GEORGE PRICE BOYCE RWS (1826-1897)
Biography
PRE-RAPHAELITE (founded 1848)
Biography
Newcastle from the Rabbit Banks, Gateshead on Tyne (England, 1864)

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Watercolour on paper
Signed and dated 1864.5
Dimensions
22.00cm high
55.00cm wide
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Provenance
J Lowthian Bell
Literature
Athenaeum, 1865, page 594
Exhibition History
London, Society of Painters in Watercolours, 1865, number 128
London, Grosvenor Gallery, Winter Exhibition of Drawings by the Old Masters and Watercolour Drawings by Artists of the British School, 1878-9
Description / Expertise
The present view of Newcastle was painted by G P Boyce during a visit to the north east of England in the late summer of 1864. It seems that he had been encouraged to paint the industrialized landscapes around Newcastle by the ironmaster, Isaac Lowthian Bell, who is recorded as having called on Boyce to buy three watercolours earlier in the same year. Two principal watercolours seem to have derived from Boyce's stay in the north Windmill Hills, Gateshead (Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle-upon-Tyne) and the present picture. Each shows a distant view of Newcastle itself, with the familiar landmark of the open lantern of St Nicholas' Church, northwards across the unseen River Tyne, from Gateshead. It is not possible to identify Boyce's precise vantage point in the present drawing, as the area has been built over; however, it is likely that the Rabbit Banks on the drawing's title were somewhere close to the parish of Bensham.
Newcastle from the Rabbit Banks, Gateshead on Tyne may be identified as the 1865 Old Water-Colour Society exhibit on the basis of a description of that drawing in the Athenaeum:
A distant view of a manufacturing town (which) interests us in its million lives and fortunes; its subtle colouring seems pathetic, and a glowing sky looks full of prophecy.