Dover Castle, North East, 1/2 North (one of five drawings on one mount)
Date:
undated
Materials & Techniques:
Watercolor and graphite on medium, slightly textured, cream wove paper
Dimensions:
Sheet: 3 × 10 3/8 inches (7.6 × 26.4 cm)
Inscription(s)/Marks/Lettering:
Inscribed in pen and brown ink, lower left :"Dover Castle, NE 1/2 N." Inscribed in graphite, lower right: "Plate 1(IV)"
Credit Line:
Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection
Copyright Status:
Public Domain
Accession Number:
B1975.4.1592
Classification:
Drawings & Watercolors
Collection:
Prints and Drawings
Subject Terms:
landscape | coast | hills | castle | cliffs
Associated Places:
Dover castle | United Kingdom | England | Kent | Dover
Currently On View:
Not on view
Exhibition History:
Spreading Canvas - Eighteenth - Century British Marine Painting (Yale Center for British Art, 2016-09-09 - 2016-12-04)
Publications:
Eleanor Hughes, Spreading Canvas : Eighteenth-Century British Marine Painting, Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, 2016, p. 222, cat. 85, ND 1373.G74 S67 2016 (YCBA)
Gallery Label:
In 1799, John Thomas Serres was commissioned by the Admiralty “to go out in one of the ships from Plymouth for the purpose of taking views of Brest and the environs and to continue at sea.” Brest, the main base for the French fleet at the entrance to the Channel, was a focus of British strategic efforts to hinder the French navy during the Revolutionary War, and yet very little intelligence on the region was available to the Admiralty Coastal profiles were part of officer training at the Naval Academy in Portsmouth and were mentioned in instructions issued by the Admiralty to those sailing on enemy coasts: “where there shall be Artists on board sufficiently qualified, you are to add Drafts or Plans.” They were based on careful measurements, with vertical scale and landmarks exaggerated to increase visibility and allow for more detail. This is one of a series of profiles of landmarks on the south coast of England, which appear to have served as the basis for those published in The Little Sea Torch, a translation of an earlier work, Le petit flambeau de la mer (1684), by Le Sieur Raulin Bougard. The Little Sea Torch is illustrated with twenty plates of coastal profiles and twelve plates of charts, engraved by J. Stadler mainly after Serres’s drawings. Serres’s work for the Admiralty was incorporated into Hydrographic Office charts, some of which were not superseded until the late nineteenth century. Gallery label for Spreading Canvas - Eighteenth-Century British Marine Painting (Yale Center for British Art, 2016-09-09 - 2016-12-04)