Join The Collection to save, track, and explore works like this.

Cleveland Museum of Art

Spotted

John Frederick Lewis — The Temple of Edfu: The Door of the Pylon
John Frederick Lewis

The Temple of Edfu: The Door of the Pylon

1850

This notable recent acquisition is the work of John Frederick Lewis, who moved to Cairo in 1841 and stayed for almost a decade. He made this drawing on an expedition up the Nile that he took with his wife in 1849–50, around the same time that the first photographers arrived in Egypt. At that time,the temple complex at Edfu was buried to a depth of almost 40 feet. Lewis’s watercolor carefully renders the ruins and records the hieroglyphic inscription,but transcends archaeological description to evoke the thrill of exploration and discovery.Photographers,influenced by painters such as David Roberts and Lewis, often chose similar viewpoints and framing for their depictions.

Medium
Watercolor (wash and point of brush work) and gouache and graphite

Start the Discussion

Request access to join the discussion

Spotted works by John Frederick Lewis

About this work

John Frederick Lewis, The Temple of Edfu: The Door of the Pylon, 1850

This notable recent acquisition is the work of John Frederick Lewis, who moved to Cairo in 1841 and stayed for almost a decade. He made this drawing on an expedition up the Nile that he took with his wife in 1849–50, around the same time that the first photographers arrived in Egypt. At that time,the temple complex at Edfu was buried to a depth of almost 40 feet. Lewis’s watercolor carefully renders the ruins and records the hieroglyphic inscription,but transcends archaeological description to evoke the thrill of exploration and discovery.Photographers,influenced by painters such as David Roberts and Lewis, often chose similar viewpoints and framing for their depictions.

Medium
Watercolor (wash and point of brush work) and gouache and graphite
Year
1850
Seen at
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH

Related themes

Watercolor, Works on Paper, Drawing, Unique Work

More works by John Frederick Lewis

Collected by

Cleveland Museum of Art