George Dunlop Leslie. George Dunlop Leslie was an English genre painter, author and illustrator.
Leslie was born into an artistic family, his father was the notable genre painter Charles Robert Leslie RA, and his uncle Robert Leslie was a marine artist. He studied art first at Cary's Art Academy, then from 1854 at the Royal Academy.
His first exhibition at the Academy was in 1859, and he showed his work every year thereafter. He became an Associate in 1868 and a full Royal Academician in 1876.
George Dunlop Leslie lived early on in St John's Wood, and was part of the St John's Wood Clique, a group of artists who favoured light-hearted genre subjects. From 1884-1901 he was resident at Riverside, St. Leonard's Lane, Wallingford, Oxfordshire.
His sister Mary Leslie, also an artist, lived at Cromwell Lodge next door. Fellow artist, James Hayllar, was also a resident of the village and they painted a portrait of Queen Victoria together for her Golden Jubilee in 1887. From 1906 he lived at Compton House in Lindfield, Sussex His early works, such as Matilda showed the strong influence of the Pre-Raphaelites, but he settled into a more academic, aesthetic, style of painting with the aim of showing pictures from the sunny side of English domestic life. He often used children as subjects and his work was praised by John Ruskin for its portrayal of the sweet quality of English girlhood. One of his pictures, Th