Paul Sandby (1731-1809)
The Deputy Ranger's Lodge, from Snow Hill, Windsor 1780
Pencil and watercolour | 7.7 x 13.6 cm (sheet of paper) | RCIN 917874
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A pencil and watercolour drawing of a house in parkland, with trees to left and right, and a path with a figure. On a wash-line bordered mount, and inscribed below in pencil in the artist's hand: 'The Deputy Ranger's Lodge, from Snow Hill, Windsor', and signed and dated in ink: P.S. W.P [Windsor Park] 1780.
Paul Sandby made hundreds of drawings of Windsor Castle and the surrounding area throughout his career. In 1765 his brother Thomas was appointed Deputy Ranger of Windsor Great Park, and took up residence in the Deputy Ranger's House (now Royal Lodge) in about 1770. This drawing shows the house from Snow Hill in Windsor Great Park. Two other pencil drawings of the house are RCINs 917868 and 917871. Other watercolours of the gardens of the Lodge include two watercolour drawings, RCIN 917555 and 917556, and three more finished watercolours 917634, 917597 and 917596. Paul Sandby regularly visited his brother and his family at Windsor, especially after 1782, when Paul's son Thomas Paul married his cousin, Thomas's daughter Harriot.Provenance
William Sandby; Christie's 26 May 1969, lot 77
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Creator(s)
Acquirer(s)
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Medium and techniques
Pencil and watercolour
Measurements
7.7 x 13.6 cm (sheet of paper)
Other number(s)
RL 17874