File:'Nelson in The Victory's cockpit, Mortally Wounded October 21st 1805' RMG PU4008.tiff

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Summary

Author
Richard Golding; Thomas Cadell and William Davies; after Benjamin West
Description
English: 'Nelson in The Victory's cockpit, Mortally Wounded October 21st 1805'

A print taken from the 1808 painting by West, ‘The Death of Lord Nelson in the Cockpit of the Ship “Victory” ’ (BHC0566), showing the scene in the cockpit during the Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805. It was commissioned by John McArthur as a plate for the biography he wrote with James Stanier Clarke, ‘The Life of Admiral Lord Nelson, KB’, 1809 and was engraved by Richard Goulding.

The narrative combines portraiture of the principal figures and the conventions of history painting to show Nelson’s dying moments. Draped in a white sheet he is shown in profile and lies propped on pillows on the right of the picture, left side visible. His shirt is ripped open. The emphasis on Nelson’s pallor evokes neo-classical funerary statuary. Figures are arranged around the death scene. On the right Walter Burke, the purser, is seated in the foreground in left profile, supporting Nelson’s pillows. Behind Nelson, in left profile, the head and shoulders of Dr William Beatty, the senior surgeon on board the ‘Victory’, are visible with his right hand holding a handkerchief around the wound. His assistant surgeon, Neil Smith, is shown full-face beside him to the left, straining forward to hear Nelson’s dying words. Beyond is Dr Alexander Scott, the chaplain, leaning over Nelson to support his head. Shown in right profile bending forward in front of Nelson, and holding his left hand, is the ‘Victory’s’ captain, Captain Hardy.

Standing to the left against the bulkhead and shown nearly full-face, is William Chevailler, Nelson’s steward, holding his master’s coat and breeches. To the left of him, right profile, (in a red coat) is Gaetano Spedillo, Nelson’s valet. They are both facing towards Nelson. In the left foreground is a stanchion with two lanterns, which provide the only light on the scene. The light from the lanterns illuminates Nelson and highlights the clothing of the onlookers. Standing in the shadows, William Bunce, the carpenter, leans against the pillar, in right-side view with his left arm around it. He holds a hammer in his right hand with a bundle of plugs and oakum suspended from his shoulder. The carpenter’s mate is shown in the foreground next to him, stepping over a coil of cables with his back to the viewer. Beyond them, in the left background, a wounded midshipman is carried below deck by two sailors.

Produced several years after the event, the image concentrates on the human response of the men involved in this important event in the life of the nation. The drama draws on the narrative of Renaissance religious imagery to evoke a pieta, or lamentation over Christ’s body removed from the Cross. The artist invites such comparison, for example, by showing blood on Nelson and replacing the base of the Cross with the stanchion, which suggests it. West has thus incorporated portraiture with the imagery of Renaissance religious painting. Nelson is bathed in a golden light in contrast with the gloom of the rest of the enclosed, below-deck scene, intentionally framed by the curve of the bulkhead and the swathe of curtain, top right. It intentionally concentrates on the tragedy of the moment to evoke a response from the viewer.

West gained great popular acclaim in 1806 with his large painting the ‘Death of Lord Nelson’ 1806. In this he represented it as an ‘epic composition’ on the quarter-deck of the ‘Victory’, rejecting the realism of showing it in ‘the gloomy hold of a ship’ and criticizing Arthur Devis for doing so in his version, then in progress.

'Nelson in The Victory's cockpit, Mortally Wounded October 21st 1805'
Date 1809
date QS:P571,+1809-00-00T00:00:00Z/9
Dimensions 330 mm x 270 mm
Notes Box Title: Walter Miscellaneous.
Source/Photographer http://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections/objects/108159
Permission
(Reusing this file)

The original artefact or artwork has been assessed as public domain by age, and faithful reproductions of the two dimensional work are also public domain. No permission is required for reuse for any purpose.

The text of this image record has been derived from the Royal Museums Greenwich catalogue and image metadata. Individual data and facts such as date, author and title are not copyrightable, but reuse of longer descriptive text from the catalogue may not be considered fair use. Reuse of the text must be attributed to the "National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London" and a Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-SA-3.0 license may apply if not rewritten. Refer to Royal Museums Greenwich copyright.
Identifier
InfoField
Unidentified Prints & Drawings Number: 85
id number: PAD4008
Collection
InfoField
Fine art

Licensing

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This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published (or registered with the U.S. Copyright Office) before January 1, 1929.

The official position taken by the Wikimedia Foundation is that "faithful reproductions of two-dimensional public domain works of art are public domain".
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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current14:48, 18 September 2017Thumbnail for version as of 14:48, 18 September 20172,653 × 3,800 (28.84 MB)Royal Museums Greenwich Fine art (1809), http://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections/objects/108159 #1962
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