Heinrich Brückner (1805-92)
The Bathing House near the Rosenau c. 1845
Pencil and watercolour with touches of bodycolour | 17.0 x 23.0 cm (whole object) | RCIN 920446
-
A watercolour view of the Bathing House near the Rosenau.
Brückner was from a family of painter-decorators, and he himself became a theatrical stage designer and painter. Queen Victoria and Prince Albert acquired a substantial corpus of watercolours by Brückner and his son Max depicting the landscapes and sights in and around Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, the duchy of Prince Albert's family. Max Brückner's works tend to be bolder and more painterly in technique than those of his father.
The Queen and Prince Consort visited Coburg twice, in 1845 and 1860, and the Queen then returned on a number of occasions following Albert's death in 1861. The Rosenau was the house in which Prince Albert was born. Together, Queen Victoria and Prince Albert mounted many of their watercolour views of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha in three albums, and a survivng typescript list of their contents is presumed to accurately reflect their arrangement. These albums were dismantled around 1930 and many of the watercolours rearranged in the new, topographical, Souvenir Albums. The first of the albums, from which this watercolour derives, seems to have largely contained watercolours related to the visit of the Royal couple in 1845.Provenance
Originally mounted in the first album of views of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha
-
Creator(s)
-
Medium and techniques
Pencil and watercolour with touches of bodycolour
Measurements
17.0 x 23.0 cm (whole object)
Other number(s)
RL 20446