
Caernarvon Castle
Richard Wilson·1744
Historical Context
Caernarvon Castle from 1744 at the Detroit Institute of Arts is one of Wilson’s earliest landscape paintings, depicting Edward I’s great North Welsh fortress before Wilson had developed his mature Italianate style. The painting reveals Wilson’s Welsh topographical interests that predated his Italian transformation and persisted throughout his career. Richard Wilson, the Welsh painter who studied in Italy in the 1750s and returned to transform British landscape painting, was among the most important artistic figures of eighteenth-century Britain despite dying in comparative poverty and neglect. His synthesis of the classical landscape tradition he had absorbed in Rome with the specific visual qualities of British scenery — the cooler light, the greener landscape, the atmospheric moisture of the northern climate — established a template for British landscape painting that Turner, Constable, and the watercolor tradition would develop and transform. His work was foundational precisely because it treated British scenery as worthy of the same serious formal attention that Claude had given to the Roman campagna.
Technical Analysis
The castle is rendered as a topographical record with attention to its massive curtain walls and polygonal towers. Wilson’s early landscape style shows less atmospheric sophistication than his post-Italian work but demonstrates solid compositional instincts.

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