Family in Dusky Bay, New Zealand

Daniel Lerperniere, Artist;  William Hodges, After; 

This is one of the prints in our collection. It was made in London, England, Great Britain in 1777.
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Object Detail


Measurements
Image: 214 x 356mm
Media
engraving on paper
Description
William Hodges was the artist on Captain James Cook's second voyage of exploration to the Pacific. Reaching New Zealand on 26 March 1773, the Resolution sailed into Dusky Sound where the crew recovered from their gruelling voyage and set up an observatory to help fix the position of New Zealand on the globe. George Forster, naturalist on board the Resolution, described the scene when they arrived: 'The smoothness of the water, illuminated by the setting sun, the different degrees of verdure, and the various notes of birds which resounded throughout the whole cove during this calm evening, greatly softened the rude, uncultivated outlines of this landscape'. Hodges made sketches of the Māori family they encountered in the area and watercolours of the bay, with sharply outlined hills and turbulent skies. Cook was delighted and wrote that Hodges had 'delineated the face of the country with such judgement as will at once convey a better idea of it than can be expressed by words'.
from Auckland Art Gallery online catalogue, http://www.aucklandartgallery.com/the-collection/browse-artwork/3015/a-view-in-dusky-bay,-new-zealand
Credit Line
Collection of the Sarjeant Gallery Te Whare o Rehua Whanganui. Purchased, 1976.
Collection Type
Permanent collection
Acquisition Date
29 Sep 1976

Colours

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Nationality:
1. French
2. British
Accession Number:
1976/9/1