Image of Gallery in South Kensington
Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, level D , Case 94, Shelf E, Box 46

Drawing

20/07/1759 (made)
Artist/Maker

Drawing of the ruins of the Cisterian Buildwas Abbey, Shropshire, by Thomas Robins.

Thomas Robins is an enigmatic artist and, so far, little has been discovered of his life. He may be descended from the family of Robins who held the manor of Matson. He published a Prospect of Bath in 1757 and A View of the Baths and Pump Room in 1764. His son Thomas Robins the Younger was a drawing master.

Between 1747 and 1770, Robins produced a series of drawings and paintings of English country houses and, in particular, their gardens. His surviving drawings and paintings epitomise English rococo taste. Robins was either specially attracted to rococo gardens, or had a reputation for the delineation of such gardens in the circles of cognoscenti of the rococo.

Robins and his work are of significant interest both topographically and aesthetically. His pictures of rococo gardens, with their vistas and ornamental buildings, are of great historical importance because they immortalise a fashion whose exemplars have disappeared. Robins, who was in many respects an 'amateur' painter, never succumbed to conventional facility and his views retain the charm and freshness of a personal discovery.


Object details

Object type
Materials and techniques
Watercolour and pencil on paper
Brief description
Drawing of Bildwas Abbey, Shropshire, 'July 20th 1759' by Thomas Robins
Physical description
Drawing of the interior of Buildwas Abbey, on paper, in watercolour and pencil. The drawing depicts the columns and arches of the ruined abbey. 'No 81' is written in brown ink in the bottom right hand corner amd the drawing is dated 'July 20th 1759.' The drawing is in a landscape format and attached to one page of the album.
Credit line
Accepted by H M Government in lieu of Inheritance Tax and allocated to the Victoria & Albert Museum, 2000
Summary
Drawing of the ruins of the Cisterian Buildwas Abbey, Shropshire, by Thomas Robins.

Thomas Robins is an enigmatic artist and, so far, little has been discovered of his life. He may be descended from the family of Robins who held the manor of Matson. He published a Prospect of Bath in 1757 and A View of the Baths and Pump Room in 1764. His son Thomas Robins the Younger was a drawing master.

Between 1747 and 1770, Robins produced a series of drawings and paintings of English country houses and, in particular, their gardens. His surviving drawings and paintings epitomise English rococo taste. Robins was either specially attracted to rococo gardens, or had a reputation for the delineation of such gardens in the circles of cognoscenti of the rococo.

Robins and his work are of significant interest both topographically and aesthetically. His pictures of rococo gardens, with their vistas and ornamental buildings, are of great historical importance because they immortalise a fashion whose exemplars have disappeared. Robins, who was in many respects an 'amateur' painter, never succumbed to conventional facility and his views retain the charm and freshness of a personal discovery.
Collection
Accession number
E.1308:82-2001

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Record createdMarch 21, 2001
Record URL
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