LOT 38 Akhridha Edward Lear(British, 1812-1888)
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27.3 x 43.8cm (10 3/4 x 17 1/4in).
Edward Lear (British, 1812-1888)
Akhridha inscribed and dated 'Akhridha/Sept.23./1848' (lower left); numbered '(53)' (lower right); variously annotated throughoutPen and brown ink and watercolour heightened with white 27.3 x 43.8cm (10 3/4 x 17 1/4in).
|ProvenanceGilbert Davis Collection.Private collection, UK. ExhibitedLondon, The Fine Art Society, Edward Lear, A Centenary Exhibition, June 1988. LiteratureE. Lear, Journals of a Landscape painter in Greece & Albania, London, 1988, pp. 42-48.Susan Hyman, Edward Lear in the Levant, Travels in Albania, Greece and Turkey in Europe, 1848-1849, London, 1988 (illustrated p. 84).Lear set out from Salonika in Greece on 9 September 1848 on a three-month sketching trip; his journey was to take him in a north-westerly direction through Macedonia, into Albania and down its western coast. Travelling on horseback and sometimes on foot, he was accompanied by his dragoman Giorgio who acted as cook, valet, interpreter and guide. They generally stayed at the most rudimentary of roadside shelters along the way, carrying the basic necessities of bedding and cooking utensils with them, and whenever possible – weather permitting – Lear sketched the landscape and people that they encountered. The entry for his journal of September 20 describes a monotonous journey across a plain, but after scaling a mountain pass a very different landscape opened before them. They were approaching Akhridha (modern day Ohrid) and Lear wrote:'Soon a new world charmed the eye, and on arriving at the edge of the western face of this high ridge the beautiful plain and lake of Akhridha burst, as it were, into existence...it is scarcely possible to dream of finer scenes than these, their beauty perhaps enhanced by grand storm effects, which gave them more than ordinary magic of colour and variety of interest....Such sublime scenery obliterated from the memory all annoyances of travel and astonished and delighted at every step...Of many days passed in many lands, in wandering amid noble scenery, I can recall none more variously delightful and impressive than this has been'.Lear was so taken with the town of Akhridha that he spent three days there, remarking in his journal not only on the beauty of the place, but on the unusually lovely local costumes. The present drawing was made on the last day of his stay, September 23 and his journal note records it in detail:'There is a street scene below the castle, where a majestic plane shades bazaars rich with every sort of gay-coloured raiment. Through its drooping foliage gleams the bright top of a minaret and below it are grouped every variety of picturesque human beings. To carry away a sketch of this was the work of half the morning.' Lear's subsequent journey through Albania was often uncomfortable and the weather was not always kind to him. His sojourn in Akhridha stands out as one of the more enjoyable episodes along the way, despite an incident on his last afternoon when he incautiously decided to sketch some women washing clothes by the lake and was pelted with stones as a result. His main concern was for his spectacles which fortunately survived the attack.
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2018.9.25
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伦敦新邦德街
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