Edward Winstanley b. 1820 Lancashire, England, United Kingdom

Also known as Edward William Winstanley (Attributed name in DAA.)
  • Artist (Draughtsman) , (Painter)
Winstanley was an artistic contributor to the New South Wales Sporting Magazine during the late 1840s. He is best known for his images of racehorses and sporting scenes. During the 1830s Winstanley formed a partnership with his father as a scene painter. He was a competent silhouette artist.
Name
Edward Winstanley
Also known as Edward William Winstanley (Attributed name in DAA.)
Birth date
1820
Birth place
Lancashire, England, United Kingdom
Death date
4 August 1849
Death place
Sydney, New South Wales
Burial place
Camperdown Cemetery, Sydney, New South Wales
Gender
Male
Roles
  • Artist (Draughtsman)
  • Artist (Painter)
Residence
  • 1833- 1849 Sydney, New South Wales
Arrival
  • 2 May 1833 (Arrived on board the 'Adventure'.)
Active Period
  • 1833- 1849
Languages
  • English
Is Indigenous
No
Initial Record Data Source
  • DAA with additions

painter, sketcher and silhouette artist, was born in Lancashire, eldest son of William Winstanley . With his parents, sisters and brothers he came to Sydney in the Adventure , arriving on 2 May 1833. Although William Moore called Winstanley 'self-taught’ as a painter, he was presumably taught by his father. Even so, his artistic precocity was such that his skill in taking profiles was reported in the Sydney Monitor just two weeks after the family reached Sydney:

With a pair of scissors, and a small piece of paper, he cuts the features in the same way as an artist would apply himself with his pencil. When the profile is completed by the cutting, that of shading with Indian Ink is resorted to, to throw the prominent parts of the features into relief , and the likeness is then fixed on a card with gum … His terms are very moderate. He appears about eight years of age, but we believe he is older.

He was still reportedly taking 'the best likenesses in profile we ever saw’ in July. By October 1834, however, he had joined his father in partnership: 'Mr. Winstanley & Son’ were scene-painters at Sydney’s Theatre Royal.

At the age of twenty-three, Edward Winstanley painted the original watercolours for a set of four lithographs put on the stone by Thomas Balcombe , The Five-Dock Grand Steeple-Chase, 1844 , and established a new reputation as a sporting artist.

He drew and lithographed Don Quixote’s Remarkable Adventure with the Cattle and Don Quixote Returning Home Again c.1844 (on squatters defeating Governor Gipps’s land regulations), inscribed 'on stone by E.W./ R.Clint lith. 36 Hunter St Sydney’.

In 1846 he painted a watercolour portrait of Nazeer Farrib, an arab stallion owned by Sydney’s first postmaster-general, James Raymond of Varroville, near Minto. In 1847 his painting of the famous colonial racehorse Jorrocks, with John Higgerson in the saddle, was reproduced in Bell’s Life in Sydney . A later watercolour portrait of Jorrocks (1848, National Library of Australia) is annotated: 'This Veteran of the Turf though now nearly 18 years of age still retains his racing qualities/ Between the years 1840 and 1848 he won 44 races realizing for his owners the sum of £2688. Sydney Nov. 1849.’

Winstanley’s watercolour Race Horses and his oil painting A Hunting Scene (both then owned by the prominent solicitor, sportsman and amateur rider, Charles Cooper Turner) were shown with the Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia in 1847. The Sydney Morning Herald described the former as 'neatly coloured and drawn with some spirit in the style of English coloured engravings’, but thought 'the oil showed much more genius’. Winstanley’s address was given as care of J. Grocott, the stationer and bookseller of 476 George Street. He was represented in the society’s 1849 exhibition by Grimaldi , another horse portrait, lent by Mr Samuel.

Winstanley was the principal artistic contributor to the New South Wales Sporting Magazine . He designed its decorative cover, which featured saddlery and riding gear, rod and fishing net, gun and game, bow and arrow, kangaroos and greyhound, and cricket bat. The first issue (October 1848) had his lithograph of Jorrocks as its frontispiece, the second (November) a lithograph after his portrait of the racehorse Cassandra, while the December issue included his illustration of the start of the famous race between Slasher and Highflyer run in 1845. The fourth and final issue (January 1849) featured his The Leap, Block and Highflyer . Other Winstanley illustrations included a yacht (after Frederick Garling ), landscapes and portraits. Like other sporting artists, particularly Joseph Fowles , he also painted marine scenes, eg. The Barque Honduras off Fort Macquarie (1848, watercolour, Mitchell Library [ML]). He contributed to a lithograph of the new Sydney Post Office dating from the end of the l840s, the architectural detail being drawn by F.G. Lewis, son of Colonial Architect Mortimer Lewis – designer of the building – the figures and horses in the foreground by Winstanley (copies Dixson Galleries and Northern Regional Library, Launceston). From stylistic evidence a lively sketch of Mortimer Lewis Out Riding (ML) seems certain to be Winstanley’s work too.

Winstanley died of consumption at his mother’s residence in Phillip Street, Sydney, on 4 August 1849. His headstone in Camperdown Cemetery is carved with a painter’s palette. Bell’s Life stated that 'as an animal and marine painter the deceased possessed talents of the highest order’.

Writers:
Laverty, Colin
Kerr, Joan
Date written:
1992
Last updated:
1989
associate of
Thomas Tyrwhitt Balcombe
1810
Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Sculptor), Artist (Painter)
child of
William Winstanley
1788
Artist (Painter)
associate of
Joseph Fowles
1810
Artist (Draughtsman), Artist (Painter)
associate of
R. Clint
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Frederick Garling
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
child of
née Finch Elizabeth Winstanley
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Raphael Clint
1797
Artist (Printmaker)
associate of
William Harris
Artist (Printmaker)
associate of
M. N.
Artist
child of
William Winstanley
1788
Artist (Painter)
associate of
Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts in Australia
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts
1849
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Sydney, New South Wales
Society for the Promotion of the Fine Arts
1847
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Sydney, New South Wales
Citations:
  • Mahood, Marguerite, (1973), The loaded line : Australian political caricature, 1788-1901, (Place: Carlton, Vic : Melbourne University Press)
  • (24 June 1847), Sydney Morning Herald, (Place: Sydney, NSW)
  • (4 May 1833), Sydney Monitor, (1833-05-18; 1833-07-27; 1835-05-02. Place: Sydney, NSW)
  • (28 May 1833), Sydney Gazette, (Place: Sydney, NSW)
  • (17 April 1847), Bell's Life in Sydney, (1849-08-11 Place: Sydney, NSW)
  • Sayers, A., (1989), Drawing in Australia, (Place: Canberra, ACT)
  • Moore, William, (1934), Story of Australian Art, (Place: Sydney, NSW : Angus & Robertson (facsimile 1980))
  • Laverty, C., (1983), Pastures and Pastimes, (Place: Melbourne, Vic : Victorian Ministry for the Arts catalogue)