David Payne (artist)


David Payne was a Scottish landscape painter.

Biography

Payne was born in Annan in the old county of Dumfriesshire, the son of a Mason. He was educated at Annan Academy who also lived in Barrow upon Trent. Payne's carving of two anglers won the 1882 Derby Art Gallery medal for industrial art and the sculpture and medal have now been repurchased by the gallery.
Payne became a rural landscape and trompe l'oeil artist. He exhibited at the Royal Birmingham Society of Artists, the Nottingham Museum and Art Gallery, and was a member of the Royal Scottish Academy. He is regarded as one of the best of the 19th-century Birmingham artists. In 1891, Queen Victoria visited Derby to lay the foundation stone of the Derbyshire Royal Infirmary and to knight Sir Alfred Haslam. The scene in the market place where hundreds of people, soldiers, horses and bunting turned out to meet Queen Victoria was captured by Payne. This painting is now in Derby Museum and Art Gallery, but he also has work in his home town.
Payne married and had 14 children. He died in Sheffield in 1894. Today Payne has paintings in several British institutions including Derby Museum, the Defence Academy and Southampton City Art Gallery.