WILLIAM LOCK THE YOUNGER (NORBURY 1767-1847 PARIS)
WILLIAM LOCK THE YOUNGER (NORBURY 1767-1847 PARIS)
WILLIAM LOCK THE YOUNGER (NORBURY 1767-1847 PARIS)
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WILLIAM LOCK THE YOUNGER (NORBURY 1767-1847 PARIS)
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WILLIAM LOCK THE YOUNGER (NORBURY 1767-1847 PARIS)

The Death of Cato; and Danae and her child Perseus

Details
WILLIAM LOCK THE YOUNGER (NORBURY 1767-1847 PARIS)
The Death of Cato; and Danae and her child Perseus
the first inscribed and dated ‘Paris. 9 Sept 1831 / Cato’ (upper left); the second inscribed ‘fm Simonides’ (lower centre) and further inscribed ‘Danae with her son Perseus exposed to the fury of the seas by her father to prevent the accomplishment of an Oracle which foretold that he shoud [sic] be slain by his Grandson. / Dan: O my Child! Thou regardest not the roaring of the winds, nor the dashing of the waves around thee; nor knowest thy Mothers griefs, else woudst [sic] thou bend thy tender / ears to her complaint, Sleep on sweet Babe! Sleep with him ye billows & my saviours!’ (on the artist’s original mount)
the first pencil, pen and brown ink, brown wash on laid paper; the second pencil, stump, pen and brown ink, brown and grey wash on paper
the first 18 7⁄8 x 25 1⁄8 in. (48 x 63.9 cm.); the second 17 x 18 ¾ in. (43.2 x 47.5 cm.)(2)
Provenance
The artist, and by descent to his daughter
Elizabeth, Lady Wallscourt (1806-1877), and by descent in the family until
with Daniel Shackleton, Edinburgh (Exhibition of Drawings by William Lock of Norbury 1767-1847, 1990, nos. 29 and 9).

Brought to you by

Lucy Speelman
Lucy Speelman Junior Specialist, Head of Day Sale

Lot Essay

The Death of Cato is a direct, somewhat confrontational rendering of the event. Cato’s suicide was a key moment in Roman history, which rapidly became legend, serving as a symbol of Republican freedom. Cato was an influential senator and staunch advocate for liberty. He fought Julius Caesar to maintain the Republic, and when he lost, Caesar declared himself emperor for life, and Cato committed suicide for his ideals. Here he is depicted sitting on a draped bed, the dagger held in his hands as he looks down at his wound. Lock uses short hatching and dramatic shadows to give the drawing an angular, somewhat uncomfortable quality.

In contrast, the sinuous, flowing line he employs in Danae and Perseus give a sense of romanticism and highlight the intimacy between mother and child. An oracle had prophesied that Danae’s father, King Acrisius, would be killed by his grandson, so he imprisoned his daughter. Zeus visited her, and she gave birth to Perseus. Acrisius, fearing the prophecy, cast the mother and son adrift in a chest at sea, but they were saved, and Perseus went on to rescue Andromeda and kill the gorgon Medusa. Here, Lock has depicted Danae and Perseus being cast adrift, in a shell-like vessel. Danae is so absorbed in her baby she appears oblivious to the towering waves around them, and exudes a sense of calm.

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