Description
Now demolished, Stewarthall was a sixteenth and seventeenth century small tower house. Architecture and setting seem more French (McKean). Extended in 1600s into a broad mansion block one room deep, poss done by Archibald Stirling in 1702 after his marriage to Anna Hamilton from which dated carved armorial panels (Stirling and the Trossachs, Charles McKean, 1985).
Jane Anne Wright was an artist of some talent with an interest in history and antiquities. She was born into a moderately wealthy Stirling family with many historical links to the area. One of three sisters, she became disabled after a childhood accident which rendered her housebound and immobile. She never married and like her sister Isabella, found fulfillment through sketching and keeping a journal, documenting her visits to some of of the great houses and mansions of Stirlingshire. Born and brought up in St.Vincent Street, Glasgow, most of her family ties were in the Stirling area, and on the death of her father in 1860, the family moved to 7 Park Terrace, Stirling. In 1887, they moved to 26 Victoria Place. Jane Anne's disability prevented her travels until her mature years, when she was given a pony and trap. It was then that she began to travel to visit estates and beauty spots around Stirling. Her watercolour sketches have both painterly and historical interest. She was largely self-taught, although it is possible she may have received some tuition. Her obituary in 1922 describes her as 'a modern edition of Scott's "Jonathan Oldbuck" who surrounded herself with relics of the past, many of them of great antiquarian interest. (Jonathan Oldbuck was the principal character in The Antiquary).
Image Licence
All Rights Reserved
Image Credit
image © Smith Art Gallery and Museum Watercolour collection
Location
Andrew Stewart Hall, Stirling, Scotland
Country
Scotland
Medium
Watercolour
Tags
Category
Buildings & Architecture