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Collection Details
Bought from the artist by Sir Watkin Williams-Wynn, 4th Bt. Among the
Wynnstay papers is a document in Wilsons handwriting, headed Sir
Watkin Williams Wynn Bart to Richd. Wilson Dr. June 5th 1770. It contains
inter alia these two entries: To a Landskip taken in the Villa Ghigi at
Lariccia £26:6:0 and Its Companion £26:6:0. These must refer
to the present picture and its companion (cf Constable, infra, 1954).
Sold by Sir Watkin Williams-Wynn at Sothebys, 7 July 1965, when
it was bought by Lord Faringdon.
Literature
E K Waterhouse, Burlington Magazine, LXXXVIII, 1946, p. 227; W G Constable,
Wilson, 1953, pp. 88, 184, Pl. 53b; idem, Richard Wilson: Some Pentimenti,
Burlington Magazine, XCVI, 1954, p. 140.
Exhibition Details
Probably the picture exhibited with its companion at the BI in 1814 (Nos
127, 144) and 1848 (Nos 131, 139) and at Manchester, Art Treasures, 1857
(Nos 151, 162) variously entitled Woody Scene, View in Wales, etc; exhibited
by the Arts Council, Masterpieces from Welsh Houses, 1946, No. 13.
Companion picture
Probably the picture exhibited with its companion at the BI in 1814 (Nos
127, 144) and 1848 (Nos 131, 139) and at Manchester, Art Treasures, 1857
(Nos 151, 162) variously entitled Woody Scene, View in Wales, etc; exhibited
by the Arts Council, Masterpieces from Welsh Houses, 1946, No. 13.
Background
Until the publication by Constable in 1954 of the document partly quoted
above, the picture was always assumed to be a Welsh landscape, probably
to be equated with one of the two small views in Wales mentioned
by Benjamin Booth, the well-known collector of Wilsons paintings,
as hanging in Sir Watkin Williams-Wynns house in St Jamess
Square (unpublished notes, document 4). Constable (1953), in tentatively
dating the picture, then described as Sandpit and Ruins in a Glade, 175860
ie, soon after Wilsons return to England from Italy
added the rider that it was painted in a style to which the artist was
to revert in the late 1760s. In view of the date of the pictures
acquisition, the hypothesis of a later date may be correct. On the other
hand, the supposition that it was an earlier painting, later modified,
cannot be discounted. It is paradoxical that Waterhouse emphasises, in
what we now know to be an Italian view, its Dutch characteristics (the
patch of sunlight in a woodland glade is a popular theme in Dutch painting).
He adds of this area that Wilson had carelessly painted it over
a landscape perhaps with Italian ruins which he did not
trouble fully to eliminate
The frame was probably designed
by Adams.
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