The Falconer
Browse information by: Location Makers General Information Classification Object Parts Object Condition History References Photographs | Author: Anthony McIntosh Copyright for Photograph: Creative Commons |
Location
Street: | Church Street / A283 |
Town: | Petworth |
Parish: | Petworth |
Council: | Chichester District Council |
County: | West Sussex |
Postcode: | GU28 |
Location on Google Map | |
Object setting: | Inside building |
Access is: | Public |
Location note: | Petworth House, The North Gallery, Square Bay |
In the AZ book: | West Sussex |
Page: | 61 |
Grid reference: | N9 |
The A-Z books used are A-Z East Sussex and A-Z West Sussex (Editions 1A 2005). Geographers' A-Z Map Company Ltd. Sevenoaks. | |
Previous location: | Petworth House, The North Gallery, Central Corridor (moved after c.1865) |
Previous location: | Petworth House, The Audit Room (moved 1992) |
back to top |
Makers
Name : | John Edward Carew |
Role: | Sculptor |
back to top |
General Information
Commissioned by: | George O’Brien Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont (1751-1837) |
Construction period: | 1827/8-9 |
Installation date: | 09/08/1827 |
Work is: | Extant |
Owner custodian: | The National Trust (Petworth House) |
Description: | A falconer, naked apart from a loincloth and belt. Perched on his outstretched left arm and hand is a falcon. The falconer looks toward and beyond the bird. In his right hand, he holds the neck of a dead swan. |
Iconographical description: | Unlike Carew’s other ideal statues, it apparently has no literary or mythological source; it may originally have been intended for the Duke of St Albans, Grand Falconer of England. |
Signatures: | Carved catalogue number on base '102'. |
back to top |
Classification
Categories: | Sculptural, Free Standing, Animal |
Object type1: | Statue |
Object type2: | Sculpture |
Subject type1: | Figurative |
Subject subtype1: | Standing |
back to top |
Object Parts
Part 1: | Circular pedestal |
Material: | Wood (faux red veined marble) |
Height (cm): | 105 |
Width (cm): | 80 |
Depth (cm): | 80 |
Part 2: | Statue |
Material: | White marble |
Height (cm): | 227 |
Width (cm): | 110 |
Depth (cm): | 75 |
back to top |
Object Condition
Condition 1 of type: | Structural |
Condition 1: | Broken or missing parts |
Condition 2: | Cracks, splits, breaks, holes |
More details: | Tip of swan’s beak missing and crack above the break. |
Date of on-site inspection: | 27/06/2008 |
back to top |
History
History: | The North Gallery is one of the very few top-lit sculpture and picture galleries to survive from the early nineteenth century. It was extensively restored in 1991-3. The South corridor is the earliest part of the gallery, which was built between 1754 and 1763 to house the major part of the 2nd. Earl’s collection of antiques statuary. The top-lit Central Corridor was added to the gallery by the 3rd. Earl in 1824-5. At the same time work began on the final extension to the gallery, the Square Bay and the whole was finished in October 1827. The works were supervised by Thomas Upton, the Petworth Clerk of Works, and executed by his building yard. Advice was sought from at least three artists; the painter Thomas Philips and the sculptors Sir Francis Chantrey and John Edward Carew. The galleries are presently painted a dark red, restored to this colour during the 1991-3 restorations. The galleries had been this colour in 1873. Red (with green, the most traditional colour for picture galleries) was felt by Ruskin to accentuate the contours of sculpture, and it was known to have been used in ancient Rome as a foil to sculpture. The present sculpture arrangement (devised in 1991-3) was designed to restore, as far as possible that conceived by the 3rd. Earl. It was taken from a unique ground plan of the 3rd. Earl’s statue deployment drawn up in 1835 by H.W. Philips. Apart from the Flaxman, the Square Bay has become a gallery of works by the Irish sculptor J.E. Carew, many of which were placed here in 1835
According to Carew’s own testimony, it was certainly completed before his move from London to Brighton in 1831, and was installed at Petworth in 1829. Unlike Carew’s other ideal statues, it apparently has no literary or mythological source; it may originally have been intended for the Duke of St Albans, Grand Falconer of England. In 1835 it stood at the west end of the Central Corridor, was moved to the Audit Room after c.1865, and returned to the North Gallery in 1992. |
back to top |
References
Source 1 : | |
Title: | 'Petworth House' |
Type: | Book |
Author: | Rowell, Christopher |
Publisher: | The National Trust. |
back to top |
Photographs
Author: Anthony McIntosh Copyright: Creative Commons | Author: Anthony McIntosh Copyright: Creative Commons |
Author: Anthony McIntosh Copyright: Creative Commons | Author: Anthony McIntosh Copyright: Creative Commons |
back to top |