Gray wash with black ink over graphite on moderately thick, moderately textured, beige laid paper
Dimensions:
Sheet: 14 13/16 x 21 9/16 inches (37.6 x 54.7 cm)
Credit Line:
Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection
Copyright Status:
Public Domain
Accession Number:
B1977.14.999
Gallery Label:
The primary motivation for the expedition of 1750-51 was literary rather than architectural, or what Wood called "poetical geography." Wood, Dawkins, and Bouverie were interested in visiting sites mentioned in works of classical literature: "classical ground not only makes us always relish the poet, or historian more, but sometimes helps us understand them better." For this reason, "where we thought the present face of the country was the best comment on an antient author, we made our draftsman take a view, or make a plan of it." The first great translation of the Iliad in English, by Alexander Pope in 1715, had renewed public interest in Homer, and one of Wood's aims, ultimately unsuccessful, was to locate the position of Homer's Troy. In 1767 he published An Essay on the Original Genius of Homer, to which in 1775 he added "a Comparative view of the Ancient and Present state of the Troade," which compared the topography of the eighteenth-century Scandrian peninsula with that described in Homer's works. This view depicts the ruins at Alexandria Troas, or "Troja Nova", which was until the early eighteenth century thought to be the location of ancient Troy. It was published in the "Comparative View" as "Ancient Ruins near Troy upon the Aegean Sea. Supposed to be the work of Alexander or Lysimachus." Gallery label for Pearls to pyramids: British visual culture and the Levant, 1600-1820 (Yale Center for British Art, 2008-02-07 - 2008-04-28)