River Mouth with Peasants dancing (Mediterranean Coastal Landscape at…

River Mouth with Peasants dancing (Mediterranean Coastal Landscape at…
River Mouth with Peasants dancing (Mediterranean Coastal Landscape at…
River Mouth with Peasants dancing (Mediterranean Coastal Landscape at…
bpk | Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen/ Sammlung der HypoVereinsbank AG
title=Credit line
Artist
Richard Wilson (1713/14-1782)
Title
River Mouth with Peasants dancing (Mediterranean Coastal Landscape at Dusk)
Date
c.1770-80 (undated)
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
Metric: 139.1 x 184.6 cm
Imperial: 54 3/4 x 72 11/16 in.
Accession Number
HuW 36
Wilson Online Reference
P177
Description
A beautiful and highly atmospheric Italianate scene with extensive sea and mountains in the distance, framing trees and in the middle ground the mouth of a river with a ruined circular temple standing on its left bank next to a ruined bridge. Streams of light pour through the foliage at the right in the middle distance. In the foreground is a group of five gaily clad peasants, a man and a woman dancing at the left and nearer the centre a standing woman playing a lute, a seated man playing a flute and in front of them a reclining man in profile with a red sash. To their left are three sheep, and to the right is a half-open antique tomb with a seated female figure in shadow at its left.
Exhibited
Manchester 1857 (Modern Masters, 41 Landscape); Leeds 1868 (1004 Italian Landscape, lent J.H. Barton); Munich, Haus der Kunst, Im Licht von Claude Lorrain: Landschaftsmalerei aus drei Jahrhunderten, 12 March - 29 May 1983 (134)
Provenance
Richard Entwistle, Rousham, Oxfordshire by 1808; unknown dealer; John Barton of Swinton near Manchester (according to a note by an unknown dealer in an interleaved copy of Pilkington's Dictionary of Painters, 1824, owned by W.G. Constable); Mrs R. Fitzwilliams; Christie's 26 March 1976 (131); with Colnaghi London; bt 1978; on long-term loan to the Neue Pinakothek
Signature/inscription
Unsigned; no inscription
Techniques and materials
David Solkin has noted that all the known versions of this design display those distinct patches of colour lying loosely side by side and the numerous accentuations in free strokes of rich impasto which are characteristic of Wilson's seventies' works. The reflections lower right are lightly painted in over the priming layer of paint as is common with Wilson while the boldly painted undergrowth in the foreground supports a late dating for the picture. The trees at the right are painted over reserves, including the trunks. There are pentimenti at the edges of the foliage of the foremost tree on the left.
Verso inscriptions
[1] Upper horizontal member of stretcher, left, in white chalk: LOT 131
[2] Upper horizontal member of stretcher, right, in white chalk: E0581x COLNAGI [sic]
[3] Upper left diagonal member of stretcher, white chalk: 26 3 76
[4] Lower end of left vertical member of stretcher, white chalk: E76 [obscured] S.
[5] Lower end of right vertical member of stretcher, white chalk: IMP 6 595 E0581
[6] Lower horizontal member of stretcher, left centre smudged white chalk: BULL
[7] Left end of upper horizontal member of stretcher, black sale stencil: 19XT
Labels
[1] Left end of upper horizontal member of stretcher, handwritten in ink: WO [?] 2911 [|] 3
[2] Upper right diagonal member of stretcher, inverted torn printed label with red border: O.M. DEPT. | No. 0167 [|] Date Photographed
[3] Left end of lower horizontal member of stretcher: Printed and handwritten exhibition label: HAUS DER KUNST MÜNCHEN | Im Licht von C. Lorrain | WILSON | Süde. Landschaft | Mu. Bayer. Hypo-Bank | Lwd. | 140 x 184 | cm | 134
[4] Middle of left upright member of stretcher: printed and typed upright museum label
Subject
The view has been identified as on the coast near Naples. If so the island on the right at the horizon is Capri. Joseph Farington observed that: 'The Scene represented (I understood) somewhere near Naples'. (Diary, 15 December 1808). However, this scene is more likely to be a generalised evocation rather than a precise topographical view. Nevertheless the artist's favourite theme, Roman glory in decay contrasted with Arcadian perfection, is well served by the setting.
Related Prints
E72/26 Thomas Hastings, On the Arno The British Museum (1854,0708.83) and other impressions
E74 Samuel William Reynolds after Wilson, Evening, mezzotint (Gems of Art, 1 May 1824, pl. XII), The British Museum, and other impressions
Versions
See 'Links' tab
Critical commentary
Solkin noted that this painting can probably be identified on the basis of its size and subject, with a work that Joseph Farington saw in Richard Entwistle's collection at Rousham in 1808 (Diary, 15 December 1808).
Bibliography
Farington Diary, vol. 9, p. 3382 (15 December 1808); Catalogue 1868, p. 62; WGC, p. 196, pl. 73a (version 6) and p. 216 under pl. 105a; Solkin 1982, p. 244; Marcel Roethlisberger et al., Im Licht von Claude Lorrain: Landschaftsmalerei aus drei Jahrhunderten, 1983, p. 206 and repr. as frontispiece; Neue Pinakothek. Katalog der Gemälde und Skulpturen, Munich-Cologne 2003, p. 429 (C. Heilmann)
Link to WG Constable Archive Record
More Information
Farington's Diary entry for 15 December 1808 read: ' Called at Mr Entwistle's at Rousham. Saw His large landscape by Wilson for which he gave 200 guineas and sd He had been told it was painted for Lord Egremont [...] The Scene represented I understood somewhere near Naples - I told Him it was more a composition than a view, & that Wilson when He painted views seldom adhered to the scene as it was ... The size of the picture was 6 feet wide by 4 feet 4 inches 1/2 sight measure.'
Condition/Conservation
Glazed. The frame is 19th-century gilded with rococo-style decoration. Relined and in generally good condition. UV showed a small tear lower right and a larger one lower left. Inspection verso revealed that the latter was repaired after the relining. The stretcher is possibly contemporary with the canvas. It has one vertical bisecting member and keyed diagonal supports at the corners. That at the lower right and the adjoining horizontal member have been cut so as to permit repair of the tear in that area.
Updated by Compiler
2022-03-25 00:00:00