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Works Thomas Girtin and George Morland

The Earth Stopper

1798 - 1799

Print after: Unknown Artist, after Thomas Girtin (1775–1802) and George Morland (1763–1804), etching, 'The Earth Stopper' for The Sporting Magazine, vol.26, p.271, 1 August 1805, 10.8 × 14.8 cm, 4 ³⁄₁₆ × 6 ins. Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection Library.

Photo courtesy of Yale Center for British Art (Public Domain)

Description
Creator(s)
Thomas Girtin (1775-1802) and George Morland (1763-1804)
Title
  • The Earth Stopper
Date
1798 - 1799
Object Type
Studio Watercolour
Subject Terms
Animal Study

Collection
Catalogue Number
TG0875
Description Source(s)
The original known only from the print

About this Work

This collaboration between Girtin and his contemporary George Morland (1763–1804) is known only from a poor-quality anonymous etching that was published in The Sporting Magazine in 1805 with the inscription ‘The figures by Morland, Landscape by Girtin’ (see print after TG0875). Although there is no other evidence of either the form the original work took or how and why the artists worked together, there is no reason to doubt the claim that the lost drawing was the result of a collaboration. Early sales of Girtin’s works thus included ‘Sheep in a Landscape’, said to be ‘A fine specimen of these two great Masters united’ (Exhibitions: Henry Jeffrey, Salisbury, 1 May 1809, lot 139), and ‘Morning and Evening’, said to be ‘Most spirited unrecorded Etchings by Morland, the colouring executed by Girtin, as drawings’ (Exhibitions: Sotheby’s, 13 February 1896, lot 106), though no trace of either of these items has been found. Girtin and Morland were also linked together in some of the earliest biographical accounts of the artist (Pyne, 1832a, pp.315–16), and a number of the former’s watercolours (such as TG0122 and TG0874) copy details from the older man’s compositions, whilst Dogs Hesitating about the Pluck (TG0874) appears to have reproduced a lost Morland painting (Girtin and Loshak, 1954, p.25). Furthermore, two other drawings by Girtin ‘after Morland’ were sold from the collection of Dr Thomas Monro (1759–1833) (Exhibitions: Christie’s, 23 March 1804, lot 100).

Given all of this, it is perhaps wise to look at Girtin’s watercolours for other signs of collaboration beyond the most famous example of his work with Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851) at the home of Monro. So far this has proved fruitless, though the late Andrew Wyld did draw my attention to a watercolour view of a coastal scene attributed to Morland in the collection of the Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg, which he thought showed signs of being co-authored by Girtin. So far it has not been possible to check this possibility, though my initial impressions are that, if anything, the work may in fact be by Girtin alone.

1798 - 1799

The Earth Stopper

TG0875

1792 - 1793

Helmsley Castle

TG0122

1796 - 1797

Dogs Hesitating about the Pluck

TG0874

1796 - 1797

Dogs Hesitating about the Pluck

TG0874

by Greg Smith

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