First ever major retrospective exhibition of Captain Cook era painter
An international premiere of works by landscape painter, William Hodges, whose career as an artist took him to New
Zealand will be opened in London later this year by Sir David Attenborough.
William Hodges 1744–1797: The art of exploration runs from July 6 to November 21 in the Queen's House, at the National
Maritime Museum, Greenwich, and London.
The exhibition includes a superb portrait of Cook, whom Hodges accompanied on his second voyage (1772–75) aboard the
Resolution. Views of Pickersgill Harbour, Cascade Cove and a previously unknown stunning small oil panel of Dusky Sound
also feature.
Hodges' association with Cook is a key theme of the exhibition and illustrates his links with the history of global
maritime expansion. The subjects of his paintings of New Zealand and the Pacific Islands were a revelation at the time
for audiences in a Europe with no knowledge of the fascinating and unfamiliar scenes and cultures.
William Hodges was also the first professional landscape painter to visit India. He was a central figure in
disseminating visual knowledge of the world in the greatest era of European geographical discovery the world has ever
seen.
Sir David Attenborough said the exhibition ``will demonstrate that William Hodges has, until now, been the most unjustly
neglected British painter of the 18th century’’.
Sir David Attenborough will open an international conference at the National Maritime Museum to complement the
exhibition on July 14.
The conference, also called The Art of Exploration, will be addressed by leading historians of art and science and focus
on the art of exploration after Cook, looking at the figures who interpreted 'new’ lands and peoples for an eager
European public.
The Hodges’ exhibition of 56 key oil paintings will enable Hodges' work and association with Captain Cook to be seen and
analysed in a completely new context.
Many works have not been on display since Hodges' lifetime and this will be the first major exhibition covering his
entire career, and showing the Cook and Indian works together for the first time. Despite exhibiting at the Royal
Academy and being elected a member in 1787, Hodges died bankrupt
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