Study for "The Peep-O’-Day Boys’ Cabin, in the West of Ireland" ("The Sleeping Whiteboy")

Description

One of the greatest draftsmen of the British school, Sir David Wilkie painted slowly but drew prolifically, making studies upon which he relied to spur his imagination and compose his paintings. In this study for a painting exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1836, the artist worked out the details of a domestic interior. Here he depicted the corner of a cabin in Ireland where wool was processed: a pair of carders used to disentangle textile fibers and a spinning wheel rest upon a rough-hewn bench, and a swath of hand-dyed red cloth is flung over a ladder rung.

Provenance

Dr. Daniel A. Huebsch, Cleveland, OH (?-?); Robert Hays Gries, Cleveland, OH, given to the Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (?-1941); Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (1941-)

Study for "The Peep-O’-Day Boys’ Cabin, in the West of Ireland" ("The Sleeping Whiteboy")

David Wilkie

1835

Accession Number

1941.606

Medium

watercolor, point of brush, and gouache with graphite and brown ink

Dimensions

Sheet: 23.4 x 21.9 cm (9 3/16 x 8 5/8 in.)

Classification

Drawing

Museum

The Cleveland Museum of Art

Cleveland, United States

Credit Line

Gift of Robert Hays Gries