Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level D , Case SC, Shelf 27

An Officer of the Grand Signior

Watercolour
ca. 1816-1824 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Watercolour drawing


Object details

Category
Object type
Titles
  • An Officer of the Grand Signior (popular title)
  • A Sulak (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Pencil and watercolour, stuck down on brown card
Brief description
Watercolour, An Officer of the Grand Signior, about 1816-1824, by William Page
Physical description
Watercolour drawing
Dimensions
  • Height: 32.5cm
  • Width: 22cm
Styles
Marks and inscriptions
RUSE & TURNER (paper watermarked)
Credit line
Purchased with the assistance of the National Heritage Memorial Fund, Art Fund, Shell International and the Friends of the V&A
Object history
According to Rodney Searight: - [SD720-738] `fr Maggs, June 1967, £100' [+ 3 others, no longer in collection].
Historical context
The Officer is a Sulak, a personal bodyguard of the Sultan. See W. Miller, The Costume Of Turkey, 1802, Pl.III, Officers Of The Grand Signior. Probably copied from a published source or another artist, rather than painted from life.
The costume studies SD.720-SD.740 seem to divide into two categories; those which are apparently copied from other sources (SD.728,731,733 & 734), and those which are based on on-the-spot observation (SD.720-727, 729, 730, 732, 735-740). Possibly the copies, which seem less developed stylistically, were done before Page visited the Near East. For discussions of the dating and origins of the studies, see J.H. Money, pp.13, 22 and 30; also C.W.J. Eliot, pp.424-5. For details of another set of costume figure studies by Page, some identical to these, see Searight Archive. See also C. de Brockdorff and O. Dalvimart for comparable studies. It has also been suggested (Searight Archive) that Page may well have been influenced by L. Dupré, whom he could have met in Greece or Constantinople, in 1819-20. The two artists are very close in style and format. See L. Dupré, Voyage A Athènes Et A Constantinople, Paris, 1825, in which many images bear comparison with Page.
Only one of Page's costume figure studies (SD.732), seems to have been published (see SP.443A). The artist appears to have worked in two distinct styles: the first during the 1810s and early/mid 1820s, represented here by the costume studies and The Fountain of Babhoumayoun (SD.720-741); the second during the late 1820s and 1830s, represented here by the picturesque landscapes (SD.742-756). Another group of landscapes from the second period, some signed W. Page are in the BM, PD.
Subject depicted
Place depicted
Collection
Accession number
SD.731

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Record createdMarch 14, 2008
Record URL
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