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Stained glass window in the 'Sala de la Barca'

Stained Glass Design
1809 - 1874 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Owen Jones (1809-1874) was a prolific architect, designer, illustrator and
printer who was recognised during his lifetime as one of the most influential contemporary figures in art and design theory.

In April 1834, Owen Jones visited the Alhamba, Spain, with his friend, the architect, Jules Goury. During their stay, Goury was a casualty of the severe cholera epidemic that had broken out in Granada and killed 10,000 people. After taking his friend's mortal remains to France, Jones was determined to complete their joint project to produce a full-colour architectural survey of the palaces. He subsequently published at great personal cost his two-volume work, Plans, Elevations, Sections and Details of the Alhambra, which featured 68 chromolithographic plates across both volumes, not including the frontispieces and finispieces.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleStained glass window in the 'Sala de la Barca' (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Watercolour on paper
Brief description
Colour drawing of a geometric stained glass window in the Sala de La Barca, Alhambra
Physical description
Fully worked up and coloured drawing of a stained glass window
Dimensions
  • Height: 598mm
  • Width: 383mm
Object history
This drawing was purchased from Robert Jackson in 1887. The 'Hall of the Bark'/'Sala de la Barca', is the long narrow antechamber to the Comares Throne Hall.

The drawing relates to Vol II Plate 45 in Plans, Elevations, Sections and Details of the Alhambra by Owen Jones.

Owen Jones worked as an architect and designer. After training under Lewis Vulliamy, he took his Grand Tour in 1832, travelling to Greece, Turkey, Egypt and Spain. With the French architect Jules Goury, he carried out a detailed survey of the Alhambra palace in Spain, which he published in 1842 to 1845. It is one of the first examples of chromolithography in Britain.

Designer, writer and architect, he was educated at the Academy Schools. He toured the Middle East and Spain in 1833 and 1834. He published 'Plans, Sections and Details of the Alhambra' in 1842.
Subject depicted
Place depicted
Summary
Owen Jones (1809-1874) was a prolific architect, designer, illustrator and
printer who was recognised during his lifetime as one of the most influential contemporary figures in art and design theory.

In April 1834, Owen Jones visited the Alhamba, Spain, with his friend, the architect, Jules Goury. During their stay, Goury was a casualty of the severe cholera epidemic that had broken out in Granada and killed 10,000 people. After taking his friend's mortal remains to France, Jones was determined to complete their joint project to produce a full-colour architectural survey of the palaces. He subsequently published at great personal cost his two-volume work, Plans, Elevations, Sections and Details of the Alhambra, which featured 68 chromolithographic plates across both volumes, not including the frontispieces and finispieces.
Bibliographic reference
Unpublished paper by Mariam Rosser-Owen delivered at the conference Definining Owen Jones (1809-1874) : Architect and Designer for a Modern Age on 1-2 October, 2024 at the Sultan Nazanin Shah Conference Centre, Worcester College, Oxford, UK
Collection
Accession number
D.1133C-1887

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Record createdJune 30, 2009
Record URL
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