- 185
Edward Lear
Description
- Edward Lear
- A distant view of the Citadel, Corfu
- Watercolour over pencil, heightened with touches of bodycolour and gum arabic;
signed lower right with the artist's monogram and inscribed: Corfu - 285 by 450 mm
Provenance
sale, London, Sotheby's, 15 November 1990, lot 129;
with Spink's, London;
John, Lord D'Ayton (1922-2003);
thence by decent to the present owners
Exhibited
London, Sotheby's, Edward Lear, An Exhibition of Works by Edward Lear from the D'Ayton International Collection, assembled by John D'Ayton, 2004, no. 10
Catalogue Note
During his first trip Lear only spent a few days on Corfu before he left to explore Zante, Cephalonia and Ithaca. However, despite the brevity of his stay, he developed a strong attachment to the island and, in December 1855, after his friend Franklin Lushington (1823-1901) was appointed Judge to the Supreme Court of Justice in the Ionian Islands, he took the opportunity to settle there. He made the island his home until 1863, when Prince William of Denmark accepted the throne and the majority of British residents left the island. He returned there only once more in 1877, but it was a place that never ceased to inspire him, for he believed 'no other spot on earth can be fuller of beauty & of variety of beauty.'2
1. V. Noakes, Edward Lear: The Life of a Wanderer, London 1968, p. 86
2. V. Noakes, op. cit., 1968, pp.195-6