|
Date: |
|
Description: | The cramped ship-board service has provided this opportunity for close observation and detail. The service takes place on the gun deck above that of BHC1118, with daylight visible through the hatches. A capstan runs vertically through the centre of the image, and the companion ladder is empty. There is a clear division between the Navy to the left and marines to the right. An admiral, wearing a pig-tail, looks at a book at a table covered with a flag, sitting on a chair draped with the union flag. In front of him a midshipman possibly reads a lesson from the Bible, attended to in varying degrees by the assembly. There are five figures behind the Admiral's table. A naval officer far left a hand in his pocket, turns away from the assembly and his smile invites the viewer to question the content of his book. Behind him a fellow officer, feet resting on a cannon, appears to sleep. To his right, a marine colonel catches the eye of another marine officer standing on the far right, and at his feet a small midshipman sits on a stool holding one bible while another lies unopened on the deck.
In the foreground to the right, a naval officer appears to be asleep, with an open picture book resting on his lap, and a hat lies discarded nearby. Other naval officers are seated facing the admiral apparently in various attitudes of boredom and, in the background, one sailor seems to have been chastised for inattention by a naval officer bearing a stick. On the right, none of the seated marines, with attitudes varying from attending to yawning, holds a book. One woman, her arms folded, is portrayed in the front row. A military drum is suspended above the marines' heads. The impression of cramped space is accentuated by the sick man in the cradle, his head propped in his hand as he reads from the open book, immediately above the marines. A figure visible only by the top of his head may be a prisoner. Various objects hang from the bulkheads and beams, baskets of cannon balls, axes, a slate, hourglass, lantern and key. The two parrots are enclosed in their cage and underscore the sailors' and marines' enforced predicament and duty, since religion played little part in a seaman's life. Exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1837, it forms a companion piece to BHC1118.
The artist used his numerous watercolour sketches made on board HMS 'Hyperion', during a voyage to Rio de Janeiro in 1820, and his later journey in the 'Beagle' with Darwin as official artist. Some of the figures may be portraits observed on those voyages.
caption: Divine Service as it is Usually Performed on Board a British Frigate at Sea | Publisher: | "http://collections.rmg.co.uk/" | Rights holder: | "Royal Museums Greenwich" | Subjects: | Nelson's Navy Nelson Naval life and practice The National Maritime Museum - The Collections paintings | Source: | Royal Museums Greenwich | Identifier: | http://collections.rmg.co.uk/collections... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
-
-
Bible
; Date(s): circa 1275 -…
-
-
bible
Saved by Elizabeth Horn from…
-
-
-
-
-
|