- Description
-
- Creator(s)
- Thomas Girtin (1775-1802)
- Title
-
- Wetherby: Looking through the Bridge to the Mills
- Date
- (?) 1800
- Medium and Support
- Graphite and watercolour on laid paper
- Dimensions
- 32 × 52.1 cm, 12 ⅝ × 20 ½ in
- Object Type
- Replica by Girtin; Studio Watercolour
- Subject Terms
- River Scenery; The Country Town; Wind and Water Mills; Yorkshire View
Provenance
Chambers Hall (1786–1855); presented to the Museum, 1855
Exhibition History
London, 1953a, no.30 as ’Richmond Bridge, Yorkshire’; Manchester, 1975, no.75 as ’Wetherby Bridge, Yorkshire’; London, 1985, no.73; London, 2002, no.134
Bibliography
Binyon, 1898–1907, no.40 as 'Richmond Bridge, Yorkshire'; Davies, 1924, pl.46; Hardie, 1934, p.11; Mayne, 1949, p.94; Hardie, 1966–68, vol.2, p.16 as 'Richmond Bridge, Yorkshire'; Smith, 2002a, pp.58–59 as 'Wetherby Bridge, Yorkshire'; Stainton, 2005, pp.46–47
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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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Private Collection
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Bristol Museum & Art Gallery
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Art Institute of Chicago
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National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin
A Rainbow over the River Exe
The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens, San Marino
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Clark Art Institute, Williamstown
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The Whitworth, The University of Manchester
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Private Collection, Norfolk
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Tate, London
Chelsea Reach, Looking towards Battersea
Private Collection, Norfolk
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Private Collection
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Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
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British Museum, London
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British Museum, London
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British Museum, London
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Art Institute of Chicago
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Aberdeen Art Gallery
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British Museum, London
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Private Collection
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About this Work
This watercolour, which for a long period was known incorrectly as Richmond Bridge, shows the view through the northern arches of the bridge over the river Wharfe at Wetherby in Yorkshire. It is one of two almost identical versions of the composition (the other being TG1644) that were executed after a sketch that appears to have been produced during Girtin’s stay in Yorkshire in the summer of 1800 (TG1536). The outline does little more than indicate the relative positions of the different elements of the composition, however, and the artist must have conceived the light effect, the play of shadows, and the different textures of stone, water, tree and thatch in the studio. Travellers who followed the course of the river Wharfe sometimes commented on the picturesque charms of the market town of Wetherby, but, despite its position on the Great North Road, few artists painted the subject. Unfortunately, we do not know whether this or either of the other Wetherby subjects executed by Girtin (TG1642 and TG1644) were commissions, but it may be that the artist himself recognised the potential of the town during his travels and produced his views for sale on the open market, since all of them conform to the standard size of the works that were disposed of by Samuel William Reynolds (1773–1835), who acted on behalf of the artist in his final years in a role somewhere between agent and dealer. In this case, the artist chose a view looking upstream through two of the arches of the bridge, the only part of the scene that remains, towards the mills (which were used for grinding rape and corn at this date), with one of the wheels appearing to the left of the central pier (Hill, 1999, p.43). As Francis Hawcroft has pointed out, the use of a bridge to frame a background scene was pioneered by Giovanni Antonio Canal (Canaletto) (1697–1768), though the more immediate source for this lay in compositions by Girtin’s master, Edward Dayes (1763–1804) (see figure 1) (Hawcroft, 1975, p.51). However, unlike either earlier artist, Girtin used the framing device not for a famous architectural motif but for a humble stretch of vernacular buildings with no obvious pictorial interest, and the radical innovation is enhanced by the use of two arches, which are determinedly asymmetrical. Overlaying images of the pencil outline and the watercolour illustrates how the artist extended the arch laterally to the right, so that it no longer balances the other, to the point where the perspective breaks down. Contrary to the suggestion of David Hill, who thought that this disturbing effect was a result of the bridge being remodelled and widened, this appears to have been a way of including more of the distant view of the mills (Hill, 1999, p.43).
Overlaying images of the two versions of the Wetherby composition also illustrates just how close the two works are, not just in terms of size. Like the two versions of Paris: The Ruins of the Roman Baths, Hôtel de Cluny (TG1896 and TG1897), the watercolours are identical, even down to details such as the reflections in the water and the stains on the masonry, where one might expect variations given Girtin’s flair for improvisation. The only discernible difference I can see is that in TG1644, the version in Leeds, the buildings seen through both arches are marginally bigger, but this does not mean that the ‘composition has been refined slightly’, as Hill has suggested as a reason for thinking that this version is the later of the two (Hill, 1999, p.43). Indeed, the fact that this watercolour still includes pencil work might have suggested that it is the first version, were it not for the fact that I do not think trying to establish the primacy of one over the other is relevant in this case. Such is the congruence, down to the tiniest of details, that I suspect the artist had both watercolours to hand as he worked on them, and that he painted on both at the same time, moving from one to the other, completing a wash of each tint in turn.
On a technical note, the paper historian Peter Bower has identified the support used by Girtin as an off-white laid drawing cartridge paper by an unknown Dutch manufacturer (Smith, 2002b, p.173; Bower, Report). This is the same paper that the artist employed for Farm Buildings, Probably in Surrey (TG1432). The work is in excellent condition, allowing one to appreciate the economy of means with which the artist achieved his effects, as well as details such as the underdrawing in pencil to the right and a fingerprint that has strayed into the shadow of the pier in the centre.
(?) 1800
Wetherby: Looking through the Bridge to the Mills
TG1644
1799 - 1800
Wetherby: Looking through the Bridge to the Mills
TG1536
(?) 1800
Wetherby Bridge and Mills, Looking across the Weir
TG1642
(?) 1800
Wetherby: Looking through the Bridge to the Mills
TG1644
(?) 1802
Paris: The Ruins of the Roman Baths, Hôtel de Cluny
TG1896
(?) 1802
Paris: The Ruins of the Roman Baths, Hôtel de Cluny
TG1897
(?) 1800
Wetherby: Looking through the Bridge to the Mills
TG1644
1799 - 1800
Farm Buildings, Probably in Surrey
TG1432