Study of the boy with his finger in his mouth for Sunday Morning: Walk from Church
Drawing
1845 (made)
1845 (made)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
This drawing is a preliminary study of a boy with his left index finger in his mouth. The left hand is also holding a hat. His body is in three-quarter profile, turned to the right.
The drawing was made by Richard Redgrave (1804–1888), a prominent artist during the nineteenth century who became the first curator of the South Kensington Museum (now the V&A). Redgrave sketched the figure in pencil, applying black chalk to enhance the darker passages and white chalk to emphasise highlights. Redgrave often drew preparatory studies for his paintings. This study corresponds to the boy in Redgrave’s painting Sunday Morning: Walk from Church (1846).
The drawing was made by Richard Redgrave (1804–1888), a prominent artist during the nineteenth century who became the first curator of the South Kensington Museum (now the V&A). Redgrave sketched the figure in pencil, applying black chalk to enhance the darker passages and white chalk to emphasise highlights. Redgrave often drew preparatory studies for his paintings. This study corresponds to the boy in Redgrave’s painting Sunday Morning: Walk from Church (1846).
Object details
Category | |
Object type | |
Title | Study of the boy with his finger in his mouth for <i>Sunday Morning: Walk from Church</i> (published title) |
Materials and techniques | |
Brief description | Drawing, Study of the boy with his finger in his mouth for Sunday Morning: Walk from Church (1846) by Richard Redgrave R.A., pencil with black and white chalk on blue paper, Britain, 1845 |
Physical description | Drawing in pencil and chalk on paper of a boy with his left index finger in his mouth. The left hand is also holding a hat. His body is in three-quarter profile, turned towards the right. |
Dimensions |
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Credit line | Family of Richard Redgrave, C.B., R.A. |
Object history | Provenance: Given by the artist’s granddaughter, Dorothy Margaret Redgrave in 1932. This donation followed an earlier gift of the artist’s drawings to the V&A by Redgrave’s wife, Rose, in 1889. This drawing came to the museum as part of a set of 126 drawings originally mounted and bound in an album. The drawings were grouped together and carefully arranged in order to show every aspect of his draughtsmanship. The album was later dismantled prior to the V&A’s 1988 exhibition, Richard Redgrave 1804-1888 (16 March to 22 May 1988), which toured to the Yale Centre for British Art (14 June to 7 August 1988). The dismantled album has been retained but the pages in the album are loose. Each page is numbered in pencil in the top right-hand corner probably given by the museum at the time of accession. Some of the pages have been cut and removed from the album. The original placement of each drawing is indicated by border lines in ink and glue residue, along with museum objects numbers written in pencil. The complete arrangement was photographed in black and white before the drawings were removed. For a discussion of the original album see R. Twyman-Heaven, 'Richard Redgrave the Draughtsman' in Susan P. Casteras and Ronald Parkinson (eds.), Richard Redgrave 1804–1888, exh. cat. (New Haven and London, 1988), p.33. |
Summary | This drawing is a preliminary study of a boy with his left index finger in his mouth. The left hand is also holding a hat. His body is in three-quarter profile, turned to the right. The drawing was made by Richard Redgrave (1804–1888), a prominent artist during the nineteenth century who became the first curator of the South Kensington Museum (now the V&A). Redgrave sketched the figure in pencil, applying black chalk to enhance the darker passages and white chalk to emphasise highlights. Redgrave often drew preparatory studies for his paintings. This study corresponds to the boy in Redgrave’s painting Sunday Morning: Walk from Church (1846). |
Bibliographic references |
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Collection | |
Accession number | E.2237-1932 |
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Record created | June 30, 2009 |
Record URL |
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