The Valley of the Mawddach, with Cader Idris beyond

This item is active and ready to use
The Valley of the Mawddach, with Cader Idris beyond
The Valley of the Mawddach, with Cader Idris beyond
The Valley of the Mawddach, with Cader Idris beyond
Walker Art Gallery, National Museums Liverpool / The Bridgeman Art Library
title=Credit line
Artist
Richard Wilson (1713/14-1782)
Title
The Valley of the Mawddach, with Cader Idris beyond
Date
Early 1770s
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
Metric: 92 x 110 cm
Imperial: 36 1/4 x 43 1/4 in.
Accession Number
WAG 2428
Wilson Online Reference
P179
Description
The view is of the peaks of Mynydd Moel and Cader Idris from a point several miles to the north-east, near the banks of the River Mawddach in Merionethshire, North Wales. The town of Dolgellau is hidden by the hill on the right and a house called Gelligemlyn is visible in the valley.
Exhibited
[?] R.A. 1774 (316 - A View of Caderidris Mountains in North Wales); Liverpool Art Club 1881 (130); London, National Gallery 1945, Some Acquisitions of the Walker Art Gallery, 1935-45 (6); Birmingham 1948-49 (34); London 1949 (33); Brighton 1957 The Influence of Wales in Painting (39); London, Tate Gallery 1959 The Romantic Movement (377); London, Cardiff and New Haven, 1982-83 (136a); Madrid 1988-89 (12); Ghent, Museum voor Schone Kunsten 2007-8, British Vision: Observation and Imagination in British Art 1750-1950 (114)
Provenance
P.H. [or Trustees of the Manor Sidmouth], Christie's, 14 June 1879 (379); bt Agnew £105 as Cader Idris; 1879, Robert Rankin, sold Christie's 14 May 1898 (86 - Cader Idris) bt Agnew [£84]; 1898, John Rankin; presented to the Walker Art Gallery by Sir Robert Rankin, M.P. and his brother, James Rankin, 1937, in memory of their father, John Rankin
Signature/inscription
Unsigned; no inscription
Labels
1. On side of stretcher, lower left: 352 P
2. 'A View of Cader Idris Mountains in N. Wales' was exh. R.A., 1774, no. 316
Subject
The picture is one of several views that Wilson painted from this location, and probably the one that he exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1774. The most imposing landmark is the summit of Mynydd Moel in the centre, and to its right lies Cader Idris, which contains the volcanic lake, Llyn Cau, depicted in P153. The mountain was traditionally the focus of numerous legends, supposedly the home of a monstrous giant and a Welsh seat of King Arthur. One of the factors likely to have prompted Wilson to paint this countryside, apart from its rugged beauty, was this mythological association, comparable with the classical legends of Italy.
Versions
See 'Links' tab
Critical commentary
This is one of the last of Wilson's great works. He must have been familiar from his youth with the landscape of the Mawddach Valley. However, when he painted it he was beginning to suffer from the alcoholism, which ended his career in obscurity and poverty. P179 is better quality than the Manchester version (P179B) and as W.G. Constable pointed out, more thinly painted and more decisive in touch. The three descending figures in the foreground provide a typical Wilsonian motif.
Bibliography
Booth Notes Doc. 4; Booth Notes Doc. 5, p. 1 [?]; WGC, pp. 180-81, pl. 45a; J. Hayes, Richard Wilson (The Masters 57) 1966, pp. 6, 8, fig.5, pl. XVI; Herrmann 1973, p. 59, pl.54; Solkin 1982, p. 241, no. 136a; A. Wilton & A. Lyles, The Great Age of British Watercolours, 1750-1880, p. 21, fig. 7; R. Hoozee ed., British Vision, 2007, pp. 195-96; Kidson 2012, pp. 269-71, pl. 17
Link to WG Constable Archive Record
More Information
The 1770s witnessed the first major influx of tourists into the Welsh countryside, which began to be appreciated less for its remote, idealised past than as a potential Picturesque tourist destination.
Condition/Conservation
Treated by JCW in 1959. Kate Lowry has noted: Gilt compo frame glazed with low-reflective glass. Viewed in frame on display. Oil on canvas, relined? Not signed or dated. No detailed conservation record exists. Minor damages throughout according to David Crombie. Colour of ground not visible. Slightly larger and more detailed than the version in Manchester (P179B). Dark shadows in foreground survive intact. Sunlight falling from upper left catching the middle distant hills is well captured. Canaletto fluidity to the details caught by the light. Low clouds on peaks and in valley to the right. Grey blue sky. Foreground figures and the river below are clearly visible.
Updated by Compiler
2022-03-29 00:00:00