James Astbury Hammersley

James Astbury Hammersley (1815–1869) was an English painter, and a teacher of art and design.

Life

Hammersley was born at Burslem, Staffordshire, and studied art under James Baker Pyne.[1] During the 1840s he taught at the Nottingham School of Design, where his pupils included Henry Hunter and Andrew MacCallum.[2][3]

From May 1849 till 31 December 1862 Hammersley was head-master of the Manchester School of Design. He took part in the formation of the Manchester Academy of Fine Arts, being elected its first president, 28 May 1857. He resigned the post on 30 December 1861.[1]

Hammersley died at Manchester in 1869, and was buried at St. John's Church, Higher Broughton.[1]

Works

Mountains and Clouds – A Scene from the Top of Loughrigg, Westmoreland, a large landscape now in the Manchester City Galleries collection, was exhibited at the autumn exhibition of 1850, and was presented by Hammersley to the Royal Manchester Institution.[1][4]

Hammersley had a commission from Albert, Prince Consort, to paint Schloss Rosenau, Coburg, the prince's birthplace, and another scene in Germany. These works went to the royal collection at Windsor Castle.[1]

In 1850 Hammersley delivered an address at Nottingham on the Preparations on the Continent for the Great Exhibition of 1851, and the Condition of the Continental Schools of Art; it was published. An article by him appeared in Manchester Papers, 1856, entitled "Exhibition of Art Treasures of the United Kingdom", anticipating the Manchester exhibition.[1]

Notes

External links

Attribution

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney, eds. (1890). "Hammersley, James Astbury". Dictionary of National Biography. 24. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 

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