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Niklaus Pfyffer (1836-1908)

View of Lake Lucerne c.1868

Oil on canvas board | 27.5 x 33.5 cm (sight) | RCIN 407876

  • Niklaus Pfyffer (1836-1908) was born in Lucerne, Switzerland, and trained in Geneva under Jakob Joseph Zelger and Alexander Calame, and under Schirmer in Karlsruhe. He also worked in Düsseldorf. The Royal Collection has seven landscapes by Pfyffer, dating from between 1868 to 1885 (RCIN 407500, 407875-407879, 403741). 

    This is a view across Lake Lucerne, to snow-capped mountains; two figures walk along a path which cuts through the sloping high ground of grass and scrub in the foreground, from the lower left into the distance. This is probably one of two views ordered from the artist, by R Löhlein on behalf of Queen Victoria. They were to show a view from the Queen's quarters at the Pension Wallis in Lucerne, where she had stayed in 1868. On 9th August 1869, Löhlein wrote to the artist to confirm delivery, and to complain that the view is too much to the right side; he requests another painting, with a view from the same room, more to the left.

    Queen Victoria's fourth daughter, Princess Louise, painted two watercolour views of Lake Lucerne, during her stay at Pension Wallis in 1868; RCIN 980709, 980725.
    Provenance

    Presumably the painting ordered from the artist on behalf of Queen Victoria, 8 July 1869, and delivered to Osborne on or before 9th August; recorded hanging in the Queen's Dressing Room (Room no 213) at Windsor Castle in 1878

  • Medium and techniques

    Oil on canvas board

    Measurements

    27.5 x 33.5 cm (sight)

    28.3 x 35.0 cm (frame, rebate)

    37.5 x 44.0 x 3.7 cm (frame, external)

  • Alternative title(s)

    Von Achsenstein gegen den Urirothstock