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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: George Price Boyce, The Citadel of Saladin on the Mokattam Hills, Cairo, 1862

George Price Boyce 1826-1897

The Citadel of Saladin on the Mokattam Hills, Cairo, 1862
signed and dated 'G. P. Boyce Febr 1862' (lower left); bears inscription 'Citadel - Mookattam Hills-/Tombs of the Moomtooks-/Aquaduct - Cairo/Feb. 1862' (on a period label attached to the backboard)
watercolour
5¼ x 16 in. (13.3 x 40.6 cm)
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Provenance

The collection of S.C. Cockerell, 28 August 1904 (according to label attached to the backboard). The label possibly refers to Sir Sidney Cockrell, Director of the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge;
Private collection, UK;
Anon. sale, Bonhams, London, 10 February 2021, lot 110.

Boyce qualified as an architect before becoming an artist after meeting watercolourist David Cox (1783-1859) and began exhibiting at the Royal Academy in 1853. He spent the winter of 1861-62 in Egypt, sharing a house on the western bank of the river Nile with Swedish artist Egron Sillif Lundgren (1815-1875) and topographical painter Frank Dillon (1823-1909). Predominantly working in watercolour, Boyce was drawn to temples, ruins and scenes along the Nile. In this work he sensitively captures the Citadel of Saladin and Mamluk Aqueduct in a beautiful pink light at dusk. Boyce worked on the fringes of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and was a close friend of Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882).

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