Dictionary of Australian Biography

WESTALL, WILLIAM (17811850)

artist
was born at Hertford, England, on 12 October 1781. He was a student at the Royal Academy school when he was selected to be landscape painter on theInvestigatorunderFlinders(q.v.), which sailed from Spithead on 18 July 1801. For two years he made many drawings while on theInvestigator, but transferring to thePorpoise, was wrecked off the coast of Queensland on a coral reef, to be rescued eight weeks later. He went on to China in theRolla, from there went to Bombay, and thence to England where he arrived in 1805. A few months later he went to Madeira and then to Jamaica before returning to England, where he at once began exhibiting at the exhibitions of the Royal Academy, and from 1810 with the Old Water-Colour Society. Flinders'A Voyage to Terra Australis, published in 1814, had nine excellent large plates after Westall's drawings, and besides painting in both oil and water-colour, Westall did a large amount of book illustrations. HisViews of Australian Scenery, published in 1814, is, however, merely a reprint of the plates in Flinders's volume. He was elected an A.R.A. in 1812, but though a fairly frequent exhibitor until towards the end of his life, he never became a full academician. He met with a severe accident in 1847 which greatly affected his health, and he died at London on 22 January 1850. A large collection of his drawings is in the library of the Royal Empire Society, London.
Memoir by his son, Robert Westall,The Art Journal, 1850; J. L. Roget,The History of the Old Water-Colour Society, which gives a list of books illustrated by Westall (vol. I, pp. 283-4); W. Moore,The Story of Australian Art.