- Description
-
- Creator(s)
- Thomas Girtin (1775-1802)
- Title
-
- A Panoramic View of the Thames from the Adelphi Terrace, Section Two: The Surrey Bank
- Date
- (?) 1796
- Medium and Support
- Graphite and watercolour on paper
- Dimensions
- 15.2 × 45.7 cm, 6 × 18 in (appro×imate measurement)
- Object Type
- Outline Drawing
- Subject Terms
- London and Environs; Panoramic Format; The River Thames
-
- Collection
- Catalogue Number
- TG1379
- Girtin & Loshak Number
- 140 as 'The Thames from Adelphi Terrace'; '1795–6'
- Description Source(s)
- Photograph in the Finberg Archive, Tate Britain, Study Room
Provenance
Dr Thomas Monro (1759–1833); his posthumous sale, Christie's, 26–28 June and 1–2 July 1833 (day and lot number not known); probably Christie's, 1 April 1911, lot 124 as ‘Panorama of London’ by Joseph Mallord William Turner and Thomas Girtin, 8 × 65 in; ‘Gabriel’, £20 9s 6d; Fine Art Society, London, 1912
Exhibition History
Possibly Dudley Galleries, London, 1913
Bibliography
Girtin and Loshak, 1954, pp.58–59; Morris, 1986, p.24; Morris, 1988, pp.60–63; Smith, 2002b, pp.192–93; Smith, 2018, pp.25–30
Place depicted
Other entries in London and the Home Counties, Together with Miscellaneous Studies and Views

Windsor Castle, from the River Thames
Harvard Art Museums / Fogg Museum

Great Bookham Church, from the East
Private Collection, Norfolk

Windsor Park and Castle, from Snow Hill
Anglesey Abbey, Cambridgeshire (National Trust)

The Gateway, St Albans Abbey
Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford

St Albans Abbey: The West Porch
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

St Albans Abbey: The West Porch
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

St Albans Abbey, from the North West
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

St Albans Abbey, from the North West
Private Collection

An Interior View of St Albans Abbey, from the Crossing
Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide

The Interior of St Albans Abbey
Blackburn Museum and Art Gallery

Windsor Castle and the Great Park, from the South West
Private Collection, Norfolk

Windsor Great Park: Herne’s Oak with a Herd of Deer
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Stags Fighting amongst a Herd of Deer in Windsor Great Park, with the Castle in the Distance
Private Collection

A Herd of Deer in Richmond Park
Private Collection

A Panoramic View of the Thames from the Adelphi Terrace, Section One: Somerset House to Blackfriars Bridge
Private Collection

A Panoramic View of the Thames from the Adelphi Terrace, Section Two: The Surrey Bank
Private Collection

A Panoramic View of the Thames from the Adelphi Terrace, Section Three: Westminster Bridge to York Stairs
Private Collection

Westminster, from the West Corner of the Adelphi Terrace
Private Collection

The Thames with St Paul's and Blackfriars Bridge
The Morgan Library & Museum, New York

Shipping on the Thames, Looking down Limehouse Reach towards Greenwich, with the Church of St Alfege in the Distance
Private Collection

A Haystack on a Farm, on the Road to Harrow-on-the-Hill
Private Collection

A Panoramic Landscape, near Norwood
Private Collection

Westminster Abbey, Seen from Green Park and the Queen's Basin
National Gallery of Art, Washington

St Paul’s Cathedral, from St Martin’s-le-Grand
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

St Paul's Cathedral, from St Martin’s-le-Grand
Untraced Works

St Paul’s Cathedral, from St Martin’s-le-Grand
Private Collection

St Paul’s Cathedral, from St Martin’s-le-Grand
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

A River Scene, with Boats
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

An Imaginary Coast Scene with the Horizontal Air Mill at Battersea
Private Collection

London: The Leathersellers’ Hall
British Museum, London

London: The Interior of the Ruins of the Leathersellers’ Hall
British Museum, London

Turver’s Farm, Radwinter
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

A Farm with an Unidentified Windmill
Private Collection

Barns and a Pond, Said to Be near Bromley
Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence

Barns and a Pond, Said to Be near Bromley
Private Collection, Norfolk

Trees and Pond, Said to Be near Bromley
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

A Sandpit, near Logs Hill, Widmore
Private Collection

A Sandpit, near Logs Hill, Widmore
Private Collection

The Church of St Mary the Virgin, Stone-next-Dartford
British Museum, London

A Farmhouse in a Woodland Setting, Said to Be in Devon
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Farm Buildings, Probably in Surrey
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester

Tintern Village, Seen across the Forge Pond, Formerly Known as ‘The Mill-Pond’
Private Collection

A Picturesque House Overlooking a River, with Distant Windmills
Sidney and Lois Eskenazi Museum of Art, Indiana University, Bloomington

The West End of an Unidentified Church
Private Collection

Effingham Churchyard, Formerly Known as 'A Country Churchyard'
Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge

An Unidentified Windmill, Probably in Lambeth
Sarah Campbell Blaffer Foundation, Houston

Unidentified Buildings, Herne Hill
The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, San Marino

Study of a Sailor on Board a Ship; A Fishing Boat
Private Collection

The Frozen Watermill, from William Cowper's The Task
The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, San Marino

An Unidentified Subject, Probably from James Macpherson’s Poems of Ossian
Tate, London

The Eruption of Mount Vesuvius
The Morgan Library & Museum, New York

The Archangel Gabriel Awaiting Night, from John Milton's Paradise Lost
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

A Study of a Woman Reading; A Slight Study of a Seated Woman
Private Collection

Portrait Study of a Man, Said to Be the Artist George Barret the Younger
Private Collection

A Study of a Lion from the Tower of London
Private Collection

An Open Field with a Cart and Horses, Known as ‘The Carter’
British Museum, London

A Church Seen across Fields, with Another Sketch Depicting a Woman
The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, San Marino

A Landscape with Figures by Railings
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

Self-Portrait of the Artist at Work
British Museum, London

An Unidentified Landscape, with a Church amongst Trees
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

A Cottage and a Windmill Surrounded by Trees
Private Collection

St Paul’s Cathedral, from the Thames
Private Collection

The Head of a Youth, Here Identified as Joseph Mallord William Turner
Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford

Old London Bridge, with the Shot Tower in Construction, and St Olave's Church
Private Collection
Footnotes
- 1 This was probably the ‘panoramic view of London’ shown at the Dudley Galleries in London in 1913 as ‘attributed to Thomas Girtin and J. M. W. Turner’. But as the anonymous critic of The Architect noted, ‘the evidence to support the latter’s co-operation in the drawing is not strong’ (The Architect & Contract Reporter, vol.90, 29 August 1913, p.196). The double attribution suggests that the drawing might well have been the ‘Panorama of London’ listed as by Turner and Girtin in an auction at Christie’s in 1911 even though the measurements do not quite match (Christie's, 1 April 1911, lot 124).
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About this Work
This is the central scene from a set of three extended pencil drawings that together make up a 180-degree view looking south out over the river Thames from the Adelphi (the others being TG1378 and TG1380). Despite every effort, the unique set of drawings remains untraced, having last been seen in 1912, when it was sold by the Fine Art Society, London, and the images shown here are reproduced from black and white photographs taken then.1 There is, however, enough detail to confirm the attribution to Girtin and to give an approximate date of 1796 to scenes that are equivalent to three double-page spreads from a sketchbook; connected together, they form a detailed panoramic view of the city’s buildings, with Blackfriars Bridge framing the view to the east and Westminster Bridge closing off the view to the west (Smith, 2018, pp.25–30). The drawings were almost certainly made from one of the upper windows of the residence of Dr Thomas Monro (1759–1833), at whose home at the west end of the Royal Terrace Girtin and his exact contemporary, Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851), worked during the winter months of 1794 through to 1798. It is likely that Monro commissioned the drawings from Girtin as a record of the spectacular river view that he inherited when he moved into the Adelphi in the spring of 1794.
The middle section of Girtin’s 180-degree view, depicting the Surrey bank of the Thames opposite to Girtin’s viewpoint on the Adelphi, shows a very different world to the scenes to the east and west. Prior to the opening of Waterloo Bridge, this area of Southwark and Lambeth was comparatively underdeveloped, and the riverbank itself was home to a cluttered mix of timber yards, barge builders, iron foundries, brewers and myriad manufacturers, all making for a heterogeneous muddle. Beyond this narrow band, as Girtin diligently records, the landscape was still predominantly rural, and the artist responded to the distinctive character of the scenery by adopting a different set of landscape conventions. Thus, in place of the crisp pencil lines used to record the precise details of the architecture in the adjacent sheets, here Girtin employed a looser style of draughtsmanship in which a more extensive use of wash captures the varying textures of the building materials as well as the rural character of the landscape behind. The picturesque results recall any number of Dutch landscapes, but particularly etchings by the great Dutch artist Rembrandt Harmenszoon van Rijn (1609–69). His Amsterdam from the North-West (see figure 1) forms a similar panoramic scene, with a mix of the rural and the industrial compressed into a narrow belt in the middle ground. Monro’s collection contained prints by Rembrandt, and it may be that Girtin had such an etching in mind when he executed this drawing, just as the influence of Giovanni Antonio Canal (Canaletto) (1697–1768) is felt in the adjacent scenes.
Another extended view of the river appeared at auction in 1911 (Sotheby's, 8 December 1911, lot 171). Described as a 'Drawing: A Long Panoramic View of the Thames (Surrey side) from Blackfriars to Westminster, in sepia, signed Thomas Girtin, 1796’ and measuring 16 ½ × 67 in (41.9 × 170.2 cm) it too has not been traced.
(?) 1796
A Panoramic View of the Thames from the Adelphi Terrace, Section One: Somerset House to Blackfriars Bridge
TG1378
(?) 1796
A Panoramic View of the Thames from the Adelphi Terrace, Section Three: Westminster Bridge to York Stairs
TG1380