Frith was known for his paintings of crowd scenes, notably The Derby Day and The Railway Station. He was commissioned by Queen Victoria to paint the event and attended the ceremony to sketch the scene, also working from photographs taken on the day (which he described as a "most unsatisfactory process"), sittings with some participants and copying clothes and jewels that had been worn. He completed the painting in 1865, when it was exhibited at the Royal Academy's Summer Exhibition.[2] Frith was paid a fee of £3,000 for the painting, while the art dealer Louis Flatow bought the copyright for £5,000.[3] In 1875 The Marriage of the Prince of Wales was in the Music Room at Buckingham Palace.[2]
^Vivien Knight, "The Private Life of William Powell Frith", in: Bills and Knight, eds., William Powell Frith: Painting the Victorian Age (2006), p. 20.
Bibliography
Maas, Jeremy. The Prince of Wales's Wedding: The Story of a Picture. London: Cameron & Tayleur, 1977. ISBN9780715374191.
Bills, Mark and Vivien Knight, eds. William Powell Frith: Painting the Victorian Age. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press / Guildhall Art Gallery, City of London, 2006. ISBN9780300121902.