John Frederick Lewis (British, 1804-1876)
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John Frederick Lewis (British, 1804-1876)

Two women in an interior, Cairo

細節
John Frederick Lewis (British, 1804-1876)
Two women in an interior, Cairo
pencil, black chalk, watercolour and bodycolour on paper
13¼ x 10 5/8 in. (33.7 x 27 cm.)
來源
with Maas Gallery, London, by 1971.
with Spink & Son Ltd., London, by 1979.
with Hartnoll and Eyre, London.
出版
Connoisseur Magazine, April 1979, p. 72 (illustrated).
展覽
Newcastle Upon Tyne, The Laing Art Gallery, John Frederick Lewis, 25 September- 6 November 1971, no. 54.
London, Spink & Son Ltd., Annual Exhibition of English Watercolour drawings, 1979.
注意事項
VAT rate of 5% is payable on hammer price and at 20% on the buyer's premium.

榮譽呈獻

Alexandra McMorrow
Alexandra McMorrow

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拍品專文

The two women in this wonderfully energetic, light-filled and in parts highly wrought sketch, seem to be responding to an interlocutor outside the picture space. The foremost girl with pale skin and sweetly innocent expression, watches intently, while her dusky companion reacts with more knowing reserve, looking inwards rather than outwards. The event or person eliciting these responses remains unknown, as the sketch is not directly related to any extant finished work by Lewis, although there are points of contact with several of the interiors with opulently dressed women for which he is so highly regarded. The two women's expressions find echoes in the best known of Lewis's harem scenes, The Hhareem (1850, Corporate Collection, Japan), while their position in relation to each other within a window embrasure with its mushrabiyya framework is similar to that seen in a much later oil, The Harem (Birmingham Museums & Art Gallery, 1949, p. 14). The deliberate contrast that Lewis sets up between the expressions and skin tones of the two protagonists is reprised more starkly in the racial differences between mistress and attendant in The Arab Scribe, Cairo (1852, Private Collection). It is hard to judge whether this intriguing sketch was made while the artist was living in Cairo, 1841-50, or whether it is a compositional study made in his Walton-on-Thames studio, but in either case it seems clear that the two unveiled women, the one an English rose in appearance, the other a more reticent Egyptian, are models posing at the artist's request.

We would like to thank Briony Llewellyn for her assistance in cataloguing this lot.

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