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Works (?) Thomas Girtin after (?) James Moore

Kirkstall Abbey, from the South East

1792 - 1793

Primary Image: TG0135: (?) Thomas Girtin (1775–1802), after (?) James Moore (1762–99), Kirkstall Abbey, from the South East, 1792–93, graphite and watercolour on wove paper, 11.7 × 15.7 cm, 4 ⅝ × 6 ⅛ in. Private Collection.

Photo courtesy of The Trustees of the British Museum (All Rights Reserved)

Description
Creator(s)
(?) Thomas Girtin (1775-1802) after (?) James Moore (1762-1799)
Title
  • Kirkstall Abbey, from the South East
Date
1792 - 1793
Medium and Support
Graphite and watercolour on wove paper
Dimensions
11.7 × 15.7 cm, 4 ⅝ × 6 ⅛ in
Object Type
Copy after Thomas Girtin
Subject Terms
Monastic Ruins; Yorkshire View

Collection
Versions
Kirkstall Abbey, from the South East (TG0147)
Catalogue Number
TG0135
Girtin & Loshak Number
20ii as 'Kirkstall Abbey'; '1795'; 'from the aquatint'
Description Source(s)
Girtin and Loshak, 1954; Girtin Archive photograph

Provenance

Cotswold Gallery, London, 1926–27; Roger Clark (Girtin and Loshak, 1954)

Exhibition History

Cotswold Gallery, 1926, no.26; Cotswold Gallery, 1926a, no.28, £35; Cotswold Gallery, 1927, no.4

About this Work

George Isham Parkyns (c.1749–1824) and Jacob C. Schnebbelie (1760–92), after James Moore (1762–99), aquatint, 'Kirkstall Abbey' for <i>Monastic Remains and Ancient Castles in England and Wales</i>, p.15, 1 July 1791, 7.3 × 10.1 cm, 2 ⅞ × 4 in. Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection Library.

This view of Kirkstall Abbey from the south east, like the slightly larger version of the composition Girtin made after a sketch by his patron James Moore (1762–99) (see source image TG0147), was included in Thomas Girtin (1874–1960) and David Loshak’s catalogue of Girtin’s watercolours. They date it later, to 1795, however, and suggest that it was ‘done directly from the aquatint’ by George Isham Parkyns (c.1749–1824) and Jacob Schnebellie (1760–92) that was published in Moore’s Monastic Remains and Ancient Castles in England and Wales (see figure 1) (Girtin and Loshak, 1954, p.136). The work has not been seen in public for a century and is known only from an old black and white photograph, and so it is difficult to assess its precise status. It does not seem to have ever been in the collection of the Moore family, and, combined with its slightly smaller size, this raises suspicions about the attribution to Girtin. Certainly, it would not make sense for Girtin to have copied the print when he clearly had access to the original sketch by Moore (see source image TG0147), and in any case the watercolour is noticeably coarser in its execution than TG0147. The cattle in the foreground are a poor substitute for the more interesting details in Girtin’s larger view of the ruined abbey church, and stylistically the work has more in common with the small-scale compositions of his master, Edward Dayes (1763–1804), produced in bulk for the lower end of the market. Allowing for the limitations of working from an old image, I am inclined to dismiss the later date and the attribution to Girtin whilst upholding Girtin and Loshak’s idea that the watercolour is closer to the aquatint than TG0147. This leaves us with two alternatives. Firstly, it is possible that the drawing was made in preparation for the print, and this would explain differences between it and the Moore sketch, particularly in the foliage that cloaks the abbey. Secondly, the drawing may indeed be a copy of the print, perhaps by an amateur artist working in the style of Dayes.

1792 - 1793

Kirkstall Abbey, from the South East

TG0147

1792 - 1793

Kirkstall Abbey, from the South East

TG0147

1792 - 1793

Kirkstall Abbey, from the South East

TG0147

1792 - 1793

Kirkstall Abbey, from the South East

TG0147

by Greg Smith

Place depicted

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