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    300 years
    "London, Cardiff and New Haven 1982-83" Is linked to these Works of Art
    of 146

    Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle

    Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle
    Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle
    Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle
    Walker Art Gallery, National Museums Liverpool / The Bridgeman Art Library
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    Artist
    Richard Wilson (1713/14-1782)
    Title
    Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle
    Date
    c.1765-66 (undated)
    Medium
    Oil on canvas
    Dimensions
    Metric: 101 x 127 cm
    Imperial: 39 3/4 x 50 in.
    Collection
    Walker Art Gallery, National Museums Liverpool. To license image, click here.
    Accession Number
    WAG 2429
    Wilson Online Reference
    P152
    Description
    An eastward view from the western end of Llynnieu Nantlle, Gwynedd, North Wales, where the stream Afon Llyfni ran out towards the sea. In the central distance is Y Wyddfa, the summit of Snowdon, and beneath it a sunlit knoll, known as Clogwyn y Gareg. In the middle ground are the slopes of Mynydd Mawr (left) and two unidentified peaks (right), perhaps intended as Mynydd Tal y Mignedd and Trum y Ddysgl - all beautifully reflected in the water. Several boats are sailing on the lakes and in the central foreground two fishermen and a woman with a baby are sihouetted against the water.
    Exhibited
    SA January 1766 (189 - a version: North-west view of Snowden and its environs); BI 1849 (115 - lent Sir R.W.Vaughan); Hull 1936 (53); Birmingham 1948-49 (35); London 1949 (34); Hamburg 1949 (118); Paris 1953 (96); Munich 1958 (226); London, Cardiff and New Haven, 1982-83 (117a); Tercentenary 2014 (79)
    Provenance
    Bt from the artist by William Vaughan of Cors y Gedol (1707-1775); Sir R. W. Vaughan; Major-General John Vaughan (1871-1956), Nannau, Dolgellau; sold Christie's 20 June 1930 (114 - Snowdon from Llyn Ogwen); bt Agnew, together with a framed print by William Woollett (£609, #7176); bt by the Walker Art Gallery, 8 March 1935
    Signature/inscription
    Unsigned, no inscription
    Techniques and materials
    The mountain profile peak at the right has been heightened and below it are some broad, burnt sienna streaks of highlighting.
    Subject
    Snowdon is the highest mountain in Britain. W.G. Constable noted that a year after Wilson's death, Thomas Pennant wrote of 'two fine lakes called Llynnieu Nantlle which form two handsome expanses, with a very small distance between them. From hence is a noble view of the Wyddfa, which terminates the view through the visto of Drws y Coed. It is from this spot Mr. Wilson has favoured us with a view, as magnificent as it is faithful.' Pennant concluded, 'Few are sensible of this for few visit the spot.'
    Related Drawings
    D367 Study for Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens, San Marino, California
    Related Prints
    E30 William Woollett after Wilson Snowden Hill and the adjacent Country in North Wales (1775); other states and impressions
    Versions
    See 'Links' tab
    Related Works by Other Artists
    [1] Thomas Sunderland (1744-1823), Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, watercolour, National Museum Wales (NMW A 5767)
    [2] George Barret Sr, Llyn Nantlle, North Wales, 1763-64, Royal Albert Memorial Museum and Art Gallery, Exeter, Devon (359/1971)
    [3] J.M.W. Turner, Buttermere Lake, with Part of Cromackwater, Cumberland, a Shower, RA 1798, Tate, London (N00460)
    [4] Antony Vandyke Copley Fielding, Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, c.1830, The National Library of Wales/Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru
    Critical commentary
    Probably the prime version of a composition Wilson repeated more than once. The artist shows great sensitivity to the site and his sense of design and tonal value invests the rugged grandeur of his native Welsh mountains with a strong and timeless dignity, emphasised by the distant smoke seemingly suspended in the atmosphere and rendering the human activity in the foreground and on the lake insignificant and transitory. Alex Kidson has noted that Wilson has dramatised the view by making the right hand ridge steeper and by bringing the central massif closer to the viewer, adding that the topography is nevertheless surprisingly accurate by the standards of eighteenth-century landscape painting. Wilson thus shows here a concern for the particular in nature, which became one of the mainsprings of Romanticism. The deep significance of the work for the nascent iconography of Welsh landscape is reflected in the person of its original owner. William Vaughan of Cors y Gedol, a wealthy landowner and distant relative of the artist, was a leading figure in the Celtic Revival then underway.
    Bibliography
    Pennant 1784 vol. 2, p. 188; Booth Notes Doc. 4, p. 2; Waterhouse 1953, p. 176, pl. 143; WGC, pp. 93, 186, pl. 55; Solkin 1978, p. 408, fig.4; Solkin 1982, pp. 225-26, no.117a; Wilton 1984, p. 65; Kidson 2012, pp. 264-69, pl. 18; Wilson and Europe 2014, p. 265; Solkin 2015, pp. 214-15, 224
    Link to WG Constable Archive Record
    WGC/1/1/67
    More Information
    Today there is only one expanse of water, Llyn Uchad, the further lake visible here, but in the 18th century there were two separate lakes, upper and lower, divided by a spit of land. The lower lake, Llyn Isaf, seen here in the foreground, was drained in the 19th century in order to protect neighbouring slate quarries from flooding.
    A currently untraced version attributed to 'R. Wilson' together with an impression of Woollett's engraving E30 was sold at Christie's, 13 January 1894 (37) - bt Andrews (20 gns). Measuring 48 x 48 1/2 in. it was from the collection of Thomas Woolner R.A. and had been exhibited at the Royal Academy Winter Exhibition of 1872 (24). [Information kindly supplied by Donato Esposito]. The status and genesis of P152 are discussed at length in Kidson 2012.
    Condition/Conservation
    Kate Lowry has noted: Gilt compo frame, glazed with low-reflective glass. Viewed in frame on display. Glue-paste relined. Four-member stretcher with corner bracing. Mid-brown ground colour. Strong circular cracks in sky. Some blanched retouches present. Discoloured varnish and retouches removed in 1956 and painting revarnished with synthetic resin. 1956 record suggests that asphaltum could be the reason for the pronounced craquelure. Surface-cleaned by Jim France in 1982. Cool bluish tone prevails throughout. More thinly painted with more subtle transitions than P152A. Reserve for tree-trunk and branches visible at left and right. There are pentimenti along the edges of the right hand precipices. The original outline at the right was straighter on the mountain and raised mountain on the extreme right. Sky sometimes drawn down to the mountain profile as centre right and sometimes mountain painted up over the sky as far right.
    Updated by Compiler
    07/02/2022

    Work of Art

    Drawings

    • Richard Wilson (1713/14-1782), Study for Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, The Huntington Library, Art Collections, and Botanical Gardens

    Prints

    • William Woollett (1735-1785) after Wilson, Snowden Hill and the adjacent Country in North Wales, The British Museum
    • William Woollett (1735-1785) after Wilson, Snowden Hill and the adjacent Country in North Wales, Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection, New Haven
    • William Woollett (1735-1785) after Wilson, Snowden Hill, National Museum Wales, Cardiff

    Versions

    • Richard Wilson (1713/14-1782) Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, Nottingham Castle Art Gallery and Museum, Nottingham
    • Richard Wilson (1713/14-1782) Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, Shizuoka Prefectural Museum, Shizuoka, Japan
    • Studio of Wilson, Snowdon from Llyn Nantlle, Private Collection, Wales

    Exhibitions

    • London, Tate Gallery, Cardiff, National Museum of Wales, and New Haven, Conn., Yale Center for British Art, 3 November 1982 - 19 June 1983
    • Birmingham City Art Gallery, 17 November 1948 - 9 January 1949
    • London, Tate Gallery, 22 January - 14 March 1949
    • Hull, Ferens Art Gallery, November - December 1936
    • Paris, Musée de l'Orangerie des Tuileries, February - April 1953
    • Hamburg, Kunsthalle, 15 October - 12 November 1949
    • Munich, Residenz, 15 June - 15 September 1958
    • New Haven, Yale Center for British Art & Cardiff, Amgueddfa Cymru - National Museum Wales, 6 March - 29 October 2014

    Biographies

    • William Vaughan of Cors y Gedol (1707-1775)
    • Major-General John Vaughan (1871-1956)

    Documents

    • William George Constable, Richard Wilson
    • David Solkin, Richard Wilson: The Landscape of Reaction
    • David Solkin, 'Some New Light on the Drawings of Richard Wilson'
    • Ellis Kirkham Waterhouse, Painting in Britain 1530-1790
    • Martin Postle & Robin Simon, Richard Wilson and the Transformation of European Landscape Painting
    • Andrew Wilton, Turner in Wales
    • Thomas Pennant, A Tour in Wales
    • Alex Kidson, Earlier British Paintings in the Walker Art Gallery and at Sudley House
    • David Solkin, Art in Britain 1660-1815
    • Benjamin Booth, Unpublished Notes, Document 4
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