The Village Recruit is an 1805 genre painting by the Scottish artist David Wilkie.[1][2] Painted at the time of the Napoleonic Wars it shows a recruiting party of the British Army in a country tavern where one young man has just enlisted and prepares to spend his King's shilling on further alchohol.[3] It was painted when Wilkie was around twenty, the year he moved to London to study at the Royal Academy. It was one of three paintings that were spin-offs from his 1804 work Pitlessie Fair, which had featured a recruiting party.[4] Influenced like much of Wilkie's work by the old masters of the seventeenth century, it has strong similarities to his better-known work The Village Politicians.[5] It was initially known by the alternative title Bounty Money.[6]
The Village Recruit | |
---|---|
Artist | David Wilkie |
Year | 1805 |
Type | Oil on canvas, genre painting |
Dimensions | 64.1 cm × 76.8 cm (25.2 in × 30.2 in) |
Location | Private Collection |
The work was not publicly exhibited in Willkie's lifetime. In the 1830s it was engraved as a print.[7] A version of the painting is in the collection of the Fusilier Museum in Bury, Greater Manchester.[8]
References
editBibliography
edit- Bayne, William. Sir David Wilkie, R. A. Walter Scott Publishing Company, 1903.
- Hichberger J.W.M. Images of the Army: The Military in British Art, 1815-1914. Manchester University Press, 2017.
- Tromans, Nicholas. David Wilkie: The People's Painter. Edinburgh University Press, 2007.