Study for 'Lost Masterpiece' rediscovered
John Frederick Lewis R.A P.O.W.S 1805-76


Study for 'Lord Ponsonby's horses held by Grooms at Stamboul' Dated 1841


Black chalk, watercolour and bodycolour on buff paper


Provenance: J.F Lewis Studio Sale, Christies, 1909


Property of a Lady


Sotheby Parke Bernet 1980


Private Collection

This exquisite little study by Britain's most accomplished Orientalist is a study for Lewis' lost masterpiece - 'Arab Horses and their Seises, Constantinople' - that was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1870 but subsequently disappeared. The sketch is an exciting rediscovery in itself, having been unseen at auction for many years and was only rediscovered and acquired at a provincial auction, where it was catalogued merely as ' a 19th C School watercolour'.

The study dates from 1841 and depicts a pair of horses and their liveried grooms in the employ of Lord Ponsonby, Britain's then ambassador to Constantinople. It dates from the most interesting and fruitful portion of Lewis' career, when he had just begun a process of immersion in the culture of the Middle East that eventually resulted in him disappearing without trace for a decade in Egypt. This work is of particular interest not just because of the fascinating glimpse it offers of a lost masterpiece but also for the way it combines Lewis' superb animal and human portraiture with his eye for colour, costume and atmosphere - the twin attributes that make the artist such an enduring feature of nineteenth century art.

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