'30 Dec. (12)'

This watercolour by Edward Lear, executed on 30 December 1853, shows the barren banks of the Nile with three gyassis, two of which are heavily laden with straw. Figures and animals can be seen in the background against the low sunlight.

By the time of his second visit to Egypt, Lear had developed his individual style, which, despite its sense of detailed observation, mostly emphasizes sensitive colouring and rather swooping pencil lines. Lear tended to scribble notes onto the image clearly marking them as sketches, including descriptive comments on staffage figures or vegetation, but also on colour hues.

This view is constructed in a narrow horizontal format emphasising the flatness of the terrain and its colours are restricted to yellows, ochres, oranges and browns. Lear does not specify the exact location. The scene appears to be taken from aboard ship while travelling along in the middle of the stream.

Although Lear worked in the tradition of British topographical art, his drawings leave behind its documentary attitude, which recorded landscape and geographical features for the benefit of their antiquarian and natural historical associations. If, as in the case of his Egyptian images, the past is alluded to, Lear conveys it with a mysterious and exotic character, rather than attempting to re-establish the historical and particularly biblical topography which had drawn other travellers to the Near and Middle East. It is mostly the luminous colours in their own right which are intended to trigger poetical sentiment in the beholder and characterize the scene as picturesque.

In the watercolour the vessel signifies present life and activity, but with the beginnings of modern tourism in the region the artist’s emphasis on its traditional build also conveys the romanticized impression of timelessness, equating the ‘exotic’ and ‘oriental’ present with the distant past.

Object Details

ID: PAD9111
Collection: Fine art
Type: Drawing
Display location: Not on display
Creator: Lear, Edward
Date made: 30 December 1853; 30 Dec 1854
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Measurements: Mount: 49 mm x 189 mm