Career
He started painting these studies after a trip to Spain in 1851. He was nicknamed "Spanish Phillip". Born into a poor family in Aberdeen in Scotland, Phillip"s artistic talent was recognised at an early age.
Lord Panmure paid for Phillip to become the student of Thomas Musgrave Joy in London briefly in 1836.
His education at the Royal Academy of Arts was paid for by Panmure. Phillip"s own career was to follow that of fellow-Scot Wilkie very closely, beginning with carefully detailed paintings depicting the lives of Scottish crofters.
He moved on to much more broadly painted scenes of Spanish life influenced by Bartolomé Esteban Murillo and Diego Velázquez. Phillip"s early works tended to depict pious Scots families.
In 1851 he visited Spain, after he was advised to travel to southern Europe for his health.
Thereafter he concentrated on Spanish subjects. He was so influenced by his travels that he advised other artists to do the same. Some artists, such as Edwin Long, took this advice and were similarly inspired.
In the late 1850s and 1860s Phillip"s style became much broader and more painterly, in line with Millais"s late work.
Phillip"s two most important paintings in these years were The Early Career of Murillo (1864) and Louisiana Gloria (1865, National Gallery of Scotland). The first depicted the young Murillo drawing his art from Spanish street-life.
The second portrayed a Spanish wake for a dead child. Phillip was commissioned to paint the wedding in 1858 of Victoria, Princess Royal to Prince Frederick William of Prussia, later German Emperor Frederick III. Phillip married Richard Dadd"s sister.
Phillip died of a stroke while visiting William Powell Frith in Kensington.