WILLIAM TURNER OF OXFORD, O.W.S. (BLACKBOURTON, OXFORDSHIRE 1789-1862 OXFORD)
WILLIAM TURNER OF OXFORD, O.W.S. (BLACKBOURTON, OXFORDSHIRE 1789-1862 OXFORD)
WILLIAM TURNER OF OXFORD, O.W.S. (BLACKBOURTON, OXFORDSHIRE 1789-1862 OXFORD)
WILLIAM TURNER OF OXFORD, O.W.S. (BLACKBOURTON, OXFORDSHIRE 1789-1862 OXFORD)
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WILLIAM TURNER OF OXFORD, O.W.S. (BLACKBOURTON, OXFORDSHIRE 1789-1862 OXFORD)

St. Giles', Oxford

Details
WILLIAM TURNER OF OXFORD, O.W.S. (BLACKBOURTON, OXFORDSHIRE 1789-1862 OXFORD)
St. Giles', Oxford
signed and inscribed 'W. Turner / Oxford' (lower right) and further signed, inscribed and numbered 'N.o 12. / W. Turner / Oxford' (on part of the old mount)
pencil and watercolour, heightened with touches of bodycolour, and with scratching out on paper
9 5⁄8 x 14 ½ in. (24.5 x 36.7 cm.)
Provenance
Elizabeth, Mrs Baker Morrell (neé Chapman) (1781-1861), and by descent to her grandson
Frederick Morrell; Knight, Frank & Rutley, Black Hall, Oxford, 28 April 1925, lot 311 (£25), where bought back by the family,
and by descent to the present owners.
Exhibited
Probably London, Old Watercolour Society, 1841, no. 127 (as 'Scene near St John's College, Oxford,as it appeared in the year 1812’).

Brought to you by

Lucy Speelman
Lucy Speelman Junior Specialist, Head of Day Sale

Lot Essay

Elizabeth Morrell, the first owner of this drawing, was the daughter of Joseph Chapman, then President of Trinity College, just off St Giles, and likely bought it for the familiarity of the view. Her grandson, Frederick Morrell, went on to become a noted collector of Turner of Oxford, and lived No. 1 St Giles, the last house on the left seen here, and then at Black Hall, at the north end of St Giles, after 1861.

Turner painted other versions of this view at different moments: one dated 1820 (Ashmolean Museum) shows the view shortly before the houses in front of St Mary Magdelene were demolished. In 1841, in the present drawing, he revisited it as the site had just been allocated for the Martyr's Memorial, on which work was completed in 1845.

We are grateful to Timothy Wilcox for his help in preparing this catalogue entry.

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