- Description
-
- Creator(s)
- Thomas Girtin (1775-1802) after (?) Samuel Ireland (1744-1800)
- Title
-
- The Market at Aberystwyth
- Date
- (?) 1797
- Medium and Support
- Pen and ink and watercolour on wove paper
- Dimensions
- 13 × 18.3 cm, 5 ⅛ × 7 ¼ in
- Subject Terms
- South Wales; The Country Town
-
- Collection
- Catalogue Number
- TG0350
- Girtin & Loshak Number
- 144 as 'Village Fair with Mountebanks'; 1795–6
- Description Source(s)
- Viewed in 2001 and 2016
Provenance
Thomas Calvert Girtin (1801–74); then by descent to George Wyndham Hog Girtin (1836–1912); then by a settlement to his sister, Julia Hog Cooper (née Girtin) (1839–1904); her sale, Davis, Castleton, Sherborne, 2 December 1884, lot 49 as 'An unfinished Sketch, “Mountebanks at a Village Fair”'; bought by the Museum
Bibliography
V&A, 1927, p.231 as 'Village Fair, with Mountebanks'; Williams, 1952, p.107; Girtin and Loshak, 1954, p.60; Lambourne and Hamilton, 1980, p.151; V&A Collections Online as 'Village Fair, with mountebanks' (Accessed 13/09/2022)
Place depicted
Other entries in Topography without Travel:
The British Landscape at Second Hand

Windsor Castle, from the River Thames
Untraced Works

Windsor Castle: The Norman Gateway and the Round Tower, with Part of the Queen's Lodge
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown

The Interior of Tintern Abbey, Showing the Choir and North Transept
Blackburn Museum and Art Gallery

A View in Windsor Great Park with Deer
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

An Ancient House, Possibly in Sussex
Private Collection

The Interior of Tintern Abbey, Looking towards the West Window from the Choir
Norwich Castle Museum and Art Gallery

The Ruins of Newark Priory Church
Tate, London

Lancaster Castle and Priory Church, Seen with the Old Bridge over the River Lune
Private Collection

Barnard Castle and Bridge, from the River Tees
Tate, London

The Ruined West Front of Dunbrody Abbey Church, County Wexford, Ireland
Tate, London

The Refectory of Walsingham Priory
British Museum, London

The Ruined East End of Walsingham Priory Church
Tate, London

The West Tower of Rumburgh Priory Church
Tate, London

Dumbarton Rock, from the North
Tate, London

Part of the Ruins of Middleham Castle
Tate, London

Kidwelly Church, with the Castle Beyond
Tate, London

Kelso Abbey, from the North West
Ashmolean Museum, University of Oxford

The Keep, Portchester Castle, from the North East
Tate, London

The Keep of Rochester Castle, from the South East
Tate, London

Part of the Ruins of Middleham Castle
Tate, London

Margam Abbey Church, from the North West
Tate, London

The Ruined East End of Walsingham Priory Church
Tate, London

The Ruins of the Holy Ghost Chapel, Basingstoke
Tate, London

The Medieval Kitchen, Stanton Harcourt
Tate, London

Part of the Ruins of Lewes Castle, from the West
Tate, London

Glasgow High Street, Looking towards the Cathedral
Tate, London

The Keep of Hedingham Castle, from the East
Tate, London

The South Transept, Much Wenlock Priory Church
Tate, London

Newport Castle, Monmouthshire
Private Collection

Portchester Castle, from the Outer Bailey
Tate, London

The Refectory of Walsingham Priory
Tate, London

An Unidentified Church close to a Road
British Museum, London

The Keep of Hedingham Castle, from the South West
Tate, London

Kirkstall Abbey, from the North West
Tate, London

Kirkstall Abbey, from the North West
Tate, London

The Ruined Gateway of Mettingham Castle
Tate, London

The Keep of Rochester Castle, Seen from outside the Walls
Tate, London

Tintern Abbey, from the River Wye
Private Collection

Tintern Abbey: The View from the Nave
Private Collection

The Market at Aberystwyth
Victoria and Albert Museum, London

Lancaster Castle, from the River Lune
Tate, London

Lancaster Castle, from the River Lune
Tate, London

Lancaster Priory Church, Seen with the Old Bridge over the River Lune
Tate, London

Buttermere Bridge, from the Fish Inn
Tate, London

The Medieval Kitchen, Stanton Harcourt
Private Collection, Norfolk

Rochester Cathedral, from the North East, with the Castle Beyond
Tate, London

Glasgow High Street: Looking towards the Cathedral
Tate, London

A Distant View of Corfe Castle
Tate, London

Chichester Cathedral, from the South West
Tate, London

The Gatehouse of Amberley Castle
Tate, London

A Lake and Mountains, Possibly in the Lake District
Tate, London

A Lake and Mountains, Possibly in the Lake District
Tate, London

An Unidentified View across a Lake, or along a Coast
Tate, London

A Road by a Pond, with a Church in the Distance
Tate, London

A Road by a Pond, with a Church in the Distance
British Museum, London

A Church Tower amongst Trees, with a Cart in the Foreground
British Museum, London

An Unidentified Landscape, with a Church amongst Trees
Tate, London

Trees near a Lake or River, at Twilight
Tate, London

A Hilly Landscape, with a Two-Arched Bridge
Private Collection

A Distant View of Tynemouth Priory, from the Sea
Tate, London

An Upland Landscape, Possibly in Northumberland
Private Collection

A Bridge in the Lake District, Possibly Grange Bridge, Borrowdale
Private Collection

Bridgnorth, on the River Severn
The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, San Marino

Knaresborough, from the River Nidd
Private Collection
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About this Work
Known until recently as Village Fair with Mountebanks, this uncharacteristic monochrome study was identified during the course of the preparation of this catalogue as showing the marketplace at Aberystwyth, and, even more surprisingly, it turns out to be a copy of an aquatint published by Samuel Ireland (1744–1800) in his Picturesque Views on the River Wye (see the source image above). According to the text, Ireland made the drawings for his Views on a tour along the length of the river in 1794, but the prints were not published until 1797 (Ireland, 1797). Therefore Girtin’s copy, together with two other views of Tintern also taken from the same source (TG0343 and TG0349), appears to postdate the rest of the artist’s Wye scenes by perhaps five years. As a result of the discovery of the source of the three later watercolours, it is now possible to say with some certainty that Girtin did not visit the much frequented picturesque river and that all of his views were therefore made from secondary sources. However, whilst it may have made sense to copy the work of another artist early on in his career – when his apprenticeship to Edward Dayes (1763–1804), combined with his lack of money, made it impossible to travel – by 1797 Girtin had completed the second of his annual tours and was exhibiting and selling watercolours made from his own on-the-spot sketches. All of this raises the question of why he should turn to a secondary source at this point and, indeed, what function copies such as this performed.
It is probably safe to discount the possibility that Girtin made the watercolour for reproduction in Ireland’s publication as he did not travel anywhere near Aberystwyth on the west Wales coast, though it is conceivable that he was employed to make a version of the engraver’s sketch and was not credited on the print for his labour. It is also possible that Girtin was simply attracted to the subject and that a copy of the print provided him with a useful set of figures that he might reuse in his own compositions. Though there are no precedents for this in the artist’s mature practice, there are echoes of the figures elsewhere, such as the man with the pig and the two figures on the donkey in Dartford High Street (TG0844). Perhaps the most likely option, however, is suggested by the two views of Tintern, and specifically by their small scale. Each of the drawings measures roughly 11.5 × 16.5 cm (4 ½ × 6 ½ in), which is the same size as a series of sketch-like commodities that Girtin produced following his trip to the north of England in 1796. The attraction of examples such as Bothal Castle, from the River Wansbeck (TG1089) and Seaton Sluice (TG1088) was that they were quick to produce and might be sold at a lower price to amateurs who appreciated the spontaneous production of what purported to be sketches made on the spot. Therefore, the economical application of sepia coloured wash here signified a spontaneously produced sketch from life, even as it copied the work of another artist through the medium of an aquatint. I suspect that all three Welsh views are thus examples of a new type of commodity that Girtin was pioneering around 1796–97.
Ireland’s text, in addition to describing the charms of a Welsh country market that ‘resembled rather a fair’ such was the gathering of people and animals, also included an easily missed but telling detail. To the left, he noted, ‘appears part of the castellated dwelling of Uvedale Price’ (1747–1829), the writer on the picturesque who did the most to develop a theoretical basis for the popular ramblings of the Revd William Gilpin (1724–1804) (Ireland, 1797, p.18). Ireland wrote on Gilpin’s failings as a topographer at length, and his book and its illustrations were aimed at supplanting the ‘general effect’ of the images Gilpin included in his earlier influential publication, Observations on the River Wye … Relative Chiefly to Picturesque Beauty (1782) (Ireland, 1797, p.133). Nowhere does Girtin display the least interest in contemporary aesthetic theory, but it would be surprising if he did not share Ireland’s contempt for Gilpin’s ideas, which, from a professional artist’s point of view, provided a spurious justification for the limited capabilities of amateur artists and their engagement with the landscape.
(?) 1797
Tintern Abbey, from the River Wye
TG0343
(?) 1797
Tintern Abbey: The View from the Nave
TG0349
1795 - 1796
Dartford High Street
TG0844
1796 - 1797
Bothal Castle, from the River Wansbeck
TG1089
1796 - 1797
Seaton Sluice
TG1088