'' by
Franz Xaver Winterhalter was intended to symbolise the age. Winterhalter painted in the manner promoted by
Joshua Reynolds and based on the style of
Raphael, in which the artist consciously idealises the subject of the work. The painting shows the 82nd birthday of
Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington (born 1 May 1769), whose military victories were felt to have secured the stability and prosperity of the United Kingdom, and who as Prime Minister had attended the
opening of the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, at this time considered one of the key turning points of the Industrial Revolution. Wellington presents a casket to his godson
Prince Arthur, seventh child of Victoria and Albert (born 1 May 1850), on his first birthday, and receives a
nosegay from Arthur in return. Albert is distracted from the scene by the sun rising over the
Crystal Palace and the
Great Exhibition, organised by Albert, which opened on 1 May 1851 and symbolised the strength of British technology and innovation and the belief that technology would lead to a great future. When the 18-year-old
Alexandrina Victoria inherited the throne of the
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland as Queen Victoria in 1837, the country had enjoyed unbroken peace since the final victory over
Napoleon in 1815. In 1832 the
Representation of the People Act (commonly known as the Reform Act) and its equivalents in Scotland and Ireland had abolished many of the corrupt practices of the British political system, giving the country a stable and relatively representative government. The
Industrial Revolution was underway, and in 1838 the
London and Birmingham Railway opened, linking the industrial north of England to the cities and ports of the south; by 1850 over of railways were in place and Britain's transformation into an industrial superpower was complete. The perceived triumph of technology, progress and peaceful trade was celebrated in the 1851
Great Exhibition, organised by Victoria's husband
Albert, which attracted over 40,000 visitors per day to view the over 100,000 exhibits of manufacturing, farming and engineering on display. While Britain's economy had traditionally been dominated by the landowning aristocracy of the countryside, the Industrial Revolution and political reforms had greatly reduced their influence, and created a booming middle class of merchants, manufacturers and engineers in London and the industrial cities of the north. The newly rich were generally keen to show off their affluence through the display of art, and rich enough to pay high prices for art works, but generally had little interest in the
old masters, preferring modern works by local artists. In 1844 Parliament ruled
art unions legal, which commissioned artworks by famous artists, paying for them by means of a lottery in which the finished artwork was the prize; this not only offered an entrance to the art world for people who may not have been able to afford to buy a significant painting, but stimulated a growing market for
prints.
Reynolds and the Royal Academy British painting had been strongly influenced by
Joshua Reynolds (1723–1792), the first president of the
Royal Academy of Arts, who believed that the purpose of art was "to conceive and represent their subjects in a poetical manner, not confined to mere matter of fact", and that artists should aspire to emulate the
Italian Renaissance painter
Raphael in making their subjects appear as close to perfection as possible. '' by
Daniel Maclise (1839). Dickens's focus on reflecting the reality of modern life was highly influential on British artists. By the time of Victoria's accession the Royal Academy dominated British art, with the annual
Royal Academy Summer Exhibition the most important event in the arts world. The Royal Academy also controlled the prestigious Royal Academy art schools, which taught with a very narrow focus on approved techniques. Painting in Raphael's style had proved commercially successful for artists serving a nobility primarily interested in family portraiture, military scenes and scenes from history, religion and classical mythology, but by the time of Victoria's accession was coming to be seen as a dead end. The
destruction of the Houses of Parliament in late 1834, and the subsequent competitions to select artists to decorate its replacement, threw into sharp focus the lack of competent British artists able to paint historic and literary topics, which at the time were considered the most important form of painting. From 1841 the new, and highly influential, satirical magazine
Punch increasingly ridiculed the Royal Academy and contemporary British artists.
John Ruskin's seminal
Modern Painters, the first volume of which was published in 1843, argued that it was the purpose of art to represent the world and allow the viewer to form their own opinions of the subject, not to idealise it. Ruskin believed that only by representing nature as accurately as possible could the artist reflect the divine qualities within the natural world. An upcoming generation of young artists, the first to have grown up in an industrial age in which the accurate representation of technical detail was considered a virtue and a necessity, came to agree with this view. In 1837
Charles Dickens began to publish novels attempting to reflect the reality of the problems of the present day, rather than the past or an idealised present; his writings were greatly admired by many of the rising generation of artists. In 1837 painter
Richard Dadd and a group of friends formed
The Clique, a group of artists rejecting the Academy's tradition of historical subjects and portraiture in favour of populist
genre painting. While the majority of The Clique returned to the Royal Academy in the 1840s, after the incarceration of Dadd following his 1843 murder of his father, they were the first group of significant artists to challenge the positions of the Royal Academy. ==J. M. W. Turner==