
A Nun
Collection
Museum-quality reproductions on 310gsm textured cotton rag paper.
Shop all prints by William DanielsArtistic Style
Style Evolution
Working within the Victorian British tradition, Daniels' approach remained committed to representational clarity and decorative appeal. Over his career he maintained the technical refinement and compositional restraint typical of regional 19th-century British painters, adapting to mid-century tastes while serving local collectors.
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William Daniels (1813-1880) was a British Victorian-era painter whose work exemplified 19th-century British painting with careful draftsmanship and visual refinement.
Learn about the life of William Daniels
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William Daniels (1813-1880) was a British Victorian-era painter whose work exemplified 19th-century British painting with careful draftsmanship and visual refinement.
William Daniels was born on 9 May 1813 in Liverpool and died in Liverpool on 13 October 1880. Records identify him as a British painter working in the Victorian period. Specific details about his formal training, mentors, or early patrons are not widely documented in readily available sources; what is certain is his lifelong connection to Liverpool, a major commercial and cultural port in 19th-century Britain that shaped many local artists' careers.
William Daniels' career unfolded during the 19th century under the broad cultural umbrella of Victorian art. While the precise chronology of his training and major stylistic shifts is not extensively recorded, his work sits within the era's emphasis on technical skill and representational clarity.
In the early decades of his life (1830s–1840s) Daniels would have come of age artistically in a Britain shaped by academic instruction, local art societies, and a market for portraiture, landscapes, and genre painting.
Across the mid-19th century (1850s–1860s) many British painters responded to changing taste for domestic subjects and marine and landscape views; Daniels' practice belongs to this wider Victorian context.
By the 1870s and up until his death in 1880, Daniels worked as an established 19th-century British painter whose output reflects the craft and compositional concerns of his generation.
Comprehensive, reliably sourced lists of William Daniels' individual paintings are limited in widely available references. Because specific titles and provenances are not provided here, this profile focuses on his standing as a Victorian-era British painter associated with the Liverpool art milieu.
Daniels' work is best understood within the conventions of Victorian British painting: careful draftsmanship, attention to compositional order, and a clear representational approach. His paintings would have appealed to collectors seeking decorative, well-executed works suitable for domestic interiors during the 19th century.
While William Daniels is not widely cited among the major national figures of 19th-century British art, his career contributes to the broader understanding of provincial and regional artistic activity in Victorian Britain—especially in port cities such as Liverpool. Artists like Daniels helped sustain local art markets and taste, and their paintings are valued by collectors interested in Victorian decorative and documentary imagery.
Documented personal details beyond birth and death locations are scarce in common sources. What is known: he was born and died in Liverpool, indicating strong ties to his native
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