Paul Falconer Poole. Paul Falconer Poole was an English subject and genre painter.
Though self-taught, his fine feeling for colour, poetic sympathy, and dramatic power gained Poole a high position among British artists. Paul Falconer Poole was born on 28 December 1807 at 43 College Street in Bristol, England, the fourth son of James Paul Poole, a Bristol coal merchant.
Poole exhibited his first work in the Royal Academy at the age of twenty-five, the subject being The Well, a scene in Naples. There was an interval of seven years before he next exhibited his Farewell, Farewell in 1837, which was followed by the Emigrant's Departure, Hermann and Dorothea and By the Waters of Babylon.
In 1843, his position was made secure by his Solomon Eagle, and by his success in the Cartoon Exhibition, in which he received from the Fine Art Commissioners a prize of E300 sterling. After his exhibition of the Surrender of Syon House, he was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1846, and was made an academician in 1861.
In the 1850s, he lived at 43 Camden Road Villas near Camden Town. Poole was a close friend of landscape artist Thomas Danby with whom he shared a house in Hampstead, London for a time. Poole died on 22 September 1879. The subjects of Poole's works can be categorized either idyllic or dramatic. His May Day is a typical example of his idyllic works. Of both styles, there were excellent examples t