01 Painting by Orientalist Artists, Amelia Goddard’s The orange sellers, with footnotes, #96

Henry Zaidan
2 min readSep 28, 2024

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Amelia Goddard (British, 1847–1928)
The orange sellers, c. 1875

Oil on canvas
104.5 x 76.5cm (41 1/8 x 30 1/8in).
Private collection

Sold for £16,575 in June 2022

Amelie Goddard was born in Christchurch, Hampshire, close to the New Forest in southern England but lived most of her life within the boundaries of the national park. Both Amelia and her elder sister Eliza (b. 1840) became artists and travelled to France to further their studies when Amelia was still in her late teens. The sisters would show their work at exhibitions together and the height of their careers came in 1904, when a show entitled The Knot of Grass, composed entirely of Amelia and her sister’s work, was held at the Dore Gallery in New Bond Street, London.

Much of Amelia’s subject matter was drawn from the lives of those who lived within the New Forest, principally gypsy families who had roamed and lived in harmony with the forest for generations. Amelia and Eliza’s grandfather, John, had been a doctor who had always been prepared to help the poorer members of society. It was Amelia’s experience as a young girl, seeing him tending to the poorest souls of the Forest that formed her close affiliation with these people who existed on the very edge of society. More on Amelie Goddard

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Henry Zaidan

In my Blog is an Online collection of significant paintings from the 1st century to today; complete with art-history and artist bibliographies.