The Artist: Sir William Russell Flint (1880–1969)
A. Biography and Contextual Milieu
Sir William Russell Flint (1880-1969) was a Scottish artist and illustrator who built a prolific and commercially successful career across various mediums, including watercolor, oils, tempera, and printmaking. Born in Edinburgh, Flint’s artistic foundation was shaped by his early training. From 1894 to 1900, he was apprenticed as a lithographic draughtsman, a period that instilled a meticulous attention to line work and technical precision that would define his later career. This hands-on experience was a critical influence, providing him with the foundational skills necessary for the detailed drawings and etchings he would later produce. Following his apprenticeship, he moved to London, where he continued to refine his craft as a medical illustrator and later as a regular contributor to
The Illustrated London News from 1903 to 1909.
His transition to a freelance artist in 1907 allowed him to expand his work into book illustration, where his talents were applied to a number of classical limited editions, including H. Rider Haggard’s King Solomon’s Mines (1907), W. S. Gilbert’s Savoy Operas (1909), and Chaucer’s The Canterbury Tales (1912). Flint’s professional background as an illustrator for both mass-media publications and literary works underscores a key theme of his career: the tension between commercial appeal and critical reception. His work was intended for a broad audience of collectors rather than solely for the academic art world, a characteristic that would earn him significant popular success but also a degree of critical dismissal. This dynamic is central to understanding his place in art history. Flint’s career continued to flourish, leading to his knighthood in 1947 and a major retrospective exhibition at the Royal Academy in 1962, a significant honor near the end of his life.
B. Artistic Style and Mediums
Flint is most widely celebrated for his mastery of watercolor, a medium in which his work was described by the President of the Royal Academy as displaying a “baffling skill”. His signature style is marked by a command of transparent washes and a deft ability to render the female form with a sense of both realism and lyricism. His depictions of women, particularly nudes, are often described as “ethereal and sensual” and remain the hallmark of his legacy. This specialization, however, was not without controversy. While his watercolors were technically flawless, some critics found a “perceived crassness in his eroticized treatment of the female figure,” likening his work to that of Victorian neoclassicist Lawrence Alma-Tadema.
This critical paradox—lauded technical skill applied to a subject matter that faced disdain from the art establishment—is a defining aspect of his career. It illustrates a broader shift in the art market of the early 20th century, where commercial viability and popular taste began to diverge from the conservative views of traditional critics. Flint, with his background in commercial illustration, was perfectly positioned to capitalize on this expanding market for aesthetically pleasing, accessible, and often sensual imagery.
C. The Printmaker: Etchings and Drypoints
Beyond his watercolors, Flint was an accomplished printmaker, working in both etching and drypoint. A formal catalogue raisonné of his prints, titled
Etchings and Dry Points by Sir William Russell Flint Catalogue Raisonne by Harold J. L. Wright, was published in 1957, documenting 66 of his prints. The existence of this catalogue is a crucial detail, as it provides a benchmark against which to measure the artwork in question. The fact that a known etching titled
Notre Dame de Paris et Pont Saint Michael from 1935 is recorded in auction databases further confirms his active and documented printmaking career. The medium of etching, with its reliance on incised lines and tonal hatching, was a natural extension of Flint’s meticulous draughtsmanship cultivated during his early career as a lithographer and illustrator.