C1777

Les Isles de Glace, Vues le 9 Janvier 1773.

Famous engraved view of Cook’s ship and his men breaking ice in Antarctica on the 9th January, 1773. Cook had left Cape Town on 22 November 1772 and headed for the area of the South Atlantic where the French navigator … Read Full Description

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Details

Full Title:

Les Isles de Glace, Vues le 9 Janvier 1773.

Date:

C1777

Condition:

In good condition, with centre fold as issued.

Technique:

Hand coloured copper engraving.

Image Size: 

353mm 
x 207mm

Paper Size: 

385mm 
x 252mm
AUTHENTICITY
Les Isles de Glace, Vues le 9 Janvier 1773. - Antique View from 1777

Genuine antique
dated:

1777

Description:

Famous engraved view of Cook’s ship and his men breaking ice in Antarctica on the 9th January, 1773.

Cook had left Cape Town on 22 November 1772 and headed for the area of the South Atlantic where the French navigator Bouvet claimed to have spotted land that he named Cape Circumcision. Shortly after leaving they experienced severe cold weather and early on 23 November 1772 the crew were issued with fearnaught jackets and trousers at the expense of the government. By early December they were sailing in thick fog and seeing ‘ice islands’. Cook had not found the island that Bouvet claimed to be in latitude 54°. Pack ice soon surrounded the ships but in the second week in January, in the southern mid-summer, the weather abated and Cook was able to take the ships southwards through the ice.

Cook records his men getting ice, ‘we hoisted out three Boats and took up  as much as yielded about 15 Tons of Fresh Water, the Adventure at the same time got about 8 or 9 and all this was done in 5 or 6 hours time; the pieces we took up  and which broke from the Main Island, were very hard and solid, some of them too large to be handled so that we were obliged to break them with our Ice Axes before they could be taken into the Boats’ ,|Cook, Journals II, 74.

Cook to reached the Antarctic Circle on 17 January. The next day, being severely impeded by the ice, they changed course and headed away to the north-east, after having reached 67°15’s.

References;
Beddie 1381-33,
Joppien 2.6A, ill.p.138, ill. pl.15, p.18

From Hawkesworth, Relation des Voyages Entrepris par ordre de Sa Majeste Britannique Actuallement Regnante. Paris

William Hodges (1744 - 1797)

William Hodges was born in London, the only son of Ann and Charles Hodges, a blacksmith of St. James's Market London. They encouraged their son's talent for drawing and placed him in William Shipley's drawing school at Castle Court in the Strand. Joining Richard Wilson as an apprentice in 1758, he was required to assist his master 'in dead colouring and the forwarding of pictures'. A short period of study under Wilson and Cipriani at the Duke of Richmond's Gallery developed his style for classical composition. He was appointed artist on the Resolution and left Plymouth on 13 July 1772 and returned on 29 July 1775.

View other items by William Hodges

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