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Richard Parkes Bonington (December 25, 1802 - September 28, 1828) was an English Romantic landscape painter and lithograph.
Richard Parkes Bonington was born in the town of Arnold, a suburb of
Nottingham in England. His father was successively a gaoler, a drawing
master and lace-maker, and his mother a teacher. Bonington learned
watercolour painting from his father and exhibited paintings at the
Liverpool Academy at age 11.
In 1817, Bonington's family moved to Calais, France where his father had set up a lace factory.
At this time, Bonington started taking lessons from the painter
François Louis Thomas Francia, who trained him in English watercolour
painting.
In 1818, the family moved to Paris to open a lace retail outlet. It was
Paris where he first met Eugène Delacroix , who he became friends with.
He worked for a time producing copies of Dutch and Flemish landscapes
in the Louvre. In 1820, he started attending the École des Beaux-Arts
in Paris, where he studied under Antoine-Jean, Baron Gros.
It was around this time that Bonington started going on sketching tours
in the suburbs of Paris and the surrounding countryside. His first
paintings were exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1822. He also began to
work in lithography, illustrating Baron Taylor’s "Voyages pittoresques
dans l'ancienne France" and his own architectural series "Restes et
Fragmens". In 1824, he won a gold medal at the Paris Salon along with
John Constable and Anthony Vandyke Copley Fielding.
Bonington died of tuberculosis on September 28, 1828.