c. 1752
Description
A watercolour drawing of a view in Windsor Great Park, with a rustic summer house under trees in the right foreground, a red brick house in a glade to right. On two sheets of paper, Villedary watermark, joined vertically.
This work is one of a set of five watercolours of Cranbourne and the Great Park, all early works by Thomas Sandby, who continued to work for William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland after returning from Scotland following the Duke's appointment as Ranger of Windsor Great Park (the others are RCINs 914636, 914637, 914639, 914640). In 1768 a set of 'Six Different Views of Cranbourne Lodge and Park' was recorded in the Duke's Dressing Room at the Great Lodge; they are almost certainly the same as the 'Six different Views in Water Colours' recorded in the same room three years earlier (Royal Archives: WRA CP 1/19). The sixth view has not survived.
This open panorama of woodland and parkland cannot be precisely identified, though the distant house may be Cranbourne Lodge, one of the homes of the Duke of Cumberland from 1751. Oppé has drawn particular attention to the unfinished areas in the foreground, noting that the patches of loose colour were intended to be worked up so that the pencil marks were no longer visible.
Descriptive Medium: 'Pencil, pen and ink and watercolour', 'pencil, pen and ink', 'watercolour painting'
Image Licence
All Rights Reserved
Image Credit
© Royal Collection Trust
Location
Windsor Great Park, Berkshire, England
Country
England
Tags
Category
Landscapes & Seascapes