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1 of 253523 objects
George III's Procession to the Houses of Parliament 1762-64
Oil on canvas | 90.1 x 136.2 x 2.6 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external) | RCIN 402002
Attributed to John Wootton (c. 1682-1764)
George III's Procession to the Houses of Parliament 1762-64
Attributed to John Wootton (c. 1682-1764)
George III's Procession to the Houses of Parliament 1762-64
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George IV acquired this work as a Hogarth: it is typical of his interest in works recording earlier royal history and his enthusiasm for tradition of British art which began to emerge during the mid eighteenth century. The attribution to John Wootton remains conjectural.
Whoever is its author, this painting may be intended to celebrate the first outing in 1762 of the new state coach, designed by Sir William Chambers, decorated by Cipriani and still displayed in the Royal Mews. The King sits in the Gold State Coach drawn by eight horses to right with Yeoman of the Guard and Household Cavalry accompanying the coach as it emerges from South Lodge of Carlton House; Horse Guards visible in the distance to the right and spectators in the foreground and in St James's Park in the middle ground.Provenance
Purchased by George IV for 80 guineas as a Hogarth of George II in 1822; recorded as an addition to the Carlton House inventories dated 1816 (no 592) and 1819 (no 587); taken to the King's Lodge or Cumberland Lodge in 1824; in the Grand Corridor in Windsor Castle in 1858
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Creator(s)
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Medium and techniques
Oil on canvas
Measurements
90.1 x 136.2 x 2.6 cm (support, canvas/panel/stretcher external)
108.5 x 154.3 x 8.0 cm (frame, external)
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