- Description
-
- Creator
- Francis Towne (1739 - 1816)
- Title(s)
-
- Landscape at 'Morrill'
- Date
- 1780
- Medium
- Oil on canvas
- Dimensions
-
- image width 387mm,
- image length 511mm
- Inscription
-
- sheet, recto, lower left
- “F.Towne / Pinxt. 1780”
- Object Type
- Oil painting
-
- Collection
- Catalogue Number
- FT161
- Description Sources
- Examination; Museum records (image)
Provenance
Untraced until 1932, when it was given by Captain Stanley William Sykes (d.1966) of Balls Grove, Grantchester, to the current owner, the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge (1616).
- Associated People & Organisations
- Fitzwilliam Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 1932, 1616
- Captain Stanley William Sykes ( - 1966), Grantchester
- Exhibition History
- Loan Exhibition of Works by Early Devon Painters Born Before the Year 1800, Royal Albert Memorial Museum, 1932, no. 10 as 'Landscape at Morrill'
- Bibliography
- Adrian Bury, Francis Towne - Lone Star of Water-Colour Painting, Charles Skilton: London, 1962, p. 128
- Jack Weatherburn Goodison, Catalogue of Paintings, Fitzwilliam Museum Cambridge, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 1977, p. 262-263
- Luke Herrmann, British Landscape Painting of the 18th Century, Faber: London, 1973, p. 75
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Comment
No such place as “Morrill” is known, but given its use in the title as early as 1932, it may well have a meaning that relates to the picture; perhaps Towne painted a location once known as “Moor Hill” or something similar. The scenery looks more like Wales than Devon, which is why it is not suggested as a Royal Academy exhibit of 1780, but the reasoning is no stronger than that.
The preparatory study is not known.
Captain Sykes was a collector and benefactor of the Fitzwilliam Museum, and the assumption is that he acquired, rather than inherited, this work.