSN 0264-0856