Girtin produced a second set of hand-coloured impressions of his etchings, which were carefully mounted and sold by John Girtin to the dedicatee of the publication, George Capel-Coningsby, 5th Earl of Essex (1757–1839), for £50 (see figure 1). The two sets have been the cause of considerable confusion, but, following the discovery of new evidence about John Girtin’s role in the project, it has been possible to distinguish their very different functions (Smith, 2017–18, pp.32–35). The set sold to the earl is thus complete, and it is carefully rendered and presented so as to resemble Girtin’s finished watercolours. In contrast, the group of eighteen hand-coloured etchings, which were once owned by Francis Russell, 7th Duke of Bedford (1788–1861), are very much working drawings; indeed, in some cases they have been cut down, presumably to disguise their careless treatment whilst in the studios of the four men who were employed by the Girtin brothers to add aquatint to the plates. The utilitarian function of the latter can also be identified by the fact that, in addition to providing instructions to the professional aquatinter regarding the distribution of light and shade, they also include Girtin’s amendments, such as the prominent barge shown in the foreground here. The issue has been complicated further by the existence of what appears to be a second colour study by Girtin (see figure 2), though this may be an example of an unknown artist colouring an impression of the soft-ground etching.
1802
The Louvre and the Pont Royal, Taken from the Pont Neuf: Pencil Study for Plate Two of ‘Picturesque Views in Paris’
TG1864
1802
The Louvre and the Pont Royal, Taken from the Pont Neuf: Pencil Study for Plate Two of ‘Picturesque Views in Paris’
TG1864
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