The Travels of David Roberts
(1796-1864)
By Helen Guiterman
David Roberts was 42 when he set off, in 1838, on
the second of his important foreign
journeys. The first, in 1832-33, was to Spain, a country then little known
to his compatriots. From Gilbraltar
he made a short trip to Morocco, to Tangiers and Tetuan,
his first African experience. In the five years between
the two journeys, Roberts earned enough
from sales and oils and watercolors, and from commissions for book illustrations,
to undertake this second expensive
expedition.
He had read as much as he could about
the countries he planned to visit.
Roberts left London in August 1838. He traveled
through France to Marseilles, sailed
via Malta and Greece to Alexandria, which he reached on September 24th.
While he was away he kept a journal,
written in pencil, of which one small fragment survives; the
rest was transcribed by his young daughter into
two leatherbound volumes. With the
help of the British counsul at Alexandria, Roberts hired a boat, its eight-man
crew, a reis, and a servant. He went
to Cairo and spent a day or two there, seeing the
pyramids and the Sphinx, then went on to his river journey.
Like most of the artists making the
same trip, he did most of his drawing on the way downriver.
The material collected by Roberts over his travels
was to serve him for many more years.
The main short-term result was the six volumes of lithographs for which he
is best known. The volumes were described
as "the most ambitious work ever published in
England with lithographed plates." They were issued to subscribers
in monthly installments over a number of years. He continued to paint until
his sudden death in 1864 when he was in the middle of a popular series of
London subjects, left unfinished. For a poor shoemaker's son, who left school
at 12 or 13, had no formal art training at all, but learned his craft as
a house painter, then as a scene painter, his was a great achievement.
|
|