Not currently on display at the V&A

Relief depicting Assyring King Ashur-Nasir-Pal II (885-860 B.C.), Louvre, Paris

Photograph
ca. 1880s (photographed)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This is part of a group of 611 photographs which once belonged to John Singer Sargent (1856-1925). The collection was presented to the Victoria and Albert Museum by the painter’s sisters, Emily Sargent and Violet Sargent Ormond, in August 1925, shortly after his death. Two months before, the sisters had donated a watercolour by the artist (Inv. no. P.2-1921), and they later gifted a tapestry-covered chair (Inv. no. W.39-1926).
The photographs reflect Sargent’s travelling lifestyle and breadth of artistic interests. The majority show architecture, sculpture and other art objects from a great variety of countries including Italy, France, the United Kingdom, Spain, Portugal, Egypt, Palestine, Lebanon, the United States and India. Sargent visited some of these countries in order to conduct research for The Triumph of Religion, his major mural project in the Boston Public Library (1890-1916). Although Sargent is known to have been an amateur photographer, it appears that most of the donated photographs were probably purchased from local professional photographers.
At the time of the donation, the collection was valued as an educational resource; the Museum wrote to thank the sisters for the photographs, which they affirmed would “prove very useful in the Library Photograph Collection, and the Sculpture Department,” and they were soon separated and classified geographically according to their content.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleRelief depicting Assyring King Ashur-Nasir-Pal II (885-860 B.C.), Louvre, Paris (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Albumen print
Brief description
Photograph of relief depicting Assyring King Ashur-Nasir-Pal II (885-860 B.C.), Louvre, Paris, albumen print, ca. 1880s
Physical description
A mounted sepia-coloured photograph of a relief sculpture showing an Assyrian King.
Dimensions
  • Mount height: 33cm
  • Mount width: 26.5cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'Ashur-Nasir-pal (King of Assyria 885-860 B.C.) Relief. Louvre, Paris'
  • (National Art Library blind stamp)
Object history
This photograph is one of a group belonging to the painter John Singer Sargent, which were presented to the museum by his sister Emily after his death.
Subjects depicted
Places depicted
Summary
This is part of a group of 611 photographs which once belonged to John Singer Sargent (1856-1925). The collection was presented to the Victoria and Albert Museum by the painter’s sisters, Emily Sargent and Violet Sargent Ormond, in August 1925, shortly after his death. Two months before, the sisters had donated a watercolour by the artist (Inv. no. P.2-1921), and they later gifted a tapestry-covered chair (Inv. no. W.39-1926).
The photographs reflect Sargent’s travelling lifestyle and breadth of artistic interests. The majority show architecture, sculpture and other art objects from a great variety of countries including Italy, France, the United Kingdom, Spain, Portugal, Egypt, Palestine, Lebanon, the United States and India. Sargent visited some of these countries in order to conduct research for The Triumph of Religion, his major mural project in the Boston Public Library (1890-1916). Although Sargent is known to have been an amateur photographer, it appears that most of the donated photographs were probably purchased from local professional photographers.
At the time of the donation, the collection was valued as an educational resource; the Museum wrote to thank the sisters for the photographs, which they affirmed would “prove very useful in the Library Photograph Collection, and the Sculpture Department,” and they were soon separated and classified geographically according to their content.
Collection
Accession number
520-1930

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Record createdApril 11, 2014
Record URL
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