William James Muller (1812-1845)
William James Muller, the Bristol painter, died prematurely aged 33 from heart disease, caused by poisoning from the white lead in his oil paints. To the end he continued to work: 'It is curious I have lost no vigour, no colour, can now [paint] easily as ever, and yet at times can hardly write a line'. He is best known for his watercolours of France, Italy, Greece, Egypt and Turkey where, in late 1843, he travelled through the Xanthus Valley. Despite the sometimes treacherous conditions, his expedition resulted in some of the finest travel records of any artist of the 1840s including lots 79, 80 and 81. Muller drew and painted in the open air, refusing to re-work any picture in the studio. He relished the use of a broad, wet brush, maintaining superb control of the medium. In his short career, he worked compulsively, once describing paint as 'oozing out of my fingers'.
William James Muller (1812-1845)

The entrance to the small temple at Medinet Habu, Luxor, Egypt (recto); and with subsidiary sketches (verso)

細節
William James Muller (1812-1845)
The entrance to the small temple at Medinet Habu, Luxor, Egypt (recto); and with subsidiary sketches (verso)
pencil and watercolour, on paper
12 x 17½ in. (30.5 x 44.5 cm.)
來源
with Colnaghi's, London.

榮譽呈獻

Antonia Vincent
Antonia Vincent

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拍品專文

The present watercolour depicts the entrance to a small Roman temple that is situated next to the great Mortuary Temple of Rameses III at Medinet Habu on the West Bank at Luxor in Egypt.