- Description
-
- Creator(s)
- Thomas Girtin (1775-1802)
- Title
-
- Unidentified Gothic Ruins, Said to Be St Mary’s Abbey, York
- Date
- 1798 - 1800
- Medium and Support
- Graphite and watercolour on laid paper
- Dimensions
- 31.1 × 51 cm, 12 ¼ × 20 in
- Object Type
- Studio Watercolour
- Subject Terms
- Monastic Ruins; Yorkshire View
-
- Collection
- Catalogue Number
- TG1052
- Girtin & Loshak Number
- 384 as 'St Mary's Abbey, York'; '1800'
- Description Source(s)
- Viewed in 2001 and April 2024
Provenance
Presented by the Trustees of the Public Picture Gallery Fund, 1913
Exhibition History
Brussels, 1929, no.75; Amsterdam, 1965, no.57; Lyons, 1966, no.55; Prague, 1969, no.66; Bourges, 1970, no.56
Bibliography
Mayne, 1949, p.101; Hill, 1996, p.203
Place depicted
Other entries in The 1796 Northern Tour to Yorkshire, the North East and the Scottish Borders:
Sketches and Subsequent Watercolours

Bamburgh Castle, from the South
Cragside House, Northumberland (National Trust)

Durham Cathedral, from the South West
British Museum, London

The Ouse Bridge, York, from the North Shore
British Museum, London

The Ouse Bridge, York, from Skeldergate Postern
York Art Gallery

York: The New Walk on the Banks of the Ouse
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

York Minster, from the South West
Private Collection

York Minster, from the South West
Private Collection

York Minster, from the Ouse, with St Mary’s Abbey
Harewood House, Yorkshire

The South Side of York Minster, Showing the Transept and the Western Towers
Private Collection, Yorkshire

York Minster, from the South East, Layerthorpe Bridge and Postern to the Right
British Museum, London

Unidentified Gothic Ruins, Said to Be St Mary’s Abbey, York
Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery

A Distant View of Ripon Minster, from the River Skell
Private Collection

A Distant View of Ripon Minster, from the River Skell
Harewood House, Yorkshire

A Distant View of Rievaulx Abbey
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Easby Abbey, from the River Swale
Private Collection

Easby Abbey, from the River Swale
Manchester Art Gallery

Easby Abbey, from the River Swale
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

The Bridge at Warkworth, with the Church Beyond
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Richmond, Yorkshire: The Seventeenth-Century House Known as St Nicholas
British Museum, London

Richmond Castle and Bridge, from the River Swale
The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, San Marino

Richmond Castle and Bridge, from the River Swale
Victoria Gallery and Museum, University of Liverpool

Richmond Castle and Town, from the South East
Private Collection

Barnard Castle, from the River Tees
British Museum, London

Egglestone Abbey, from the River Tees
Gallery Oldham

Egglestone Abbey, on the River Tees
British Museum, London

Durham Cathedral and Castle, from the River Wear
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Durham Cathedral and Castle, from the River Wear
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester

Durham Cathedral and Castle, from the River Wear
J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Durham Castle and Cathedral, from below the Weir
Private Collection, Norfolk

Durham Castle and Cathedral, from below the Weir
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Durham Castle and Cathedral, from below the Weir; Dryburgh Abbey with the Eildon Hills Beyond
Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery

Durham Cathedral, from the South West
Private Collection

St Nicholas’ Church, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Private Collection

Tynemouth Priory, from the Coast
Cleveland Museum of Art

Bothal Castle, from the River Wansbeck
Private Collection

A River Scene with a Tower, Said to Be the Tyne near Hexham
Leeds Art Gallery

Warkworth Castle, from the River Coquet
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Warkworth Castle, from the River Coquet
Private Collection, Norfolk

The Bridge at Warkworth, with the Castle Beyond
Untraced Works

Dunstanburgh Castle, Viewed from a Distance
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Dunstanburgh Castle: The Lilburn Tower
Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle-upon-Tyne

Lindisfarne: An Interior View of the Ruins of the Priory Church
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester

Lindisfarne: An Interior View of the Ruins of the Priory Church
Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge

An Interior View of the Ruins of Lindisfarne Priory Church
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Lindisfarne: The Nave and Crossing of the Priory Church
British Museum, London

An Exterior View of the Ruins of Lindisfarne Priory Church
Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford

An Exterior View of the Ruins of Lindisfarne Priory Church
Private Collection

York Minster, from the South East, Layerthorpe Bridge and Postern to the Right
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Dryburgh Abbey: The South Transept Looking North
Private Collection

Dryburgh Abbey: The South Transept from the Cloister
Private Collection

Melrose Abbey: The Ruined Presbytery and the East Window
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown

Melrose Abbey: The Ruined Presbytery and the East Window
Cooper Gallery, Barnsley

Melrose Abbey, from the North East
The Morgan Library & Museum, New York

Jedburgh Abbey, from the North East
Private Collection

Jedburgh Abbey, from Jed Water
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

The Village of Jedburgh, with the Abbey Ruins
British Museum, London

The Village of Jedburgh, with the Abbey Ruins
Private Collection, Bedfordshire

The West Front of Jedburgh Abbey
British Museum, London

Jedburgh Abbey, from the South East
Blickling Hall, Norfolk (National Trust)

The Ruins of the Lady Chapel, near Bothal
Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence

Bamburgh Castle, from the Village
Guy Peppiatt Fine Art Ltd

St Nicholas’ Church, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Victoria Gallery and Museum, University of Liverpool

Richmond, Yorkshire: The Seventeenth-Century House Known as St Nicholas
Private Collection

An Interior View of Fountains Abbey: The East Window from the Presbytery
Graves Gallery, Sheffield

St Mary’s, Old Malton, on the River Derwent
Untraced Works

York: Pavement, Looking towards All Saints
Private Collection
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About this Work
This view of Gothic ruins went under the title ‘St. Mary’s Abbey, York’ in Thomas Girtin (1874–1960) and David Loshak’s catalogue of Girtin’s works, but Tom Girtin (1913–94) said that the subject was actually ‘unidentifiable’, whilst David Hill has noted that the work displays ‘a less than professional grasp of the architecture or the site’ (Girtin and Loshak, 1954, p.186; Girtin Archive, 34; Hill, 1996, p.203). Hill’s implication is presumably that Girtin copied the image from the work of an amateur artist such as James Moore (1762–99), whose sketches provided the basis for numerous early watercolours by Girtin and who might not have been expected to have provided an accurate record of a site. However, Moore’s view of the remains of the thirteenth-century west front of St Mary’s Abbey (see figure 1), the only part of the site that in any way resembles the structure shown here, records the three levels of ornate arcading that distinguish the facade with some precision, albeit with little artistic distinction.Girtin’s contemporary Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851) made a detailed sketch from similar viewpoint during his 1797 northern tour (Tate, Turner Bequest XXXV 71) and it confirms the veracity of Moore’s drawing. In comparison, the structure shown here includes just the two levels of arcades, and a further comparison with the view of St Mary’s shown in Girtin’s watercolour York Minster, from the Ouse (TG1049) accords in most respects with Moore’s drawing, demanding us to reconsider the traditional identification of the subject of the watercolour. One possibility is that the view actually represents a hitherto unidentified location which diligent research might subsequently reveal. The other option, and the one that I currently favour, is that Girtin depicted just the right-hand part of the portal, cutting the building to the left to create a capriccio design of a generic Gothic ruin in a landscape, with no reference to its York setting.
There is of course another possible explanation for the mismatch between the traditional title of the work and the appearance of the ruined York abbey – namely, that the work is not by Girtin but by a follower with a poor grasp of perspective and the principles of Gothic architecture. The work is in a particularly bad condition, badly faded with the sky gone completely, the pencil work too prominent and the foliage flattened out, and consequently making a definitive attribution to Girtin is not straightforward. However, although the watercolour is not of the highest quality, there is just enough in the work to suggest that it is by Girtin after all, and that it is therefore the subject on which attention needs to be focused. Sorting that out would no doubt help with the dating of the work, which Girtin and Loshak give as 1800, rather than immediately after the 1796 northern tour, as I initially thought (Girtin and Loshak, 1954, p.184).
1797 - 1798
York Minster, from the Ouse, with St Mary’s Abbey
TG1049