Laughed at for wearing gloves…

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[1][A View on the Thames, near London Bridge]; A View of the Thames near Westminster Bridge.

[2][Une Vüe Sur la Tamise, prés le Pont de Londres]; Une Vue sur la Tamiser, près le Pont de Westminster.

JUKES, F[rancis], after CLEVELY, J[ohn]
London,
[Mr Acret, Wardour Street,
1786].
Two lithographs, one with original hand colour.
Image: each 340 by 505mm (13.5 by 20 inches). Sheet: [1] 460 by 606mm (18 by 23.75 inches). [2] 431 by 591mm (17 by 23.25).
12366

To scale:

notes:

notes:

Two views on the river.

John Cleveley the Younger (1747-1786) came from a family of marine painters. Originally a caulker like his father, Clevely turned to painting after his fellow workers laughed at him for wearing gloves (Ayres). He developed his maritime experience under rather unusual circumstances. He acted as draughtsman to Sir Joseph Bank's expedition to Iceland in 1772 and also to Constantine, 2nd Baron Mulgrave on his expedition to the North Pole the f...

bibliography:

bibliography:

James Ayres, Art, Artisans and Apprentices: Apprentice Painters & Sculptors in the Early Modern British Tradition (Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2014), p.236; BL Maps K.Top.27.42; BL Maps K.Top.27.43.

provenance:

provenance: