Mansion, Charlton House, Richardson, 1838
£250.00
330 x 470 mm
- Description
Description
An original antique stone lithograph based on the work of John Thorpe (fl. 1570-1618). Published in Charles James Richardson’s ‘Architectural Remains of the Reigns of Elizabeth and James I’ in 1838. Engraved by Day and Haghe from sketches by Richardson. Stone lithography is the ideal medium for such work, as the fine detail captures the impression of the artist’s pencil sketch. The intention of Richardson’s publication was to present ‘a full, correct, and comprehensive collection’ of the more valuable examples of Elizabethan and Jacobean architecture, as opposed to those ‘deficient in unity and simplicity of character’. The idea for the publication was suggested by the many ‘curious and original drawings’ by John Thorpe to be found in Sir John Soane’s Museum. John Thorpe was a prominent architect of the period. As Richardson puts it, ‘there were few celebrated houses then erecting in which Thorpe was not engaged’.
This engraving shows a view of the principal front of Charlton House, Kent, which, in 1838 when the collection was published, was the seat of Sir Thomas Maryon Wilson, Bart. The house was built circa 1612 by Sir Adam Newton, tutor to Henry Prince of Wales. The ornamental borders surrounding the design are selected from among an ample collection of friezes and ornaments characteristic of the style.