About this artwork
This drawing shows how rural northern Edinburgh looked just before the building of its New Town in the late eighteenth century. The drawing dates from after the building of Gayfield House in 1765, which is the Dutch-gabled building on the extreme right. Small figures, possibly farm workers, make their way along the road in the foreground. They are only lightly suggested with dabs of wash. Echoing their presence is a flotilla of boats in the Firth of Forth, voyaging out to sea. Clerk rendered greater detail in these distant ships than in the foreground figures, reflecting his own interests in the sea, and the navy in particular. At this time, merchant ships were often accompanied by naval vessels for protection. In Clerk's convoy, the larger tall ship may be serving this purpose.
Updated before 2020
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artist:John Clerk of EldinScottish (1728 - 1812)
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title:Picardy Village, Gayfield House and the Firth of Forth, Edinburgh
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date created:Late 1760s
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materials:Pen, black ink and grey-wash on paper
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measurements:15.00 x 26.60 cm
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object type:
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credit line:Purchased 1948
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accession number:D 4384
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gallery:
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subject:
John Clerk of Eldin
John Clerk of Eldin
Clerk was an exceptional amateur artist. His wealthy background afforded him the luxury of entertaining numerous careers, including medicine and business, and he also showed a considerable interest in geology. In the 1740s he began sketching alongside his brother-in-law, Robert Adam, and the artist...