Thomas Herbert Victor Watercolour Mousehole Harbour

  • Mousehole
  • Harbour
  • Watercolour
  • T H Victor
  • aka W Sands
  • Cornish seaside scene
  • framed, mounted and glazed

Description

An idyllic little watercolour of the artist’s home town of Mousehole by renowned Cornish artist T H Victor. This is a scene looking down into the harbour from the harbour walls. It shows a fishing boat heading out of the harbour with two men aboard. Other boats are moored up around the harbour walls, with the town rising up on the hillside opposite. It is framed glazed and mounted. The frame dimensions are 41 x 34 cm (16″ x 13″) with the painting itself measuring 25 x 18 cm (10″ x 7″).

Thomas Herbert Victor (British 1894 -1980). T H Victor was born in Mousehole in Cornwall, went to art school in Penzance and spent his life painting watercolour scenes of Mousehole, Newlyn, Penzance and The Lizard Peninsular. He never left Cornwall but became one of the foremost Cornish watercolour artist of the early to mid 20th century. He also painted under the pseudonym W Sands.

The following is a copy of a review of this painting in a local newspaper….

T H Victor and his Alter Ego.

Thomas Herbert Victor, the painter of our beautiful little picture this week, was a very interesting character who developed his very own alter ego for reasons that will become clear.

Our painting this week is a lovely watercolour of the artist’s home town of Mousehole in Cornwall. It depicts probably the most famous part of Mousehole…the busy little fishing harbour. There is a boat about to leave the sanctuary of the harbour walls with two men aboard heading out to sea for a day’s fishing. Other boats lie tethered to the walls, berthed for the day, nets are hung over the harbour railings drying out after those that have finished their days fishing have left the harbour for some rest. There are one or two boats out at sea either just going out or heading for the safety of the harbour walls, with the hillside village away in the background.

T H Victor was one of Cornwall’s most respected, prolific and truly homegrown artists, one whose work is now revered as having great topographical and historic interest as he captured many scenes around Newlyn, Mousehole, St. Ives, Polperro and other local villages around The Lizard as they were in simpler times and in exquisite detail.

Not all in Victor’s life was simple though… He was born in Mousehole in September 1894 to the local village shoemaker and his wife. By the age of 17 he was listed in the census as an art student. Having shown exceptional artistic talent all through his school years he ended up at art school in Penzance where in his first year there he was so good that he was awarded a scholarship to The Slade School of Art in London (one of the best and most respected art colleges in the country) but he refused to leave his beloved Cornwall. Indeed, Victor would never leave Cornwall in his whole lifetime…in fact, the furthest he ever travelled was Truro! Despite this his work flourished and his reputation grew. Early on he was signed up by one particular gallery in Penzance who helped him promote his work and assisted him in growing his following for the contractual rights to sell all his work. Now for a young man at the beginning of his career this was a good move but later as he developed a following and some customers who wanted to commission work from him he needed to do this free from the restriction of this earlier contract, but the gallery would not allow him to break free. So, he developed an alter ego…W Sands. A number of his commissions and later works were painted under this pseudonym to enable him to grow his business independent from the gallery commitment. He ended up owning his own gallery from 1960 until his passing in 1980. This painting is one of his earlier works and as such is signed T H Victor. However, I do also have some of his later works in the gallery which are signed with his alter ego signature of W Sands.