- Description
-
- Creator(s)
- Thomas Girtin (1775-1802)
- Title
-
- Bolton Abbey, from the River Wharfe
- Date
- 1801
- Medium and Support
- Graphite, watercolour and scratching out on laid paper
- Dimensions
- 32.1 × 52.4 cm, 12 ⅝ × 20 ⅝ in
- Inscription
‘Girtin 1801’ lower left, by Thomas Girtin
- Object Type
- Studio Watercolour
- Subject Terms
- Monastic Ruins; River Scenery; Yorkshire View
-
- Collection
- Catalogue Number
- TG1679
- Girtin & Loshak Number
- 440 as 'Bolton Abbey'
- Description Source(s)
- Viewed in 2016
Provenance
Madeline Clifton (née Knox) (1890–1975); Thos. Agnew & Sons, 1938–39 (stock no.2839); bought by Mrs Wood; Thos. Agnew & Sons, 1943 (stock no.3614); Lietenant-Colonel Edward Rigby Kewley (1889–1972); his widow, then by descent; James Mackinnon
Exhibition History
Agnew’s, 1939, no.169 as ’Easby Abbey’; Agnew’s, 1953a, no.59 as ’Bolton Abbey’
Bibliography
Tuck, 1997, pp.392–93
Place depicted
Other entries in Late Watercolours:
Samuel William Reynolds and Painting for the Art Market
An Imaginary City, with Antique Buildings
Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence
Ancient Ruins, with an Obelisk
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
Ancient Ruins, with a Gothic Church
National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh
A Classical Composition, with a Church and Column
Walker Art Gallery, National Museums Liverpool
The Arch of Janus, Rome
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
The Temple of Clitumnus
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
Rome: The Temple of Antoninus and Faustina
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
Rome: The Temple of Saturn, with the Arch of Septimius Severus
Private Collection
A Town on an Estuary
Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence
A Lagoon Capriccio
Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery
An Unidentified Coastal Landscape with a Windmill
Lady Lever Art Gallery, Port Sunlight
Barnard Castle, from the River Tees
Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle
A Farmhouse, Said to Be near Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
An Exterior View of the Ruins of Lindisfarne Priory Church
Lindisfarne Priory, Northumberland (English Heritage)
Kelso Abbey: The West Front
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester
Jedburgh Abbey, from the Riverbank
The Higgins, Bedford
On the River Medway, with a Boatyard, Beached Vessels and Hulks
Private Collection
Bisham Abbey, on the River Thames
Private Collection
A Classical Composition, with Figures Admiring the Sculptures
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester
An Unidentified Ruin next to a Bridge over a Stream, Said to Be Furness Abbey
Touchstones Rochdale
The Gatehouse of Morpeth Castle
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
Buildings on the River Nidd, near Knaresborough
British Museum, London
A River View with Buildings, Possibly in Yorkshire
Preston Park Museum and Grounds, Stockton-on-Tees
Kirkstall Abbey, from Kirkstall Hill
British Museum, London
Kirkstall Abbey, from Kirkstall Bridge, Morning
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
Kirkstall Abbey, from the Canal, Evening
Private Collection
A Distant View of Kirkstall Abbey
Williamson Art Gallery & Museum, Birkenhead
A Village Scene, Possibly Finchingfield in Essex
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
Wetherby Bridge and Mills, Looking across the Weir
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Wetherby: Looking through the Bridge to the Mills
British Museum, London
Wetherby: Looking through the Bridge to the Mills
Leeds Art Gallery
Kirk Deighton, near Wetherby
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester
York: The New Walk on the Banks of the River Ouse
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
York: The Layerthorpe Bridge and Postern
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester
York: The Layerthorpe Bridge and Postern
Private Collection
York Minster from the South East, Layerthorpe Bridge and Postern to the Right
Private Collection
A Farmyard with Barns, Ladder and Figures; A Sky Study
Courtauld Gallery, London
Ripon Minster, with Skellgate Bridge
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
Ripon Minster, with Skellgate Bridge
Leeds Art Gallery
Ripon Minster, with Skellgate Bridge
Blackburn Museum and Art Gallery
A Distant View of Ripon Minster, from the River Skell
Private Collection
Ripon Minster, from the South East
National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh
Ripon Minster, from the South West
Private Collection
The Abbey Mill, near Knaresborough
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
A Mountain Stream in Spate, Possibly the River Wharfe
Private Collection
Bolton Abbey: The East End of the Priory Church from across the River Wharfe
Eton College, Windsor
Bolton Abbey: The East End of the Priory Church, from across the River Wharfe
National Museum of Wales, Cardiff
Bolton Abbey: The East End of the Priory Church, from across the River Wharfe
Leeds Art Gallery
Bolton Abbey, from the River Wharfe
Private Collection
Bolton Abbey, from the River Wharfe
Private Collection
The Banks of the River Wharfe, with Bolton Abbey in the Distance
Private Collection
Stepping Stones on the River Wharfe, near Bolton Abbey
National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh
Stepping Stones on the River Wharfe, near Bolton Abbey
National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne
Storiths Heights, near Bolton Abbey, from the River Wharfe
Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge
Richmond Castle, from the River Swale
Leeds Art Gallery
A Farmhouse in Malhamdale, Known as 'Kirkby Priory, near Malham'
British Museum, London
An Ancient Oak, Said to Be on the River Ure
Private Collection
Cottages at Hawes, from Gayle Beck
Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery
Cottages at Hawes, from Gayle Beck
Private Collection, Norfolk
Cottages at Hawes, from Gayle Beck
Private Collection
Cottages at Hawes, from Gayle Beck
Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford
Guisborough Priory: The Ruined East End
Tate, London
A Distant View of Guisborough Priory; The Tithe Barn, Abbotsbury
Private Collection, Norfolk
A Distant View of Guisborough Priory
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
A Distant View of Guisborough Priory
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
A Farmhouse, Said to Be near Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Private Collection
A Farmhouse, Said to Be near Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle-upon-Tyne
Kelso Abbey, from the River Tweed
Private Collection
Warkworth Castle, from the River Coquet
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
An Upland Landscape, Said to Show Etal Castle
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
The River Tweed at Kelso, Looking Upstream
Courtauld Gallery, London
The Eildon Hills, from the River Tweed
Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge
A Distant View of Dryburgh Abbey, with the Eildon Hills Beyond
Private Collection
The Valley of the Tweed, with Melrose Abbey in the Distance
Private Collection
Jedburgh Abbey, from Jed Water
Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge
Jedburgh Abbey, from the South East
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
The Village of Jedburgh
National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh
Southampton: The South Gate and Old Gaol
Private Collection
Bristol Harbour, with St Mary Redcliffe in the Distance
Bristol Museum & Art Gallery
A Wharf with Shipping, Possibly at Bristol
Art Institute of Chicago
A Rainbow over the River Exe
National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin
A Rainbow over the River Exe
The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, San Marino
A Rainbow over the River Exe
Graves Gallery, Sheffield
Lydford Castle, from the River Lyd
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown
St Vincent’s Rocks and the Avon Gorge
The Whitworth, The University of Manchester
On the River Taw, North Devon, Looking from Braunton Marsh towards Instow and Appledore
National Gallery of Art, Washington
Conwy Castle, from the River Gyffin
Private Collection, Norfolk
Chelsea Reach, Looking towards Battersea (The White House, Chelsea)
Tate, London
Chelsea Reach, Looking towards Battersea
Private Collection, Norfolk
A Panoramic Landscape, with Figures Trawling a Pond
Private Collection
Landscape with a Distant Ridge
Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
An Inn Yard, Edgware Road, Paddington
British Museum, London
The Thames from a Window of the Old Toy Inn, Hampton Court
British Museum, London
The Old Cottage, Widmore, near Bromley
British Museum, London
Shipping on the River Medway
Museum of New Zealand, Wellington
A Farmyard, Probably Pinkneys Farm, Wimbish
Art Institute of Chicago
Farmhouse and Outbuildings, Possibly in Essex
Aberdeen Art Gallery
An Unidentified Village Street with a Church Tower in the Distance
British Museum, London
A Panoramic Landscape, Possibly Showing Primrose Hill, London
Private Collection
Unidentified Landscape with a Distant Rain Shower
National Museum of Wales, Cardiff
Warkworth Church, with the Bridge Beyond
Victoria and Albert Museum, London
An Italianate Landscape with Two Monks
Private Collection
Footnotes
- 1 The details are contained in a letter from Reynolds to Sawrey Gilpin (1733–1807). The letter is transcribed in the Documents section of the Archive (1801 – Item 4).
Revisions & Feedback
The website will be updated from time to time and, when changes are made, a PDF of the previous version of each page will be archived here for consultation and citation.
Please help us to improve this catalogue
If you have information, a correction or any other suggestions to improve this catalogue, please contact us.
About this Work
This late watercolour, painted in the last complete year of Girtin’s life, shows the surviving part of the priory church at Bolton in Yorkshire, seen from the river Wharfe. Employing a limited palette of colours and his customary coarse cartridge paper, the artist fashioned a sunny midday scene that evokes a peaceful sense of rural retirement quite different from the melancholic mood often associated with the depiction of monastic ruins, as in the case of another view of Bolton Priory (TG1676). Girtin’s technique is equally effective in the shady foreground and the brightly illuminated middle ground. In both, he reduces forms to simple blocks of a few superimposed layers of wash, with the neutral tone of the paper showing through to create a vibrant set of highlights. There are a number of passages, in the foreground water in particular, where the radical simplification of forms creates strikingly abstract patterns, and across the composition the viewer can switch easily from taking pleasure in the illusory natural effects on display to appreciating the varied and inventive ways in which Girtin employs the medium. Areas of very fluid washes of colour, contrasted with rough scratching out, occur to great effect in the foreground, in particular, where the artist faithfully recorded the manner in which the clear water of the Wharfe appears brown because of the colour of the underlying rock. We are able to enjoy the artist’s mastery of the medium because the work is generally in good condition, the exception being the darkening of the trees to the right, where Girtin’s choice of a fugitive blue pigment, probably indigo, has resulted in a loss of detail and a tonality that is too warm.
Girtin produced at least six finished watercolours of the priory church at Bolton – the foundation was never an abbey – as well as five more of its environs along the river Wharfe. All of these studio works derive from pencil sketches and on-the-spot colour studies that the artist made in the summer of 1800, though the sketch for this work has not been traced. Collectively, the group represents one of the artist’s most diverse explorations of a topographical subject, encompassing scenes that explore the sublime backdrop to the ruins (TG1684) as well as their more picturesque immediate setting on a bend of the river (TG1680). This work is closest to the three versions of the view of the ruined east end of the church (TG1676, TG1677 and TG1678), which records the site’s ‘seclusion’ and ‘retirement’, where a ‘luxuriant landscape, composed of abundance of wood, water and meadows’, guaranteed a ‘retreat … from the strife and turbulency of the busy world’ (Anonymous, 1813, pp.15–16). There is, however, a key difference that points to the more radical nature of this work. If we look at another of the Bolton drawings, which shows the view from further away, looking north (TG1616), the unusual character of the composition becomes clear. Moving closer to the church and looking from the bend in the river, Girtin omits the modern buildings of Bolton Abbey at the same time as he obscures the ostensible subject of the work, the ruined east end and crossing of the priory church, behind the two trees to the right. What we therefore see as the centrepiece of the composition is actually the west end of the priory, which was fitted up as the parish church of Bolton Abbey after the Dissolution of the Monasteries, with the blocked-off opening to the crossing visible to the right. It is perhaps not surprising, therefore, that the work was for a significant part of its existence known erroneously as 'Easby Abbey', as Girtin obscured the picturesque outline of the ruined east end in favour of the singularly lumpish profile of the nave, taking a typically perverse delight in disregarding a much prized view.
It is very likely that Girtin made his original sketches of Bolton on an excursion from Harewood House, where he stayed with his patron Edward Lascelles (1764–1814). Lascelles certainly commissioned one of the views of the countryside around Bolton, the very faded On the River Wharfe at Bolton Abbey (TG1554), but he did not own either this or any of the other Bolton views, many of which appear to have been made instead for Samuel William Reynolds (1773–1835), who acted on behalf of the artist in his final years in a role somewhere between agent and dealer. Reynolds recorded in October 1801 that he had in his possession ‘Drawings by Girtin 19 Large size at £7. 7’, but that since ‘Mr G leaves England in a fortnight they will then I should think become much more Valuable’ (Reynolds, Letter, 1801).1 In the event, Reynolds was able to sell works of this size for £10 during Girtin’s absence. Most of the works that it has been possible to identify as going through Reynolds’ hands are prominently signed and dated, like this watercolour, and they all conform to the same standard size. The point about the date is that it signified to potential purchasers that the drawing was newly produced, as opposed to having been consigned to a dealer because it had not found a buyer. Although there is no specific evidence to suggest that this work was once part of Reynolds’ stock, it is a strong possibility, and it therefore stands both as evidence of Girtin’s skill as a watercolourist and as an example of his increasing use of the art market to assert his independence from direct patronage.
1800 - 1801
Bolton Abbey: The East End of the Priory Church, from across the River Wharfe
TG1676
1800 - 1801
Stepping Stones on the River Wharfe, near Bolton Abbey
TG1684
1801
Bolton Abbey, from the River Wharfe
TG1680
1800 - 1801
Bolton Abbey: The East End of the Priory Church, from across the River Wharfe
TG1676
1800 - 1801
Bolton Abbey: The East End of the Priory Church, from across the River Wharfe
TG1677
1800
Bolton Abbey: The East End of the Priory Church, from across the River Wharfe
TG1678
(?) 1800
Bolton Abbey, from the River Wharfe
TG1616
1800 - 1801
On the River Wharfe at Bolton Abbey
TG1554