C1814

Eclipse Isles: taken Dec. 8.1801 at six p.m. [Albany]

Rare coastal profile of Eclipse Island, which is just south of Albany, by William Westall, artist on board Matthew Flinders seminal survey of the Australia on the Investigator. Flinders arrived at the island on Dec.8.1801. The wind blew fresh at this … Read Full Description

Sold

S/N: FAVTTA-CP-WC-0173–195365
(C097)
Free Shipping

Within Australia

All orders ship free
within Australia

Rest of the World

Orders over A$300
ship free worldwide

See Shipping page for Terms & Conditions

Details

Full Title:

Eclipse Isles: taken Dec. 8.1801 at six p.m. [Albany]

Date:

C1814

Condition:

In good condition.

Technique:

Hand coloured engraving.

Image Size: 

450mm 
x 80mm
AUTHENTICITY
Eclipse Isles: taken Dec. 8.1801 at six p.m. [Albany] - Antique View from 1814

Genuine antique
dated:

1814

Description:

Rare coastal profile of Eclipse Island, which is just south of Albany, by William Westall, artist on board Matthew Flinders seminal survey of the Australia on the Investigator.

Flinders arrived at the island on Dec.8.1801. The wind blew fresh at this time, and a current of more than one mile an hour ran with us, so that, by carrying all sail I hoped to get sight of King George’s Sound before dark. At seven we passed close on the south side of the Eclipse Isles; but Bald Head at the entrance of the sound had so different an appearance from what I had been led to expect, being a slope in this point of view, that the steep east end of Break-sea Island was at first taken for it. The error was fortunately perceived in time; and at eight o’clock we hauled up round the head, with the wind at west, and made a stretch into the sound. It was then dark; but the night being fine, I did not hesitate to work up by the guidance of captain Vancouver’s chart; and having reached nearly into a line between Seal Island and the first beach round Bald Head, we anchored at eleven o’clock in 8 fathoms, sandy bottom.

From of Flinders hydrographic atlas, A voyage to Terra Australis…, sheet XVII, London : G. and W. Nicol, 1814.

Full title of the atlas; A Voyage to Terra Australis, undertaken for the purpose of completing the discovery of that vast country, and prosecuted in the years 1801, 1802, and 1803, in His Majesty’s Ship The Investigator and subsequently in the armed vessel Porpoise and Cumberland schooner. 

William Westall (1781 - 1850)

Westall was a landscape artist born at Hertford, England. He was taught to draw by his elder half-brother Richard (1765-1836), a water-colour painter, Royal Academician and painting teacher to Princess Victoria. In 1799 he was admitted to the Royal Academy School, where he was studying when at 19 he was appointed landscape artist with Matthew Flinders' Investigator expedition to Australia, at a salary of 300 guineas. During the voyage he made a large number of pencil-and-wash landscapes in places visited by the Investigator and a series of coast profiles in pencil. When the Porpoise ran aground on Wreck Reef his sketches were 'wetted and partly destroyed' and, while Westall travelled in China, the drawings, regarded as part of the official record of the voyage, were taken by Lieutenant Robert Fowler to England. There, at the suggestion of Sir Joseph Banks, they were handed to Richard Westall to be 'restored to a proper state'. After spending some time in China and India Westall returned to London in February 1805 and sought access to the sketches to paint a picture for exhibition at the Royal Academy and showed a View of the Bay of Pines at the academy later in the year. In the summer of 1805 Westall went to Madeira and twelve months later to Jamaica. After returning to England he painted a series of water-colour views of the places he had visited and these were shown in a Brook Street gallery and at the Associated Artists' exhibition in 1808. Later he received commissions from the Admiralty to paint nine pictures to illustrate Flinders' A Voyage to Terra Australis … (1814), and was engaged by several London publishers to paint water-colours to be reproduced as aquatints.  

View other items by William Westall

Choose currency

Exchange rates are only indicative. All orders will be processed in Australian dollars. The actual amount charged may vary depending on the exchange rate and conversion fees applied by your credit card issuer.

Login

Register

The List

Join our exclusive mailing list for first access to new acquisitions and special offers.