When I think of the Picturesque I instantly think of the Classical seventeenth paintings of Claude Lorrain and Nicolas Poussin in the National Gallery, those idealised pastoral scenes featuring perfectly ordered landscapes. In truth, whilst Claude was without doubt a master of his genre, walking past painting after painting of the formulaic style leaves me feeling quite sickly, like experiencing a sticky bun that is too sweet.
Whilst Claude’s scenes are of his own invention with their perfectly positioned Classical buildings in just the right setting, it is easy to find examples of idealised versions of real landscapes too. William Widgery’s 1870 painting Bowerman’s Nose contains little of the bleak ruggedness of the actual landscape and instead draws on Claude’s influence with it’s gentle sunlight and soft greenery. It is just as easy to find lower quality modern day versions in cheap souvenir galleries along the Devon and Cornwall coast although there does seem to have been some improvement in variety and quality in the last two decades or so.
And yet it is surely the Picturesque in terms of perfect real life landscapes that attracts most photographers to the genre in the first place. My mood still lifts every time I am travelling through the glorious English countryside with its rolling hills and postage stamp rows of distant fields in the late afternoon sun, no matter how many times I have seen it before. The Picturesque doesn’t display the ferocious crashing waves of a stormy sea or the precipitous danger of the rugged mountain that we see in the Sublime but contains a gentle, reassuring beauty all of its own. Many of us as serious artists move onto more probing, investigative avenues of work and, if we consider that one of art’s roles in society is to provoke and question, we would be wrong, I think, to ignore the uglier sides of our landscapes. However, I do believe the Picturesque has a place in photography and art in general, even if it is only as a gentle reminder of the joy in first starting on our photographic journey.












































