Most of the buildings in towns are houses, so townscapes illustrate the appearance of our most familiar environment. The houses and palaces of royalty and the aristocracy are featured earliest in painting, when only the rich could afford to employ artists. The house-portrait became a recognised specialism.
In seventeenth-century Holland, with a prosperous middle class, ordinary people’s houses in towns and villages were the subject or background of very many paintings.
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Interiors and street scenes were depicted in great detail by de Hooch, Vermeer and many others. Flemish artists such as Teniers and the Brueghels are famous for their views of peasants’ domestic lives. Much later, middle-class Victorians too appreciated records of their comfortable lifestyles.
Artworks
Old Slaughter House, Notting Hill GateHerbert William Wright (1912–1989)
Kensington Central Library
Snow, Lansdowne RoadTimothy Francis Gibbs (1923–2012)
Kensington Central Library
George PrimmerJohn Emms (1843–1912)
Southampton City Art Gallery
The Yellow TowelJean Antoine Carlotti (1909–2003)
Kensington Central Library
Village SceneTheobald Michau (1676–1765) (attributed to)
Shipley Art Gallery
LandscapeLucas van Uden (1595–1672)
Temple Newsam House, Leeds Museums and Galleries
Market Place, Bishop Auckland, County DurhamGeorge John Rogers (1885–1996)