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Works James Moore and Thomas Girtin

The West Tower, St Clement's Church, Hastings; Studies of a Horse in Harness and Numerous Architectural Details

(?) 1795

Primary Image: TG0308: James Moore (1762–99) and Thomas Girtin (1775–1802), The West Tower, St Clement's Church, Hastings, (?) 1795, graphite on wove paper, 22.2 × 16.6 cm, 8 ¾ × 6 ½ in. Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford (WA1916.20.21).

Photo courtesy of Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford (All Rights Reserved)

Primary Image Verso: TG0308: Thomas Girtin (1775–1802), Studies of a Horse in Harness and Numerous Architectural Details, (?) 1795, graphite on wove paper, 22.2 × 16.6 cm, 8 ¾ × 6 ½ in. Ashmolean Museum (WA1916.20.21).

Photo courtesy of Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford

Description
Creator(s)
James Moore (1762-1799) and Thomas Girtin (1775-1802)
Title
  • The West Tower, St Clement's Church, Hastings; Studies of a Horse in Harness and Numerous Architectural Details
Date
(?) 1795
Medium and Support
Graphite on wove paper
Dimensions
22.2 × 16.6 cm, 8 ¾ × 6 ½ in
Inscription

'St. Clement's Church Hastings by James Moore' lower left

Object Type
Collaborations; Outline Drawing
Subject Terms
Gothic Architecture: Parish Church; Sussex View

Collection
Catalogue Number
TG0308
Description Source(s)
Viewed in 2016

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 and presented anonymously to the Museum, 1916

Bibliography

Brown, 1982, p.471, no.1409 as 'St. Clement's Church, Hastings' by James Moore

About this Work

This pencil drawing by Girtin’s first significant patron, the antiquarian and amateur artist James Moore (1762–99), was probably made on the third and final tour he undertook to record the medieval castles and churches of Sussex. It is contained in an album assembled from fifty-three drawings that were acquired by the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, from Moore’s descendants after 1912. They were catalogued by David Brown as being by Moore himself, but Brown added a note to this sketch of St Clement’s Church, Hastings, suggesting that since it was so superior to the other drawing that Girtin had made of the west tower from slightly further back (TG0304), the artist may also have ‘taken a hand’ in it (Brown, 1982, p.471). I think it is possible to go a step further and propose that, given perhaps half of the drawings in the album are significantly stronger than Moore’s generally unconvincing sketches (see source image TG0114), the professional artist had a ‘hand’ in many more of his patron’s outlines. In this case, such is the contrast in quality, particularly in the architectural details, that it is clear that the drawing has been corrected and enhanced by a superior artist working over Moore’s sketch with a sharper and more richly toned piece of graphite. The drawing is typical of the way in which Moore’s tentative outlines have been firmed up, his faulty perspective corrected and an exuberant level of decorative detail added. The manner in which the artist varies the pressure applied to the graphite to introduce subtle variations in tone, even within the same line, is characteristic of Girtin’s fine draughtsmanship, and it was surely he who elaborated Moore’s view of the late fourteenth-century west tower from the south east in a way that was well beyond the amateur’s capabilities. Thomas Girtin (1874–1960) and David Loshak believed that Girtin actually accompanied Moore on his 1795 trip to Sussex and the ‘Cinque Ports region’ (Girtin and Loshak, 1954, p.28), but that now seems very unlikely, and all of his views of the county were either made after his patron’s sketches or, as here, elaborated from drawings on the amateur’s return to London.

On the back of the drawing is a series of slight sketches of details of masonry, and also of eyes and faces, which are again weak in their execution and were presumably made by Moore. A tiny drawing of the head of a horse in harness, however, has a startling economy of means that again suggests the work of Girtin.

(?) 1795

St Clement’s Church, with Hastings in the Distance

TG0304

1792 - 1793

The Albion Mills, Southwark, after the Fire

TG0114

by Greg Smith

Place depicted

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