William Wyld (1806-89)
The Crystal Palace seen from the Serpentine dated 1852
Watercolour and bodycolour | 31.0 x 49.0 cm (whole object) | RCIN 919930
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A watercolour showing the Crystal Palace in the distance, with the Serpentine in the foreground. Signed and dated at bottom left: W Wyld. 1852. A smaller variant of this watercolour is in the State Hermitage and Russian Museums, St Petersburg.
In his capacity as President of the Society of Arts, Prince Albert set up a committee to organise exhibitions with the aim of improving British industrial design. An exhibition in Birmingham in 1849 was followed by the first truly international exhibition, the Great Exhibition of Products of Industry of All Nations, held in Joseph Paxton's 'Crystal Palace' in Hyde Park, London, in the summer of 1851. Half the exhibition space was devoted to British manufacturing, and the other half was offered to foreign countries to display their achievements and specialisms. Six million people visited the exhibition to see over 100,000 exhibits from around the world, divided broadly into raw materials, machinery, manufactures and the fine arts; Queen Victoria herself visited no fewer than thirty-four times. The substantial profits were used to establish the South Kensington Museum, renamed the Victoria and Albert Museum in 1899. The Queen wrote to her uncle Leopold, King of the Belgians, that the inaugeration of the Great Exhibition was the "greatest day in our history."
In addition to a sequence of watercolours that Albert and Victoria commissioned to be reproduced by Dickinson Bros in chromolithography, the couple also commissioned works for their private series of View Albums (see below for more information). This watercolour was originally mounted in View Album V, followed by a series of nine interior views of the Great Exhibition, smaller in scale, by James Roberts (see RCINs 919982-919990).
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert compiled nine View Albums during their marriage. These albums contained watercolours and drawings documenting their life together and were arranged in chronological order. The albums were dismantled in the early twentieth century and rebound in new volumes both in a different arrangement and with additional items, but a written record of their original contents and arrangement still exists.Provenance
Probably commissioned by Prince Albert; perhaps the drawing for which Wyld was paid 20gns on 20 October 1852
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Creator(s)
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Medium and techniques
Watercolour and bodycolour
Measurements
31.0 x 49.0 cm (whole object)
Object type(s)
Other number(s)
RL 19930