James Waylen
{{short description|19th-century English painter}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
Image:Colonel George Turnbull -- James Waylen picture.jpg and sergeant play a strathspey, 1770, New York", 26x32 inches, 1884. The text below includes the Colonel with a favorite sergeant, the solatium [compensation] of a strathspey after a weary day's work. The prostration of the regimental dog indicates the severity of the march, while the approach of the whisky induces the sergeant to beat time with encreased [stet] emphasis.Page 387 of the George Turnbull (civil engineer) autobiography (DVD version) British Library, London. A gift to him by the artist.Ann Arbor's William L. Clements Library Occasional Bulletins January 2018 page 19.]]
James Waylen (19 April 1810–1894) was a 19th-century English painter. He was already successful as an artist in his 20s, when he exhibited two portraits and a work entitled Marmion Borne Down by the Scottish Spearmen at Flodden at the Royal Academy of Arts in London from 1834 to 1838.The Dictionary of Victorian Painters by Christopher Wood, 2nd edition page 503, 978-0-902028-72-3
Biography
He was born in Devizes, Wiltshire, in southern England on 19 April 1810 of Robert and Sarah Waylen.6 June 1841 census On 2 June 1829 Waylen came to the office of the famous civil engineer Thomas Telford, designing London's St Katharine Docks.Page 10 of George Turnbull, C.E. 437-page memoirs published privately 1893: copy in the National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh; and a scanned copy held in the British Library, London on compact disk since 2007http://www.gracesguide.co.uk/James Waylen
Working in Telford's drawing office, he made long-life friends with another civil engineer, the Scottish George Turnbull, who in 1838 asked Waylen to travel from London to Huntingtower near Perth in Scotland to paint a portrait in oils of Turnbull's father William Turnbull, who wrote to his son:
Waylen seems just the same unassuming, kindhearted creature as when last here: his heart appears to be in his profession, and he has made more progress in it than could have been expected in the time; we find him very amusing in the accounts of his travels. He has been here more than a week and has made a success in making a likeness of me: everyone who sees it says the likeness is striking.Page 34 of George Turnbull, C.E. 437-page memoirs published privately 1893: copy in the National Library, Edinburgh; and a scanned copy held in the British Library, London on compact disk since 2007Waylen had a long artistic career, in that he was commissioned in about 1868 by Turnbull to paint Turnbull's three children together. Later in 1884 Waylen, as a present to Turnbull, painted Turnbull's great uncle Colonel George Turnbull.
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