Plate 31. Wild Pig, or Indian God Tree.
Joseph Bartholomew Kidd
1808 - 1889
J. B. Kidd was born in Edinburgh, Scotland in 1808. A landscape painter, he was one of the original associates of the Scottish Academy of Art, where he was a regular exhibitor.
Between 1835 and 1843, Kidd visited Jamaica three times, where his older brother, Thomas Patrick Kidd was in business as a general merchant in Falmouth. During his visits he became enthralled with the Jamaican landscape and captured in pencil and paint Jamaica's "superb and picturesque" scenery as he called it. He is also known to have done some portraits including sketches of slaves.
He then held a show of his paintings in Falmouth, which was said to be the first display of its kind ever seen in the colony. It was staged at his brother's home and advertisements inviting the public were inserted in the
Falmouth Post. It was very favourably reviewed in
The Jamaican Standard, where the reviewer remarked on the rare occurrence of an artist excelling in both portraiture and landscape painting.