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The 'Royal Caroline' (BHC3598)

Object name: Painting
We have 1639 objects of this type online
Painting (BHC3598) Repro ID: BHC3598
BHC3598, The 'Royal Caroline'
© National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
About our images
Artist/maker: John Cleveley, the Elder
Date made: 1750
Place made:
Materials: oil on canvas
Measurements:  Painting: 900 x 800 mm. Overall frame size 1085 x 1460 x 90mm.
Credit: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London
Collection: Oil paintings
Maritime Art Greenwich
Description:

The 'Royal Caroline' was built in 1749 by Joshua Allin at Deptford and was an adapted sixth-rate. She replaced the 'Carolina' as the principal royal yacht. In 1761 she was sumptuously fitted out to collect the Queen Consort to be, Princess Charlotte, from Kiel, and her name was changed to the 'Royal Charlotte'. This broadside-view ship portrait from off the starboard bow, shows the ship in full sail flying the red and blue ensign and the common pendant.

John Cleveley came from an English family of painters. He was born and died in Southwark, London and did not become a professional painter until the late 1740s. He lived and worked in part of the Royal Dockyard, in Deptford, near London which he frequently included in his paintings. His work combined depictions of people with topographical accuracy and architectural detail, and displayed considerable knowledge of shipbuilding. He was an early exhibiter at the Free Society of Artists in London, and two of his three sons, John Cleveley the Younger and his twin brother, Robert Cleveley also became painters after working in Deptford's Royal Dockyard. The painting has been signed and dated by the artist in the lower-left sea 'Royal Caroline Yacht'. J Cleveley 1750'.

Related people

John Cleveley, the Elder English painter, born in Southwark, London…
Full biography of John Cleveley, the Elder