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  • Genuine antique aquatint print, hand colored, of "Post Aberglasslyn", welsh landscape with a mountain in distance, bridge linked to Devil folklore in the middle distance, and with fishermen in the foreground. www.historyrevisited.com.au
  • The Bridge that folk lore links to the Devil and the Wizard, Robin Ddu in the 1400s. "The Cob", across the Traeth Mawr estuary. wwww.historyrevisited.com.au
  • Fisherman in the foreground with two friends seated on the ground. Delicate original water color brings life and atmosphere to the tonal aquatint technique.
  • Pont Aberglasslyn's foreground autumnal colored tree feature. Evidence of past mat presentations can been seen outside the printed border lines.  www.historyrevisited.com.au

Antique Print, Landscape, Wales, Aberglasslyn, Fishing

£85.52

Product Description

Antique Print, Rural Landscape, Pont Aberglassslyn, Wales, Aquatint

Title: Pont Aberglasslyn

Description: Original hand colored Aquatint etched by William Pickett (flourished late 18th/early 19th century) from a drawing by "Miss Smirke" (Mary Smirke, 1779-1853).

A Welsh Mountain landscape scene, with a bridge in the middle distance spanning calm waters, The Bridge is one of many Bridges in Wales, attached to folklore connected to the Devil. The left foreshore features a red jacketed fishermen and two ground-seated friends, with an autumnal colored tree on a land-spit in the left foreground.

Published by R. Bowyer, 87 Pall Mall, London c.1805, one of 18 views of "Picturesque Landscapes of England and Wales"

Condition: Printed on on Wove paper. Slight paper shadow, evidence of previous mat boards. No foxing. Original hand coloring.

Size of image/plate mark = 31.2cm x 23.5cm (121/2 x 91/3 inch)

Mary Smirke

The Royal Academy lists Miss Smirke as a British landscape painter & print-maker. She exhibited in the Royal Academy from 1809-18. She collaborated with Joseph Farrington (1747-1821) and employed as a copyist by Nathaniel Dance-Holland and SirThomas Lawrence. She translated "Don Quixote" by Miguel De Cervantes, which was published in 1818 with engravings after her father, Robert Smirke. (Judy Egerton, 'An Artist of Little Leisure: Mary Smirke, 1779- 1853', Country Life, 20 November 1969)

Pont Aberglasslyn

Situated in the parish of Nantmor landowners had benefited significantly from the land reclamation made possible by the construction of a sea wall. Known as the Cob, it was built by William Maddocks at Porthmadog in 1810. The Cob, across the Traeth Mawr estuary, is illustrated here. The Glasslyn estuary was tidal as far as Pont Aberglasslyn and the fisherman's path through the pass was used as a route to the coast. It gradually fell out of use and through erosion by the river, became impassable. This was resolved with the Cob, but then there is the local folklore, the Devil and a magician named Robin Ddu...

 

 

Other Details

Antique Print:
Aquatint
Landscape:
Rural
United Kingdom:
Wales
William Pickett:
Mary Smirke

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