SAMUEL HOWITT (LONDON 1755-1822)
SAMUEL HOWITT (LONDON 1755-1822)
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Property of a Gentleman
SAMUEL HOWITT (LONDON 1755-1822)

A roadside inn

Details
SAMUEL HOWITT (LONDON 1755-1822)
A roadside inn
pencil, pen and grey ink and watercolour on paper watermarked with a Strasbourg lily
10 x 14 3/4 in. (25.4 x 37.5 cm.)
Provenance
with Spink, London, where purchased by
Roger Makins, 1st Baron Sherfield (1904-1996) and
by descent to the present owner.

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Lot Essay

Howitt is best known as a producer of sporting pictures and engravings, but he was the brother-in-law of Thomas Rowlandson, and also made drawings in a caricature style similar to Rowlandson's. He visited the Isle of Wight with Rowlandson in the 1790s, and it is possible that this drawing dates from that trip. The pub sign reads 'SAMSCOREUP', seemingly a pun on the artists name.
Roger Makins was a British Diplomat who was Ambassador to the United States (1953-6). As a collector he is best known for his Collection of Pre-Raphaelite Art but he also put together a fine collection of Early British Drawings, the majority purchased from the prestigious London dealers Agnew’s and Spink.

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