Collection: British Romanticism

British Romanticism emerged in the late 18th century as a literary, artistic, and intellectual movement, reaching its height between 1800 and 1850. Rooted in Great Britain, it paralleled broader European Romantic currents but found its most pronounced expression in poetry, with figures such as William Wordsworth marking its inception through works like "Lyrical Ballads" (1798).

While primarily literary, the movement’s aesthetic principles, emphasis on emotion, nature, and individualism, extended to visual arts, though with less formal cohesion than continental counterparts. Its chronological boundaries are loosely defined, often framed by Wordsworth’s early work and the accession of Queen Victoria in 1837.

In the visual sphere, British Romanticism manifested through landscape painting, portraiture, and genre scenes that privileged atmospheric effects, dramatic chiaroscuro, and a subjective engagement with nature. Artists associated with the movement often employed plein air studies and a loose, expressive brushwork to evoke sublime or picturesque qualities.

Themes of national identity, historical nostalgia, and the interplay between human figures and untamed landscapes recurred, though the movement’s stylistic diversity resisted rigid categorization. Works such as "Double Portrait: Two Women" (c. 1845) and "Portrait of a Lady, Possibly of the Stanley Family" (c. 1780) exemplify its fusion of intimate observation with Romantic sensibility.