[10] His picture Greenwich Hospital from the River was shown in London three decades after his death and caused renewed interest in his paintings and helped to establish his reputation as a leading member of the Norwich School.
[11] The art historian Herbert Minton Cundall wrote in the 1920s that had Vincent "not given way to intemperate habits he would probably have ranked amongst the foremost of British landscape painters".
Listed and illustrated in A catalogue of pictures by British artists in the possession of Sir John Fleming Leicester, Bart.
"...marred by inconsistencies of scale and perspective..." (Hemingway)[42] On display at the Elizabethan House Museum, Great Yarmouth[80] "...one of the most impressive of his late works.
(Hemingway)[91] "The dainty painting of the trees, the broad treatment of the middle distance and above all the spectacular cloud formation... ...are all features associated with the best of Vincent's late work".