Henry H. Parker was a Midlands, England, landscape painter working in the last quarter of the 19th Century, at the end of the Victorian Era. Like many of his contemporaries, he concentrated on painting “pure” landscapes – a genre that he mastered early in his career. His landscapes are lush and tranquil, frequently featuring a loan figure in a boat or walking down a country path. The scenes are often sunny and bright and the waters are calm and soothing.
His style shows a great influence by the Impressionists, through his use of bright colors and quick brush strokes, but a definite understanding of the Academic principals is also displayed. This style of painting was very typical for the late Victorian landscape artists who strove to incorporate the new Impressionist techniques in their more traditional paintings. His landscapes and skies were created with a free, but controlled, application of paint while the watery areas of his work were handled in the more traditional way – using glazes to create depth and reflections. His paintings are well composed, beautifully balanced and capture the landscape in its most pure and natural state. This colorful and free look was a welcome relief to the traditional Victorian landscapes of the previous decades and this, coupled with Parker’s choice of subject matter, brought him great success. His favorite locales were in Surrey, Kent and Wales – especially views on the Thames – and he would often sign and title his works, with their exact location, on the reverse. His work shows great similarity in both technical and subject matter to that of Benjamin Williams Leader (1831-1923).