-
1 of 253523 objects
A parade shield c. 1827-33
Pencil, watercolour, pen and ink | 25.0 x 22.5 cm (sheet of paper) (sheet of paper) | RCIN 934917

Office of Augustus Charles Pugin (1762–1832)
A parade shield c. 1827-33
-
A watercolour showing a detailed view of a parade shield, after RCIN 62978. The shield has been split into loose quarters using brief pencil lines and only the bottom quarter has been filled in with the intricate embossed details which decorate the shield. Loose figures can be seen in between two posts on either side of the quarter. The shield is shown mounted in a circular gold frame. A plan is shown to the left and measurements are shown below the shield.
The Pictorial Inventory consists of three volumes containing a total of 230 drawings. It was originally created as a pictorial record of the clocks, vases, candelabra and other miscellaneous items from Carlton House, as well as selected items from the stores at Buckingham House, Brighton Pavilion, Hampton Court and Kensington Palace to be considered for use in the refurbishment of Windsor Castle. Artists from an architectural drawing school run by Augustus Charles Pugin were employed by George IV’s supplier of furniture, Nicholas Morel, for this epic task. After Morel had finished using the drawings as an aid in creating his furniture schemes for Windsor Castle, the drawings were bound into three volumes and delivered to the King’s Inventory Clark, Benjamin Jutsham, where they assumed the role of an inventory. At some point in the nineteenth century, further drawings were added to the original 214 supplied by Morel. Many of the 230 drawings have been annotated by Jutsham or by a later hand and many inscriptions, including some signatures, have been erased. -
Creator(s)
-
Medium and techniques
Pencil, watercolour, pen and ink
Measurements
25.0 x 22.5 cm (sheet of paper) (sheet of paper)
Other number(s)
RL 34917RL 33560f41