East was fascinated by Japanese tea-houses during his expedition to Japan in March-September 1889, and particularly enjoyed painting them during the short plum and cherry blossom season. His diary contains a number of descriptions of tea-house gardens, including one in Kyoto which “had a wonderful tree of white plum blossom which I essayed to paint”. A number of his tea-house paintings featured in the Fine Art Society Exhibition of 1890. This painting measures 14″ x 10″, signed Alfred East and sold at Christies on 16 July 1926.
Sir Alfred East (1844 – 1913) is one of the most significant figures in English landscape painting in the decades for the First World War. His landscapes caught the mood of the times in which there was a growing concern at the rapidity of social change and its impact upon the countryside. He was born in Kettering, Northamptonshire, and worked in his brother’s boot and shoe factory as a ‘clicker’ before becoming a sales representative for the company in Glasgow. There he attended evening classes at the Glasgow School of Art. In his late thirties he decided to become a professional artists and in 1882 went to study at the Academie Julian in Paris, where he was much influenced by the Barbizon School of Landscape Artists. Around 1884 he and his family moved from Glasgow to North London where they lived until his death.
In 1888 he was commissioned to spend six months in Japan by the Fine Art Society. He arrived in Nagasaki in March 1889 and became the first English artist to make Japan the field of an extensive and detailed study in paint. In March 1890, 104 of his paintings of Japanese landscapes and people were exhibited at the Fine Art Society in London. East continued to travel widely and painted regularly in France, Italy, Spain and North Africa. He was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1899, having been a regular exhibitor since 1883. In 1906 he was elected President of the Royal Society of British Artists, a position he held until his death. In 1910 he received a knighthood, and a banquet was held in his honour in his native town of Kettering. The Alfred East Gallery, designed by J A Gotch, was opened in Kettering on 31 July 1913 by Lord Spencer. East died two months later, but not before he had been elected to full membership of the Royal Academy.
Private Collection, Kettering, Northamptonshire.