Danby’s conspicuous departure from the biblical text is his topical reference to slavery. To the left of the composition is a crouching ?gure, similar to that adopted as the symbol of the abolitionist movement, and towards the centre a standing, liberated slave, who breaks the shackles around his wrists. The latter ?gure answers the question posed at the end of the biblical verse:‘For the great day of his wrath is come, and who shall be able to stand?’ The slave trade had been discontinued in 1807 in Britain but the Bill for the abolition of slavery itself was not passed until 1833. Danby had no particularly strong feelings for the religious subject, but was opposed to slavery and recognised a prevailing appetite for the apocalyptic in art. He excelled at describing dramatic phenomena in nature, from spectacular sunsets to lightning storms. The painting proved the most popular work at the Royal Academy in London in 1828, though, contrary to expectation, its success did not lead to Danby’s full membership of the Academy.
March 2016
Academy of Fine Arts, Barclay Street, London, 1833
Bristol Institution, Bristol, 1835-36
Bristol Institution, Bristol, 1843
Rochdale, 1843
Art Treasures, Manchester, 1857
Works by Irish Painters, Guildhall, London, 1904
The First Hundred Years of the Royal Academy, Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1951-1952
Francis Danby, 1793-1861, City Art Gallery, Bristol, 9 September - 7 October 1961; City Art Gallery, Birmingham, 14 October - 5 November 1961; City Art Gallery, Bradford, 11 November - 2 December 1961
The Bristol School of Artists, Francis Danby and Painting in Bristol 1810-1840, City Art Gallery, Bristol, 4 September - 10 November 1973
James Arthur O'Connor, National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin, November - December 1985; The Ulster Museum, Belfast, February - March 1986; Crawford Municipal Art Gallery, Cork, March - April 1986
Francis Danby 1793-1861, Tate Gallery, London; Bristol Museum and Art Gallery, Bristol, 1988
Lines of Vision. Irish Writers at the National Gallery of Ireland, 8 October 2014 —12 April 2015