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Works Thomas Girtin after James Moore

Dumbarton Rock and the Castle, from the North West

1792 - 1793

Primary Image: TG0101: Thomas Girtin (1775–1802), after James Moore (1762–99), Dumbarton Rock and the Castle, from the North West, 1792–93, graphite, watercolour, pen and ink and scratching out on wove paper, on an original washline mount, 17 × 21.8 cm, 6 ¹¹⁄₁₆ × 8 ⅝ in. Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection (B1975.3.1147).

Photo courtesy of Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection (Public Domain)

Artist's source: James Moore (1762–99), Dumbarton Castle, 25 September 1792, graphite on wove paper, 17.8 × 22.7 cm, 7 × 8 ¹⁵⁄₁₆ in. Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection (B1975.3.760).

Photo courtesy of Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection (Public Domain)

Description
Creator(s)
Thomas Girtin (1775-1802) after James Moore (1762-1799)
Title
  • Dumbarton Rock and the Castle, from the North West
Date
1792 - 1793
Medium and Support
Graphite, watercolour, pen and ink and scratching out on wove paper, on an original washline mount
Dimensions
17 × 21.8 cm, 6 ¹¹⁄₁₆ × 8 ⅝ in
Mount Dimensions
24.9 × 29.7 cm, 9 ¾ × 11 ⅝ in
Inscription

‘Dunbarton Castle’ on the mount, by James Moore

Object Type
Work after an Amateur Artist
Subject Terms
Castle Ruins; Scottish View

Collection
Catalogue Number
TG0101
Girtin & Loshak Number
45
Description Source(s)
Viewed in 2001

Provenance

James Moore (1762–99); his widow, Mary Moore (née Howett) (d.1835); bequeathed to Anne Miller (1802–90); bequeathed to Edward Mansel Miller (1829–1912); bequeathed to Helen Louisa Miller (1842–1915); bought by Thomas Girtin (1874–1960), 1912, £25; given to Tom Girtin (1913–94), c.1938; bought by John Baskett on behalf of Paul Mellon (1907–99), 1970; presented to the Center, 1975

Exhibition History

London, 1912, no.46; Cambridge, 1920, no.6; Sheffield, 1953, no.38; London, 1962a, no.117; Reading, 1969, no.22; New Haven, 1986a, no.8

Bibliography

Gibson, 1916, p.213; Grundy, 1921a, p.134

About this Work

This watercolour by Girtin showing Dumbarton Rock, on the river Clyde west of Glasgow, was made after a drawing by the amateur artist and antiquarian James Moore (1762–99) (see source image above), and Girtin himself never visited the site. Girtin’s earliest patron undertook an extensive tour of Scotland in the late summer of 1792 and this sketch of the rock, seen from the north west across the river Leven, with the castle to the left, is dated 25 September. Girtin is documented as having worked for Moore between October 1792 and February 1793 for a fee of six shillings a day, producing watercolours on paper generally measuring roughly 6 ½ × 8 ½ in (16.5 × 21.5 cm), each with its own distinctive washline mount and, as here, with an inscription by the patron (Moore, Payments, 1792–93).1 In this case the colour from the drawing has seeped onto the mount, a good indication that it was conceived as an integral part of the watercolour. In all Girtin painted seventy or so small watercolours after Moore’s sketches, including about thirty compositions derived from drawings made on the trip to Scotland. Moore employed other artists to work up his sketches for reproduction, including Girtin’s master, Edward Dayes (1763–1804), but it seems that the seventeen-year-old artist, who may still have been an apprentice at this date, was tasked with simply producing the best watercolours he could from the little more than functional records produced by the antiquarian. Moore’s collection of watercolours by Girtin, which eventually numbered over a hundred, remained in the ownership of his descendants until it was broken up after 1912, when this work was acquired by a great-grandson of the artist, Thomas Girtin (1874–1960).

Moore had a particular interest in Dumbarton Castle, with its spectacular location on a twin-peaked rocky outcrop on the river Clyde. Following an earlier visit to the site, he commissioned George Robertson (1748–88) to produce a watercolour from his sketch, and this work is dated 1787 (see TG0258 figure 1). Girtin himself made a pencil copy of the untraced sketch by Moore (TG0258) for his later patron Dr Thomas Monro (1759–1833). And, in turn, Moore commissioned another watercolour of a more distant view of Dumbarton from Dayes (Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford (WA1912.3)); this too was based on a sketch made by Moore in 1792 and was at one point early in the twentieth century attributed to Girtin. For once, it was the situation of the castle that caught the attention of the antiquarian, for little of the ancient castle of Dumbarton remained and most of the visible buildings were recently constructed as the elevated site guarding the river Clyde continued to play an important defensive role.

1794 - 1795

Dumbarton Rock, from the North

TG0258

by Greg Smith

Place depicted

Footnotes

  1. 1 The document detailing the payments made to the young Girtin by Moore is transcribed in full in the Documents section of the Archive (1792–93 – Item 1).

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