Interior of the Mosque of the Sultan Hassan

Method Lithograph with tint stone
Artist after David Roberts
Published London, Published Octr. 15th. 1856 by Day & Son, Gate Street, Lincoln's Inn Fields
Dimensions Image 140 x 212 mm, Sheet 201 x 290 mm
Notes Plate 220 from Volume 6 of the small format reprint of Roberts' The Holy Land, Syria, Idumea, Arabia, Egypt & Nubia. A view of the central courtyard of the Mosque-Madrassa of Sultan Hassan in the citadel of Cairo, Egypt. The mosque and madrassa (educational centre) was built by the otherwise unremarkable Mamluk Sultan Hassan in the mid fourteenth century. The mosque was praised for housing a number of architectural wonders, and for the speed in which the massive structure was completed. The mosque was particularly celebrated for the extravagant decoration of its interior, and was positioned so that the central courtyard could be seen by the Sultan from his palace terraces. Roberts' view shows a pavilion in the centre of one of the main courtyards of the mosque. Numerous worshippers kneel in prayer towards one of the cloisters while others purify themselves at a fountain house.

David Roberts RA (24th October 1796 – 25th November 1864) was a Scottish painter. He is especially known for a prolific series of detailed prints of Egypt and the Near East produced during the 1840s from sketches made during long tours of the region (1838-1840). This work, and his large oil paintings of similar subjects, made him a prominent Orientalist painter. He was elected as a Royal Academician in 1841.

The firm of Day & Haghe was one of the most prominent lithographic companies of the nineteenth-century. They were also amongst the foremost pioneers in the evolution of chromolithography. The firm was established in 1823 by William Day, but did not trade under the moniker of Day & Haghe until the arrival of Louis Haghe in 1831. In 1838, Day & Haghe were appointed as Lithographers to the Queen. However, and perhaps owing to the fact that there was never a formal partnership between the two, Haghe left the firm in the 1850's to devote himself to watercolour painting. The firm continued as Day & Son under the guidance of William Day the younger (1823 - 1906) but, as a result of a scandal involving Lajos Kossuth, was forced into liquidation in 1867. Vincent Brookes bought the company in the same year, and would produce the caricatures for Gibson Bowles' Vanity Fair magazine, as well as the illustrations for Cassells's Poultry Book, amongst other commissions.

Condition: Slight foxing to margins, not affecting image.
Framing unmounted
Price £30.00
Stock ID 39046

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