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Thomas Snagg - VIEW OF CLONTARF CASTLE, 1805

Currency:EUR Category:Art Start Price:0.00 EUR Estimated At:5,000.00 - 7,000.00 EUR
Thomas Snagg - VIEW OF CLONTARF CASTLE, 1805

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Auction Date:2012 Mar 12 @ 18:00 (UTC+1)
Location:Clyde Hall, Royal Dublin Society (RDS), Ballsbridge, Dublin, ., Ireland
Thomas Snagg - VIEW OF CLONTARF CASTLE, 1805

(1746-1812)
oil on canvas
signed and dated lower right
60.96 by 91.44cm., 24 by 36in.
Stackallan House Co. Meath Sale, Christie's, 20 October, 1992, lot 197;
Private collection




This rare Thomas Snagg oil painting places its main feature- Clontarf Castle - on the left-hand side of the picture, a characteristic also found in the works of his exact contemporary William Ashford who had dominated Irish landscape painting for a quarter of a century before Snagg put brush to canvas here in 1805. The castle stands on the site of the Norman fortress built around 1200 by the Knights Templar and the tower at the right-hand end of the building may be part of a later medieval commandery of the Knights Hospitallers to whom the property was transferred in the 14th century. The remainder of the castle seen in Snagg's canvas is probably a creation of the later18th century; one of the earliest examples of the Neo-Gothic style in Ireland, and the predecessor of the present Tudor-Revival structure designed by William Vitruvius Morrison in 1836. A closer view of 1772 by Gabriel Beranger, of which there is a watercolour copy in the National Library, shows out the Gothic fenestration more clearly. In 1998, Sotheby's auctioned for £40,000 a sketch of the castle of around 1817, allegedly by the famous English painter J.M.W. Turner, which was apparently copied from an original by Maria Sophie Vernon. She was a member of the family which had been in residence since the mid-17th century - the builders of the structure painted by Snagg - and whose name is still attached to the various roads in the vicinity. It is doubtless they or their guests feature in the charming vignette in the bottom of the picture, seen on the horse-drawn carriage at the top of the road leading down to the sea.The right half of the picture gives a break in the foliage to reveal a splendid vista of Dublin Bay, reaching as far as the two Sugarloaves - Dunleary (afterwards, Kingstown and later Dún Laoghaire) before its harbour was built. A notable feature is the South Wall, finished in 1786, and extending from Ringsend (out of sight) past the Pidgeon house out to the old Poolbeg Lighthouse which helped guide shipping up the River to the Custom House, completed only fourteen years before Snagg's panorama was created. A most unexpected, and rather fanciful, feature of the picture is the series of houses and other buildings presented at such a scale as to be almost Lilliputian, and placed along the shore where there were probably slobs at the time, a plan to reclaim which was prepared in the year of the painting, 1805. Snagg, thrice married, was born in London and became a successful actor, performing with David Garrick at Drury Lane. He took up painting around the mid-1770s and travelled as far as St. Petersburg, where he painted Empress Catherine the Great. On his return journey, Robespierre arrested him and his family in northern France, where he was held captive for more than a year - an ordeal he recorded in a print in the British Museum.In 1804, twelve months before he painted Clontarf, Snagg exhibited four landscapes at Allen's in Dame Street, one of which may have been the view of Dublin Bay seen from the University Rowing Club in Ringsend now in the National Gallery of Ireland, and which - like the Clontarf picture - has the main building on the left-hand side of the painting.Dr. Peter HarbisonHonorary Academic Editor, Royal Irish AcademyFebruary, 2012