,
View of the Avon Gorge, oil on panel, 1822.|alt=Four people sit together on a shaded lawn beside a riverside path. A small boat sails on the river, which bends away into a gap between sunlit wooded hills. The group conducted evening sketching meetings and sketching excursions to scenic locations around Bristol, in particular the
Avon Gorge,
Leigh Woods, Nightingale Valley and
Stapleton Valley. Works by the group often featured these locations. A variation on this theme is
The Avon Gorge from the summit of the Observatory (1834), an oil painting by West from the vantage point of his own
observatory on
Clifton Down. Depictions of excursions taking place in these landscapes include Danby's
View of the Avon Gorge (1822), Johnson's
The Entrance to Nightingale Valley (1825), and Rippingille's
Sketching Party in Leigh Woods (c. 1828). Imaginary, fantasy landscapes in monochrome
wash were common subjects of the evening meetings, usually taking inspiration from the Bristol scenery. One of the most important events for the school was the first exhibition of the work of local artists at the new
Bristol Institution in 1824. The organisers of this exhibition included Jackson, Johnson, Rippingille and Branwhite. The fifth organiser was a second John King, an artist and friend of Danby from
Dartmouth. There were other artists working in Bristol during this period who do not seem to have been participants in the school's activities. These included
Rolinda Sharples,
Samuel Colman and some of the
topographical artists working for Braikenridge such as
Hugh O'Neill,
Thomas Leeson Scrase Rowbotham and Edward Cashin. ==Later years==