- Description
-
- Creator(s)
- Thomas Girtin (1775-1802)
- Title
-
- Bamburgh Castle
- Date
- 1797 - 1798
- Medium and Support
- Graphite and watercolour on laid paper
- Dimensions
- 42.6 × 56.2 cm, 16 ¾ × 22 ⅛ in
- Object Type
- Studio Watercolour
- Subject Terms
- Castle Ruins; Durham and Northumberland
-
- Collection
- Catalogue Number
- TG1103
- Description Source(s)
- Viewed in January 2022
Provenance
Sir John Edward Swinburne (1762–1860) (lent to London, 1823); then by descent to Sir John Swinburne (1831–1914); his posthumous sale, Christie's, 4 June 1915, lot 7, sold with 'Dunstanburgh Castle, TG1102; bought by Palser, £25 4s; J. Palser & Sons; bought by Walter Runciman, 19 September 1916; then by descent
Exhibition History
London, 1823, no.176 as ’Bamborough Castle’ (The Examiner, 10 February 1823, p.101)
Place depicted
Other entries in The 1796 Northern Tour to Yorkshire, the North East and the Scottish Borders:
Sketches and Subsequent Watercolours

Bamburgh Castle, from the South
Cragside House, Northumberland (National Trust)

Durham Cathedral, from the South West
British Museum, London

The Ouse Bridge, York, from the North Shore
British Museum, London

The Ouse Bridge, York, from Skeldergate Postern
York Art Gallery

York: The New Walk on the Banks of the Ouse
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

York Minster, from the South West
Private Collection

York Minster, from the South West
Private Collection

York Minster, from the Ouse, with St Mary’s Abbey
Harewood House, Yorkshire

The South Side of York Minster, Showing the Transept and the Western Towers
Private Collection, Yorkshire

York Minster, from the South East, Layerthorpe Bridge and Postern to the Right
British Museum, London

Unidentified Gothic Ruins, Said to Be St Mary’s Abbey, York
Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery

A Distant View of Ripon Minster, from the River Skell
Private Collection

A Distant View of Ripon Minster, from the River Skell
Harewood House, Yorkshire

A Distant View of Rievaulx Abbey
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Easby Abbey, from the River Swale
Private Collection

Easby Abbey, from the River Swale
Manchester Art Gallery

Easby Abbey, from the River Swale
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

The Bridge at Warkworth, with the Church Beyond
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Richmond, Yorkshire: The Seventeenth-Century House Known as St Nicholas
British Museum, London

Richmond Castle and Bridge, from the River Swale
The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, San Marino

Richmond Castle and Bridge, from the River Swale
Victoria Gallery and Museum, University of Liverpool

Richmond Castle and Town, from the South East
Private Collection

Barnard Castle, from the River Tees
British Museum, London

Egglestone Abbey, from the River Tees
Gallery Oldham

Egglestone Abbey, on the River Tees
British Museum, London

Durham Cathedral and Castle, from the River Wear
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Durham Cathedral and Castle, from the River Wear
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester

Durham Cathedral and Castle, from the River Wear
J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Durham Castle and Cathedral, from below the Weir
Private Collection, Norfolk

Durham Castle and Cathedral, from below the Weir
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Durham Castle and Cathedral, from below the Weir; Dryburgh Abbey with the Eildon Hills Beyond
Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery

Durham Cathedral, from the South West
Private Collection

St Nicholas’ Church, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Private Collection

Tynemouth Priory, from the Coast
Cleveland Museum of Art

Bothal Castle, from the River Wansbeck
Private Collection

A River Scene with a Tower, Said to Be the Tyne near Hexham
Leeds Art Gallery

Warkworth Castle, from the River Coquet
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Warkworth Castle, from the River Coquet
Private Collection, Norfolk

The Bridge at Warkworth, with the Castle Beyond
Untraced Works

Dunstanburgh Castle, Viewed from a Distance
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Dunstanburgh Castle: The Lilburn Tower
Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle-upon-Tyne

Lindisfarne: An Interior View of the Ruins of the Priory Church
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester

Lindisfarne: An Interior View of the Ruins of the Priory Church
Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge

An Interior View of the Ruins of Lindisfarne Priory Church
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Lindisfarne: The Nave and Crossing of the Priory Church
British Museum, London

An Exterior View of the Ruins of Lindisfarne Priory Church
Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford

An Exterior View of the Ruins of Lindisfarne Priory Church
Private Collection

York Minster, from the South East, Layerthorpe Bridge and Postern to the Right
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Dryburgh Abbey: The South Transept Looking North
Private Collection

Dryburgh Abbey: The South Transept from the Cloister
Private Collection

Melrose Abbey: The Ruined Presbytery and the East Window
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown

Melrose Abbey: The Ruined Presbytery and the East Window
Cooper Gallery, Barnsley

Melrose Abbey, from the North East
The Morgan Library & Museum, New York

Jedburgh Abbey, from the North East
Private Collection

Jedburgh Abbey, from Jed Water
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

The Village of Jedburgh, with the Abbey Ruins
British Museum, London

The Village of Jedburgh, with the Abbey Ruins
Private Collection, Bedfordshire

The West Front of Jedburgh Abbey
British Museum, London

Jedburgh Abbey, from the South East
Blickling Hall, Norfolk (National Trust)

The Ruins of the Lady Chapel, near Bothal
Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence

Bamburgh Castle, from the Village
Guy Peppiatt Fine Art Ltd

St Nicholas’ Church, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Victoria Gallery and Museum, University of Liverpool

Richmond, Yorkshire: The Seventeenth-Century House Known as St Nicholas
Private Collection

An Interior View of Fountains Abbey: The East Window from the Presbytery
Graves Gallery, Sheffield

St Mary’s, Old Malton, on the River Derwent
Untraced Works

York: Pavement, Looking towards All Saints
Private Collection
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About this Work
This fine hitherto unpublished watercolour of Bamburgh Castle, on the Northumberland coast, seen from the north west, was presumably based on a drawing made on Girtin’s visit to the north east in 1796. A later watercolour showing the view from the same direction (TG1104), though from closer to and therefore omitting the great Norman keep, features the same open doorway to the right with a curiously shaped pile of masonry above – the remnants of the castle mill, which had fallen prey to the elements. In contrast to that highly unconventional composition, Girtin has here adopted what was to become a popular viewpoint from a little further back, from where the monumental structure of the keep can be appreciated whilst the scene is still shown from close enough to emphasise the height of the cliff-top setting. As in a number of other views depicting the castles along the Northumberland coast, including the other Bamburgh view (TG1104) and Lindisfarne (TG1113), Girtin has adopted a boldly centralised composition, probably derived from the work of John Robert Cozens (1752–97) (see TG0662), that unites the central tower and the rocky outcrop into a monumental form of great power. In contrast with what is seen in those views, however, the sea here is no longer shown in a calm state, though it is clear that Girtin struggled to depict the more turbulent conditions with any great conviction. The sense that the artist based his depiction of a rough sea breaking on the rocks below the castle on conventions developed by other artists, rather than on close personal observation, is perhaps not surprising, as 1796 may have been the first time that he actually encountered coastal scenery on travels that had hitherto been confined to locations chosen solely for their antiquarian interest. Despite this, Girtin was still able to produce a compelling image of an ancient building rooted organically in its setting and, though battered and shaped by the elements, still standing proud.
The first owner of the work was Sir John Edward Swinburne (1762–1860) of Capheaton Hall in Northumberland, whose collection also included a similarly impressive view of the nearby Dunstanburgh Castle (TG1102). Although there would have been an obvious attraction for Swinburne of the two local scenes, there is no direct evidence that he actually commissioned the watercolours from Girtin, and they were certainly not conceived as a pair. Thus, despite their similar subjects, they are on different scales and adopt contrasting formats, and this view of Bamburgh was probably painted a year or two earlier. Girtin’s rich palette of unfaded colours, the formulaic treatment of the water and the distinctive composition all suggest that it was painted in the immediate aftermath of the 1796 tour. The fact that the two castle views owned by Swinburne were painted at different times does not preclude them having been commissioned, however, and it is unlikely that two such large watercolours would have been produced in the hope of finding a buyer on the open market as they constitute a significant investment of labour on Girtin’s behalf. Watercolours of such impressive dimensions were invariably produced to be framed to form part of a carefully arranged display in a generously scaled domestic interior, and Girtin went to considerable efforts to produce works that might make an impact on the wall. It is perhaps all the more surprising, therefore, that the group of views of Northumbrian castles from 1797 and 1798 illustrate for the first time one of the most idiosyncratic features of Girtin’s mature finished watercolours: the fact that he was sometimes happy to incorporate the visually obtrusive drying fold found in the handmade cartridge and wrapping papers he used. This manifests itself in this work and other northern subject, such as Warkworth Hermitage (TG1096), as a vertical band where the watercolour washes have accumulated in the disturbance in the paper’s surface caused during its manufacture when it was laid on a line to dry out. Such is the vigour of Girtin’s style that this potentially disruptive feature appears quite in keeping and it does not seem to have put off patrons and collectors.
Swinburne is not known to have owned any other works by Girtin and he did not subscribe to the artist’s Paris prints in 1802. However, though there is no documentary evidence from the artist’s lifetime to confirm Swinburne as a patron, rather than a collector, the fact that he lent both the Bamburgh and Dunstanburgh works to an exhibition in 1823 again suggests this as a possibility (Exhibitions: London, 1823). The exhibition of drawings and engravings was organised by William Bernard Cooke (1778–1855) to illustrate the progress of watercolour painting in Britain and here, on the occasion of the first display in public of Chelsea Reach, Looking towards Battersea (TG1740), the so-called White House at Chelsea, Girtin’s posthumous reputation began to be forged in earnest. The critic of The Examiner thus noted that ‘A feeling above common nature is produced by the common nature Views of Mr. GIRTIN; they are executed with such a palpable facility of hand and fervour of mind. A little Sienna, neutral tint, and blue, give all that we can expect in … subjects’ such as ‘Banborough Castle, which, from the large Titian-like character of the clouds – the sweeping and rock-dashing movement of the water – rises into grandeur’ (The Examiner, 10 February 1823). The works also caught the attention of the watercolourist John Sell Cotman (1782–1842) when he visited Capheaton in July 1804. Cotman, who knew Girtin well through their work together at the Sketching Society, noted that Swinburne ‘has one glorious drawing of Girtin’s another very bad’, though, frustratingly, he did not specify which of the castle views was which (quoted in Holcomb, 1980, p.26).
1798 - 1799
Bamburgh Castle
TG1104
1798 - 1799
Bamburgh Castle
TG1104
1796 - 1797
Lindisfarne Castle
TG1113
1794 - 1797
An Unidentified Fort on a Cliff by the Sea
TG0662
1797 - 1798
Dunstanburgh Castle
TG1102
1798
Warkworth Hermitage
TG1096
1800
Chelsea Reach, Looking towards Battersea (The White House, Chelsea)
TG1740