The Norwich school of painters were the first provincial art movement in Britain. They were inspired by the natural beauty of the Norfolk landscape and influenced stylistically through the cultural affinity of Norwich and Norfolk to the Benelux countries by Dutch masters of landscape paintings such as Hobbema and Ruisdael.

Principle artists of the Norwich school include the self-taught John Crome, John Sell Cotman and Joseph Stannard. The Norwich school's great achievement was that a small group of self-taught working-class artists were able to paint with vitality the surrounding hinterland around Norwich, albeit with meagre local patronage. Far from creating pastiches of Dutch seventeenth century, Crome and Cotman, along with Stannard established a school of landscape painting which deserves far greater fame; the broad washes of Cotman's water-colours anticipate French impressionism.

A major factor why the Norwich School are not as well known as other painters of the period, notably Constable and Turner is primarily because the majority of their canvases were collected by the industrialist Jeremiah Colman and have been on permanent display in Norwich Castle museum since the 1880's. This lack of exposure was remedied in 2001 when many of the major works by the Norwich school were exhibited for the first time outside of Norwich at the Tate, London.

In 1986 Norwich Castle museum acquired a late masterwork by John Crome entitled Back of New Mills Evening dated circa 1812-1819. It is interesting to note that in the composition of this painting there is a small boy trailing a toy boat from the stern of a boat. This identical motif also occurs in Joseph Stannard's masterwork Thorpe Water Frolic of 1828 . Such was the intense rivalry and homage between the major painters of the Norwich school.