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Museum catalogue: Polar Art Collection

 

The Alert in Winter Quarters, from Amongst the barrier bergs, March, 1876

Image
Accession no.: Y: 49/22/10
Title: The Alert in Winter Quarters, from Amongst the barrier bergs, March, 1876
Description: Chromo-lithograph facsimile of original watercolour by Dr Edward Moss, during the British Arctic Expedition, 1875-76.
Medium: Lithograph
Artist: Moss, Edward Lawton
Note: Published as 'Polar Sketches', a small portfolio of sixteen prints, in 1876 by Marcus Ward London. 'It is believed by both Artist and Publishers that a much fuller and more vivid idea of Arctic scenery can be produced by careful chromo-lithographic fac-similes of the original drawings made by Dr Edward L. Moss during the Expedition, than by any rendering in black and white. The sketches are not designed to illustrate the progress of the Expedition, or any stirring events in its history, so much as the appearance of the strange and desolate country by the shores of which the ships slowly steamed, the wonderful phenomena of the sky, and the effects of light and shade produced by a midnight sun, or a mid-day moon, on the ice-bound rocks which form the scenery of the region. They are here reproduced ... in order to make them more generally accessible ... It must be added that the sketches are all the work of one hand - Dr Edward L. Moss, who served on board the Alert in the Arctic Expedition which left England on the 29th of May, 1875, and entered the Arctic regions on the 4th of July in the same year. Although the Expedition failed in reaching the Pole - which was among the sailing orders on which it started - it yet achieved results of the highest scientific and geographic value. Of what kind was the life they led - what strange experiences they gained of natural phenomena, and the freaks of light on ice and rock - the accompanying drawings illustrate with a vividness and fullness never before arrived at in sketches of Arctic life'. 'Nowhere is it more true that the low sun makes the colour than in the Arctic regions. The ice and snow, that are wearily white in midsummer, glow with all sorts of opaline tinits in the sunrise light of March. The sketch is from amongst the floebergs to seaward of the ship. The sides of the berg in the centre have been worn into columns and alcoves by the surface floods of some former summer; but it has since been forced higher on the beach, and into shallower water. Snow-drifts fill up all the gorges and ravines amongst the bergs, and are in some places so hardened by wind and inflitration of sea-water, that tidal motion cracks and fissures them, especially round the grounded bergs' - Extract from 'Shores of the Polar Sea'.
Dimensions: Image:
  • Width: 280mm; height: 198mm