Jane Maude A Jersey Lane
An original early 19th-century watercolour painting, Jane Maude, A Jersey Lane.
A wonderfully atmospheric watercolour showing a lady on horseback entering a tree-lined track, titled 'A Jersey Lane'. The composition is strongly reminiscent of (although different from) a watercolour titled 'A Grouville Lane' by Jersey artist John Le Capelain (1812–1848), which was reproduced on the title page in his 1846 volume of lithographs presented to Queen Victoria as an official souvenir by the States of Jersey, following her visit to the island.
The watercolour is heavily textural, with gum arabic and scratching out, giving it a strong feeling of depth and conveying a sense of the abundant wooded foliage.
The artist Jane Maude is likely to be the daughter of Thomas Maude Esq (1770–1831), of the Woodlands, Harrogate. Her sister, Cordelia Maude, lived in Jersey and died at a substantial house named Belvoir at the foot of Mont Millais, St Helier in 1852. Jane Maude married Edward Carus Wilson (1795–1860), whose brother Charles Carus Wilson (1797–1854) also had Jersey connections. Charles Carus Wilson was a London-based lawyer who was famously involved in a libel case between the Jersey and English authorities. He was imprisoned in Jersey for contempt of Court but applied to the English Court for a Writ of Habeas Corpus, which resulted in the landmark ruling that a Writ of Habeas Corpus extended to the Channel Islands. Wilson died at St Helier.
On paper laid down on backing paper.
Jersey Collection: John Le Capelain & Jane Maude
Dimensions: Height: 23.2cm (9.13") Width: 16.1cm (6.34")
Presented: Unframed.
Medium: Watercolour
Age: Early 19th-century
Signed: Signed lower right on backing paper.
Inscribed: Inscribed lower left on backing paper.
Dated: --
Condition: In very good condition for its age. The picture is tipped on to the backing papers at the corners only. Please see photos for detail.
Stock number: JW-738