Attrib. Sir David Wilkie RA, Stirling Castle–Early 19th-century graphite drawing

Somerset & Wood
£248.00
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Stock Number:
JS-016
Attrib. Sir David Wilkie RA, Stirling Castle–Early 19th-century graphite drawing

An original early 19th-century graphite drawing, Attrib. Sir David Wilkie RA, Stirling Castle.

An intriguing sketch attributed to Sir David Wilkie (1785–1841) showing the distinctive skyline of Stirling Castle atop Castle Hill. Surrounded on three sides by the steep cliffs of the Stirling Sill geological formation, the castle has a strong defensive position and is one of the most important castles in Scotland. There is a further graphite sketch on the verso which shows the castle at closer range, with the Stirling Old Bridge in the foreground.

Sir David Wilkie was a superb draughtsman and he produced numerous sketches and studies in a range of media, from highly finished coloured drawings to rapid pencil sketches and studies in pen and ink.

Wilkie's Journals and Letters record his travels around Scotland and his interaction with the landscape: 'Wherever Wilkie went he looked about him with an artist's eye, and felt with a Scotsman's heart'. In 1817 he writes to his sister from Blair Athol: 'At Stirling I arrived too late for the Perth coach, but at such a place it was no hard matter to find amusement. I went up to the Castle, and, after seeing every thing that is commonly shown to strangers, I began making some drawings of the Palace and Parliament House, which have been very fine buildings.'

Wilkie ends up unexpectedly staying in Stirling for three days after gaining acquaintance with the Governor of Stirling Castle, General Graham. He did not, however, translate any of his drawings of this area—described in his journals as 'the palaces and castles of old Caledonia'—into any fully worked up colour compositions.

After visiting Stirling, Wilkie goes on to the Borders, where he lodges with Sir Walter Scott—with whom he was to become great friends—and finds 'I have never been in any place where there is so much real good-humour and merriment'.

Provenance: From the Collection of Dr E.M. Brett of Hampstead.

All artworks come with a Certificate of Authenticity and—if it is a collection artwork—its accompanying collection text or artist biography.


Details

Signed: No.

Inscribed: Inscribed lower left: 'Stirling Castle by D. Wilkie'.

Height: 11.6cm (4.6″) Width: 19cm (7.5″)

Condition: Some minor age toning as shown. There is some uneveness to the paper in the left half. Please see photos for detail.

Presented: The picture is laid down at the edges onto a card mount with window cut verso. Presented in a cream wash line window mount and accompanied by old backing board giving Brett provenance. Unframed.


Sir David Wilkie (1785–1841) was born in Fife, the son of a rural minister. He studied at the Trustees' Academy in Edinburgh then entered the Royal Academy schools in London in 1805, exhibited there from 1806, and was elected a royal academician in 1811. He found great success as a genre painter, influenced by the Dutch genre painters, specialising in narrative detail and shrewd observation of character.

Between 1825 and 1828 he visited Italy, Germany, Switzerland, and Spain—where he was particularly taken with the work of Velázquez and Murillo. Wilkie thereafter developed a much broader and bolder style and a stronger use of colour. His subjects moved away from the humble scenes of the genre painter to grander scenes from history.

Wilkie famously died at sea off Gibraltar after falling ill en route to Britain. His body was consigned to the deep in the Bay of Gibraltar and his death was commemorated by the Turner in the oil painting 'Peace—Burial at Sea'.

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