A brief biography is supplied by a fellow student called J. P. Emslie:
'The son of a merchant captain, Bunney had, when very young, made several voyages round the world. At an early age he took to drawing, but the death of his father compelled him to abandon art and apply himself to less attractive work. When I first joined the Drawing Class, he was engaged at a bookseller's, and was a hard-working student whose work was greatly admired by Ruskin. For a time his work was hard, but in 1858 he made a number of drawings in Derbyshire which so charmed Mr. Ruskin that he gave Bunney commissions to make drawings in Italy and in Switzerland' ( 'Recollections of Ruskin',
The Working Men's College Journal, June 1908, x, p. 345).
Ruskin on BunneyRuskin valued Bunney's capacity for capturing detail, and had been especially impressed by him on a visit to Verona in 1869.
From there, Ruskin reported that 'I am getting on well with all my own work, and much pleased with some that Mr. Bunney is doing for me, so that really I expect to carry off a great deal of Verona' (
Works, 19, p. l).
Having stationed Bunney in Venice for the purpose of 'catching' architectural detail, Ruskin suggested that his drawings 'will become of more value to their purchasers every year, as the buildings from which they are made are destroyed' (
Works, 22, p. 476).