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1 of 253523 objects
Evening at Balmoral Castle dated 1854
Watercolour, bodycolour and scraping out | 76.5 x 133.3 cm (sight) | RCIN 451255
Carl Haag (1820-1915)
Evening at Balmoral Castle: The Stags brought Home dated 1854
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A large watercolour depicting a torchlit scene at the entrance to Balmoral Castle, with Queen Victoria, the Duchess of Kent, children and several courtiers in the doorway receiving stags pointed out by Prince Albert. With rounded upper corners, and signed and dated bottom left: Carl Haag 1854.
In this companion to Morning in the Highlands (RCIN 451257), Prince Albert displays the stags hunted during the day. The gillie John Brown stands in the foreground holding a torch with, to the left, Prince Albert, the Earl of Aberdeen and Sir Charles Phipps. The Queen and the Prince of Wales are at the centre.
Morning was commissioned by Prince Albert from Haag in 1853 as a Christmas present for Queen Victoria. At the same time Haag also worked on this watercolour, which was a commission from the Queen as a present for her spouse for his birthday the following year. The studies Haag made for these works, as well as other Scottish scenes, were probably also acquired by the royal couple, and were originally kept in a portfolio lettered with the title 'Original Studies from Nature in the Highlands'.
Carl Haag was born in Bavaria and visited London in 1847 to learn more about English watercolour painting technique, studying at the Royal Academy Schools the following year and settling in England. On a sketching trip in the Tyrol in 1852 he had a chance encounter with Charles, Prince of Leiningen (Queen Victoria’s half-brother) and Ernest II, Duke of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha (Prince Albert’s brother), who jointly commissioned Haag to paint them in an Alpine setting as a Christmas present for Queen Victoria (see RCIN 917108). Victoria and Albert, impressed with the double portrait, then invited the artist to their residence in the Scottish Highlands, Balmoral Castle, the following autumn, to paint scenes of their lives there. His association with the British court endured for a time after Albert's death in 1861, and there is a significant corpus of watercolours by him in the Royal Collection (including several Egyptian subjects, as Haag spent two years in Egypt and the Near East in 1858-60 and travelled again to Egypt 1873-4).
Text adapted from Victoria & Albert: Art & Love, London, 2010.Provenance
Given to Prince Albert by Queen Victoria on his birthday, 26th August 1854 [Victoria & Albert: Art & Love, London, 2010, pg 460]
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Creator(s)
Acquirer(s)
Subject(s)
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Medium and techniques
Watercolour, bodycolour and scraping out
Measurements
76.5 x 133.3 cm (sight)
111.9 x 168.4 cm (frame) (frame, external)
Other number(s)
RL 22033Alternative title(s)
Evening at Balmoral Castle: The Stags brought Home