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Kenilworth

Maker (British, 1819-1900)
ClassificationsDRAWINGS
Daten.d.
Mediumwatercolor and graphite pencil on wove paper
Dimensions12 1/4 x 8 5/8 in. (31.1 x 21.9 cm.)
Credit LineThe Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens. Gilbert Davis Collection
Label TextThe most prominent art critic of the Victorian era, Ruskin advocated art based on a steadfast and direct observation of nature. He praised Gothic architecture and what he imagined was the independent spirit of the medieval craftsman. His ideas inspired a generation of British artists from the Pre-Raphaelites to William Morris. Ruskin was also a prolific and accomplished draftsman, as this ink and wash drawing attests. Its subject, the ruin of Kenilworth Castle, combines his insistence on direct observation with his love of the Gothic. The close viewpoint, looking up and through the ruined structure, focuses on the crumbling tracery of the windows and the twining overgrowth (2022).
Status
Not on view
Object number59.55.1138
Terms
    Geneva from the Rhone
    John Ruskin
    n.d.
    Object number: 59.55.1137
    Lombardy Architecture
    John Ruskin
    n.d.
    Object number: 59.55.1139
    Kenilworth
    Elizabeth Lee
    n.d.
    Object number: 75.7
    Study for Northwest Passage
    John Everett Millais
    1874
    Object number: 77.34
    Seaweed
    John Henry Dearle
    ca. 1900
    Object number: 2000.5.4
    The Door of a Cafe at Cairo
    John Frederick Lewis
    1866
    Object number: 59.55.860
    Hadleigh Church and Parsonage
    John Constable
    1803
    Object number: 59.55.266
    Near Borrowdale
    John Constable
    ca. 1806
    Object number: 59.55.246
    Seated Lady, Madame Loeser
    John Brett
    1863-11-13
    Object number: 89.39
    East Bergholt Church and Village
    John Constable
    ca. 1817
    Object number: 59.55.260
    Enchanted Castle
    John Martin
    1852
    Object number: 59.55.897
    The Open Sea
    John Brett
    1865
    Object number: 2018.8