Edward Lear, Figures on Road, Tivoli Beyond (1839)

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Edward Lear, Figures on the Road, Tivoli Beyond.
Pencil, heightened with white and touches of brown wash, on grey paper; signed lower right: Edward Lear / 1839; and inscribed lower left: Tivoli. 240 by 340 mm.

In a letter to his sister Ann, Lear describes the landscape at Tivoli with rapture and reveals ‘all the rich ancients had villas there. You now pass a vast tract of ruins – Cypresses etc., towers etc…Then you commence a long pull up to the town through the most beautiful olive wood! – such trees! – and every now and then you see bits of the ancient villas – all that is left of once vast buildings – now only a few arches with the curious Roman brick-work – covered with large aloes – or roofs of olives.’1
Lear was so enthralled by the beauty of Tivoli that, after his first visit in 1838, he returned there many times and there are two different views of the town in his Views in Rome and its Environs, 1841, plates 23 and 24.
1. V. Noakes, Edward Lear Selected Letters, 1988, p. 42

Sotheby’s.

Also: View of Tivoli, Tivoli (1839), Villa d’Este, Tivoli (1840).

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Edward Lear, Falla near Strongoli, Corfu (1862)

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Edward Lear, Falla near Strongoli, Corfu.
Pen and brown ink over pencil on blue paper; inscribed lower left with the title in Greek and dated: 4 May. 1862, numbered lower right: 49 + 2, and further inscribed with artist’s notes. 215 by 445 mm.

In December 1855, after his friend Franklin Lushington was appointed Judge to the Supreme Court of Justice in the Ionian Islands, Lear decided to settle in Corfu.  He made the island his home until 1863 when Prince William of Denmark accepted the throne and the majority of British residents left the island.

Sotheby’s.

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Edward Lear, Distant View of the Citadel, Corfu

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Edward Lear, A Distant View of the Citadel, Corfu.
Watercolour over pencil, heightened with touches of bodycolour and gum arabic; signed lower right with the artist’s monogram and inscribed: Corfu. 285 by 450 mm.

Lear was first introduced to Corfu, then under British Protectorate, by Sir George Ferguson Bowen (1821-1899). He arrived by boat from Naples via Malta on 19th April 1848 and was immediately entranced by the beauty of the island, revealing to his sister, Ann, ‘I wish I could give you any idea of the beauty of this island, it really is a Paradise. The extreme gardeny [sic] verdure – the fine olives, cypresses, almonds and oranges, make the landscape so rich – and the Albanian mountains are wonderfully fine. All the villages seem clean & white, with here & there a palm tree overtopping them.’1
During his first trip Lear only spent a few days on Corfu before he left to explore Zante, Cephalonia and Ithaca. However, despite the brevity of his stay, he developed a strong attachment to the island and, in December 1855, after his friend Franklin Lushington (1823-1901) was appointed Judge to the Supreme Court of Justice in the Ionian Islands, he took the opportunity to settle there. He made the island his home until 1863, when Prince William of Denmark accepted the throne and the majority of British residents left the island. He returned there only once more in 1877, but it was a place that never ceased to inspire him, for he believed ‘no other spot on earth can be fuller of beauty & of variety of beauty.’2
1. V. Noakes, Edward Lear: The Life of a Wanderer, London 1968, p. 86
2. V. Noakes, op. cit., 1968, pp.195-6

Sotheby’s.

Also: The Citadel from Ascension.

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Edward Lear, Gebel Serbal (1849)

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Edward Lear, Gebel Serbal from above Wadi Useit, Egypt.
Pen and brown ink and watercolour over traces of pencil; inscribed lower right: Gebal [sic] Serbal / from above Wady [sic] Useit / 20. January. 1849. 2. P.M.., and further inscribed with artists notes. 120 by 225 mm.

Sotheby’s.

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Edward Lear, View of Tivoli

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Edward Lear, View of Tivoli.
Indistinctly inscribed and dated ‘Tivoli May 7 …183.'(lower left). Pencil and grey wash heightened with white on light grey paper. 7 1/8 x 10 in. (18.2 x 25.4 cm.).

With financial backing from Lord Derby, Lear set out for Italy in the summer of 1837. For most of the next ten years Lear wintered in Rome and toured other parts of Italy during the summer. This visit to Tivoli is referred to by Lear in a letter dated 3rd May 1838 to his sister Ann; ‘I, and Uwins and Mr Acland set off on Saturday – staying some days at many beautiful places all (of) which I will tell you about. I must now describe my dear Tivoli as I promised the height of landscape perfection’ (V. Noakes, Edward Lear, Selected Letters, Oxford, 1988, p. 41). ‘Mr. Acland’ (Leopold Dyke Acland) was one of Lear’s travelling companions who after Tivoli went on to the Bay of Naples in the summer of 1838. Later Acland joined Lear for a tour of Sicily in the spring of 1842. Leopold was the son of Sir Thomas Dyke Acland , tenth baronet (1787-1871), a politician and philanthropist.

Christie’s.

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Edward Lear, Jerusalem, A View from the South

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Edward Lear, Jerusalem; a view from the South looking towards the Dome of the Rock.
Signed with monogram (lower right). Pencil and watercolour and bodycolour heightened with white. 6 3/8 x 10¼ in. (16.2 x 26 cm.).

Lear first visited Jerusalem in the Spring of 1858 arriving in Holy Week, having been commissioned to paint the city by Lady Waldegrave (1821-1879). He went out each morning making preparatory drawings and wrote to his sister Ann ‘… just before sunrise the view of the city is most lovely, all gold and white beyond the dark fig and olive trees’. Lear returned to Jerusalem in 1867 setting off on camels across the desert, eventually arriving in Jerusalem in mid-April.

Christie’s.

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Edward Lear, Monaco (1865)

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Edward Lear, Monaco.
Signed with monogram (lower left). Pencil and watercolour heightened with touches of bodycolour. 4 1/8 x 8 in. (10.5 x 23 cm.).

The present work is drawn from Cap D’Ail, in 1865 and looks towards the Prince’s palace on the left of the peninsular with the cathedral, since rebuilt, a little to the right. Lear wrote to his friend Chichester Fortescue (1823-1898) on 13 November 1864 when he was in the south of France; ‘had no idea the Cornice was so magnificent in scenery; Eza [sic Eze] and Monaco are wondrously picturesque, and Mentone very pretty’ (Lady Strachey, ed., Later Letters of Edward Lear, London, 1911, p. 51).

Christie’s.

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Edward Lear, Thermopylae, 30 June 1848

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Edward Lear, Thermopylae, 30 June 1848.
Pen and brown and blue ink with watercolour over pencil, heightened with white on grey paper; inscribed lower right: 102 / Thermopylae / 30 June 1848; further inscribed with artist’s notes. 175 by 28 mm.

Edward Lear arrived in Greece on 1st June 1848 before setting out on a tour of the central part of that country with his friend and patron, Charles Church. Unfortunately, their journey was beset by misfortune and Lear was thrown from his horse on the first day. Despite a sprained shoulder he refused to turn back and they visited Chalcis, Euboea, Eretia, Aliveri, Kumi, Lamia and Patragik before reaching ‘the celebrated pass of Thermopylae’1on the 30th. By the time they reached Thebes however Lear had developed a fever and, dangerously ill, he had to be brought back to Athens ‘by four horses on an indiarubber bed.’2

1. V. Noakes, Edward Lear Selected Letters, London 1988, p. 80.

Provenance

Sale, London, Sotheby’s, 20 November 1986, lot 188;
with Spink’s, London;
John, Lord D’Ayton (1922-2003);
thence by decent to the present owners

Exhibited

London, Sotheby’s, Edward Lear, An Exhibition of Works by Edward Lear from the D’Ayton International Collection, assembled by John D’Ayton, 2004, no. 9

Sotheby’s Old Master & British Drawings including French Masterworks from the Dormeuil Collection.
2. Lady Constance Strachey, Letters of Edward Lear, London 1907, p. 11.

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Edward Lear, Perugia, 7 September 1883

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Edward Lear, Perugia, Italy.
Pen and brown ink and watercolour over pencil; inscribed lower right: near / Perugia / 7. September 1883 / 7.AM.; further inscribed with artist’s notes. 325 by 505 mm.

Lear drew this large pen and ink study during a visit to Perugia in September 1883. A late work, he skilfully depicts the ancient city with its patchwork of small streets and tiled roofs. Towering above the other buildings is the Basilica San Domenico, while in the distance the Umbrian hills can clearly be seen.

Provenance

With Agnew’s, London;
John, Lord D’Ayton (1922-2003);
thence by descent to the present owners

Exhibited

London, Sotheby’s, Edward Lear, An Exhibition of Works by Edward Lear from the D’Ayton International Collection, assembled by John D’Ayton, 2004, no. 8

Sotheby’s Old Master & British Drawings including French Masterworks from the Dormeuil Collection.

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Captain Beechey’s Zoology and Illustrated Excursions in Italy

I periodically search a few online databases for new material relating to Edward Lear, and today’s search proved rather interesting, so here is something to look at while you are waiting for the return of Edward Lear’s Diaries, due to start again on 24 June.

Google Books now has both volumes of Lear’s Illustrated Excursions to Italy online, there may be limitations depending on the country you are accessing the archive from, you can certainly download PDFs from the USA: volume I, volume II.

On eBay, MJC Books is offering 12 original color plates by Edward Lear from the “Zoology of Captain Beechey’s Voyage: Ornithology.” Here is the seller’s description, followed by the eight pictures provided: they are rather small, but look better than what you get from Archive.org’s scanned book.

Offered here are the 12 original coloured plates of birds by Edward Lear from the ornithology section of the ‘Zoology of Captain Beechey’s Voyage’, together with the relevant text by N R Vigors, pages 13-40, all printed in facsimile.
All the plates are laid down and trimmed, 8 significantly. Seven have 2 punch holes in the blank inner margin, 1 is repaired, 1 has a faint fold mark and the centre an 1 has some browning. Some captions have been trimmed and pasted back onto plate margin. The actual coloured illustrations are bright and fresh looking. Its rare to find these original Lear Plates.
London: 1839. 290 by 205 mm, 11.5 by 8 inches. All bound in maroon cloth with gilt lettering to spine. The binding is in very good condition.
** Zoology of Captain Beechey’s Voyage; compiled from the Collections and Notes made by Captain Beechey, the Officers and Naturalists of the Expedition, during a Voyage to the Pacific and Behring’s Straits performed in His Majesty’s Ship Blossom, in the Years 1825, 26, 27, and 28. The complete ‘Zoololgy’ is illustrated with 44 coloured plates and is now a rare and valuable book **

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