Lake Avernus - III (Lake Avernus with a Sarcophagus)

Lake Avernus - III (Lake Avernus with a Sarcophagus)
Lake Avernus - III (Lake Avernus with a Sarcophagus)
Lake Avernus - III (Lake Avernus with a Sarcophagus)
National Museum Wales, Cardiff
title=Credit line
Artist
Ascribed to Wilson
Title
Lake Avernus - III (Lake Avernus with a Sarcophagus)
Date
c.1752-53 (undated)
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
Metric: 21.6 x 29.2 cm
Imperial: 8 1/2 x 11 1/2 in.
Accession Number
NMW A 5191
Wilson Online Reference
P124B
Description
In the left foreground stands a pine tree. On the right is an ancient stone sarcophagus with two figures. A lake stretches out behind and on its further shore are wooded slopes with two ruined towers.
Provenance
Perhaps John Constable sale, Foster's, London 15-16 May 1838 (24 - An Italian Landscape, manner of R. Wilson) [...] Trustees of the George Hilditch Will sale, Christie's 27 July 1934 (26 - River Scene with two figures); bt National Museum Wales
Signature/inscription
Unsigned, inscription verso
Verso inscriptions
[1] Inscribed on the stretcher bar in ink in a nineteenth-century hand: R.Wilson | Presented by Sir George Beaumont | July 1812 to J. Constable and | [illegible =] sold (?) at his sale
Versions
See 'Links' tab
Critical commentary
W.G. Constable believed that this could be a preliminary sketch for P124. If the painting is autograph the uncharacteristic, free technique can be explained only thus. In its favour, the double layer of white ground with intermediate size layer is the typical commercial ground found in Wilson's works. Underdrawing is partly visible in infra-red imaging and its style is comparable with Wilson's drawing style. The pigments found are also those normally used by Wilson.
Previous Cat/Ref Nos
402
Bibliography
WGC, p. 195, pl. 70b
More Information
Sir George Beaumont was possibly a pupil and certainly an admirer and advocate of Wilson. He acquired several of his paintings including P90B The Destruction of Niobe's Children, formerly National Gallery London, destroyed by enemy action in 1944.
Condition/Conservation
Kate Lowry has noted: Original linen canvas has simple coarse weave; turnovers removed at time of lining. Glue-lined onto fine weave linen. Pine stretcher dates from lining. Off-white, smooth, oil preparation covering all of canvas and most of the canvas weave. Cross-sections show the ground is made up of two layers of chalk and lead white with intermediate size layer. Oil paint thickly applied throughout with some impasto in the sky, in clouds and in sarcophagus. Underdrawing is visible in IR in distant hills and trees at left.
Updated by Compiler
2020-05-05 00:00:00