Joseph Nash (1809-78)
The Quadrangle, Windsor Castle, at night c.1846
Pencil, watercolour and bodycolour | 3.7 x 48.5 cm (whole object) | RCIN 919786
-
A watercolour showing the Quadrangle at night where a guard of honour is drawn up; a Royal visitor has just alighted under George IV's Gateway from the first line of carriages.
Nash appears to have first worked for Victoria and Albert in 1844, when he was commissioned to record events from the visits of, first, the Emperor of Russia and then Louis-Philippe, King of the French. A version of this watercolour was reproduced as a lithograph by Nash in his publication Views of the Interior and Exterior of Windsor Castle (1848), which he dedicated to the Queen. The introduction states: "On the various occasions when the Continental Sovereigns were entertained by Her Majesty at Windsor Castle, Mr Nash had the honour of receiving Her Majesty's commands to make Drawings of the scenes illustrative of the state and ceremony which distinguish the Royal hospitality". As well as such narrative scenes (see, for example, RCIN 919791), Nash's publication also included illustrations of rooms and spaces within the Castle (such as RCIN 919788), which must have been made with Victoria and Albert's permission. Some watercolours by Nash connected with the publication are in the Royal Collection; three were acquired by Victoria and Albert for their watercolour albums, but the majority were purchased in the twentieth century. A complete set of 26 watercolours, which are probably the final works on which the lithographs in the publication were based, is in the collection of Anglesey Abbey (National Trust).Provenance
Purchased from Sawyer, 1934, with RCINs 919788 and 919787
-
Creator(s)
Acquirer(s)
-
Medium and techniques
Pencil, watercolour and bodycolour
Measurements
3.7 x 48.5 cm (whole object)
Other number(s)
RL 19786