Amelia Long
Amelia Long (née Hume), Lady Farnborough (1772-1837) was a watercolour painter who specialised in landscapes and botanical subjects.
Born in Wormley in 1772, Long would specialise in watercolours of landscapes depicting the Bromley area in Kent. Long, who was an honorary exhibitor at the Royal Academy from 1807 to 1822 and at the British Institution in 1825, studied with Thomas Girtin and Henry Edridge. Examples of her work are held by Galleries of Scotland National Galleries of Scotland, Dundee Art Gallery, and the British Museum, and Bromley Historic Collections.[1]
Long was the elder daughter of Sir Abraham Hume and Amelia Egerton. Together with her sister Sophia, Countess Brownlow, she was heiress to her parents' art collection.
Well known in her day as a judge of art and a skilled horticulturist, Long largely assisted or was solely the designer,[2] in laying out the gardens at Bromley Hill Place, Kent, a 1760s property she and her husband Charles Long bought in 1801 and enlarged according to their own designs. By 1809, the gardens at Bromley Hill House had two mile-long, picturesque walks, and the present view of St. Paul's Cathedral. Long's paintings of four separate views from the grounds of Bromley Hill House were exhibited between 1811 and 1817. The gardens have since disappeared, but the house, though altered, remains. Lady Long was given an early introduced plant of Wisteria from China, Glycine Sinensis by Thomas Carey Palmer. She grew this wisteria "beautifully trained over an umbrella shaped ironwork frame".[2]
She died at Bromley Hill on 15 January 1837, and was buried at Wormley, Hertfordshire, with an elaborate tomb by Richard Westmacott.
Gallery
- The Garden of St Cloud, Sunday, 10 September 1815
References
Hamilton, John Andrew (1893). . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. 34. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- "Bromley Archives and Museum Catalogue". 185.121.204.42. Retrieved 10 February 2020.
- Compton, James A. (28 October 2015). "815. Wisteria Sinensis on the Slow Boat from China: The Journey of Wisteria to England". Curtis's Botanical Magazine. 32 (3–4): 248–293. doi:10.1111/curt.12112. ISSN 1355-4905.