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Works (?) Edward Dayes after James Moore

Jedburgh Abbey, from the East

1792 - 1793

Primary Image: TG0086: (?) Edward Dayes (1763–1804), after James Moore (1762–99), Jedburgh Abbey, from the East, 1792–93, watercolour on paper, 18.8 × 22.9 cm, 7 ⅜ × 9 in. Private Collection.

Description
Creator(s)
(?) Edward Dayes (1763-1804) after James Moore (1762-1799)
Title
  • Jedburgh Abbey, from the East
Date
1792 - 1793
Medium and Support
Watercolour on paper
Dimensions
18.8 × 22.9 cm, 7 ⅜ × 9 in
Object Type
Work after an Amateur Artist
Subject Terms
Monastic Ruins; The Scottish Borders

Collection
Versions
Jedburgh Abbey, from the East (TG0104)
Catalogue Number
TG0086
Description Source(s)
Girtin Archive Photograph

Provenance

Possibly Christie’s, 9 April 1879, lot 31 as 'A ruined abbey'; bought by 'Hogarth', £3 for Dr John Percy (1817–89); his posthumous sale, Christie’s, 17 April 1890, lot 510; bought by 'Dowdeswell', £5 10s; Sir Henry Studdy Theobald (1847–1934); his sale, Sotheby’s, 13 May 1925, lot 67; bought by 'Walker', £10 10s; Walker’s Galleries, London

Exhibition History

Walker’s Galleries, 1925, no.84, 25 gns

Bibliography

Girtin and Loshak, 1954, p.209

About this Work

This watercolour of Jedburgh Abbey, in the Scottish Borders, was made after a drawing by the amateur artist and antiquarian James Moore (1762–99) (see source image TG0104). Girtin’s earliest patron visited the country in the late summer of 1792 and his sketch of the partially ruined abbey church is dated 21 August. The watercolour differs in a number of respects from the similar-sized view of Jedburgh which Girtin produced for Moore soon after the trip (TG0104). In this depiction of the ruined abbey, the building may be shown from the same viewpoint, but it is enhanced by a different set of figures; contains a darker, more formulaic foreground of vegetation; and features an altogether blander skyscape. The watercolour has not been seen since it was sold at auction in 1925, but, as far as one can tell from an old black and white photograph, such stylistic features have more in common with the work of Edward Dayes (1763–1804). Girtin’s master also had access to Moore’s sketches at this date and he made numerous versions of them, including some twenty Scottish views, and the attribution of the work to Girtin made by Thomas Girtin (1874–1960) and Derek Loshak is unconvincing (Girtin and Loshak, 1954, p.209).

1792 - 1793

Jedburgh Abbey, from the East

TG0104

1792 - 1793

Jedburgh Abbey, from the East

TG0104

by Greg Smith

Place depicted

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