Jonathan Skelton (London c.1735-1759 Rome)
Jonathan Skelton (London c.1735-1759 Rome)

The Ponte Molle in the Campagna, Northern Rome (recto) and (verso)

Details
Jonathan Skelton (London c.1735-1759 Rome)
The Ponte Molle in the Campagna, Northern Rome (recto) and (verso)
inscribed 'Il Ponte Mole due Mighe da Roma, from la Porta del' Popolo' (on the reverse)
pencil, pen and black ink and grey, ochre and yellow wash, fragmentary watermark, on paper
10½ x 14¾ in. (26.7 x 37.5 cm.)
Exhibited
London, W/S Fine Art, Summer 2005, no. 1.

Brought to you by

Harriet West
Harriet West

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

In December 1758 Skelton wrote from Rome, 'I have lately almost finish'd two Pictures, one is a Composition of a part of Tivoli; and the other (the principal part of the Picture) is the Bridge called the Ponte Mole. I have pleased my self pretty well in them' (ed. B. Ford, 'The Letters of Jonathan Skelton ', Walpole Society, XXXVI, 1960, p. 66). These pictures, which evidently took time to complete, must have been oils. Another Ponte Molle drawing, a larger and slightly different version of the present composition, is in the collection of the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford (dated 10 April 1758).

Skelton was one of the earliest English landscape artists to work in Italy. He had left home in September 1757 and was in Rome from the end of 1757 until his sudden death there on 19 January 1759 (J. Ingamells, Dictionary of British and Irish Travellers in Italy 1701-1800, 1997, pp. 860-61). After his death his pictures were shipped back to England and most were lost to view until the reappearance of many of them at the sale of T.C. Blofeld of Hoveton Hall, Norfolk in 1909.

More from Andrew Wyld: Connoisseur Dealer

View All
View All