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Thomas Sautelle Roberts RHA (1760-1826) - MILITARY ROAD, 1802

Currency:EUR Category:Art / General - Paintings Start Price:NA Estimated At:10,000.00 - 15,000.00 EUR
Thomas Sautelle Roberts RHA (1760-1826) - MILITARY ROAD, 1802

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Auction Date:2011 Oct 10 @ 18:00 (UTC+1)
Location:Royal Dublin Society, Ballsbridge, Dublin 4, Dublin, Dublin, ., Ireland
Artist: Thomas Sautelle Roberts RHA (1760-1826)
Title: MILITARY ROAD, 1802
Medium: watercolour
Signature: signed and dated lower left partially hidden beneath mount
Dimensions: 48 by 64cm., 19 by 25in.
Provenance: Provenance:Private collection, Australia
Exhibited:
Literature:
Note: This watercolour is one of several painted by Thomas Sautelle Roberts showing construction of the Wicklow Military Road after the 1798 rebellion. The view is northwards towards Glencree, with a roadside quarry to the right and the cliffs above Lower Lough Bray to the left. The partially constructed road snakes downhill, with a puff of smoke to indicate quarrying. The 3rd Earl of Hardwicke, Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, is shown on horseback talking to a Scottish soldier; behind are three of his entourage, and soldiers and labourers at work. Two of the camps used by the military are shown — at the left a small temporary camp with tents and a possible cookhouse near Upper Lough Bray and in the distance the major basecamp at the head of Glencree, known as Aurora and appropriately illuminated by a shaft of sunlight.
Thomas Sautelle Roberts RHA (c.1760–1827) was the younger brother of the notable landscape painter Thomas Roberts (1748–77). He exhibited forty Irish landscapes in watercolour at the Parliament House, College Green, in 1802: these were intended for his Illustrations of the Chief Sites, Rivers and Picturesque Scenery of the Kingdom of Ireland. Some, including the two here, were also issued as aquatints. The miniature portrait painter John Comerford (c.1770–1832) added small figures and portraits, including that of Lord Hardwicke at the Military Road.
Mary Davies
Irish historian and author of
Royal Irish Academy’s Atlas of Bray and
That Favourite Resort: the Story of Bray, Co. Wicklow
Dublin, September, 2011.