landscape | ruins | castle | hills | river | trees | cliffs | geology | architectural subject
Associated Places:
Wye | Chepstow Castle | Europe | United Kingdom | Cymru | Chepstow | Wales
Currently On View:
Not on view
Exhibition History:
Art in Focus : Wales (Yale Center for British Art, 2014-04-04 - 2014-08-10)Francis Danby ARA (Bristol Museum and Art Gallery, 1988-11-05 - 1989-01-21)Francis Danby ARA (Tate Britain, 1989-02-15 - 1989-04-09)
Publications:
Yale Center for British Art, Wales, New Haven, 2014, p. 21, V2519 (YCBA)
Gallery Label:
By the nineteenth century, Chepstow Castle had long lost its original, strategic purpose intended by William the Conqueror in the eleventh century. Francis Danby specialized in poetic landscapes that were not grounded in biblical, literary, classical, or historical subject matter. This drawing, however, does not fall into his usual poetic landscape category, but instead is a detailed depiction of Chepstow Castle, one of the many stops along the Wye River Valley tour. Like many other Romantic artists of his period, Danby depicts the ruins as a vision of a desolate past, the expanse of beautifully shaded water accompanying a deserted Chepstow Castle. Edited out of the landscape are a glass yard and factory, which were built when the castle was leased out during the nineteenth century. Gallery label for Art in Focus: Wales (Yale Center for British Art, 2014-04-04 - 2014-08-10)