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An unfinished painting of the Battle of the Nile. Nelson's decisive victory over the French led to the disintegration of Napoleon's army by isolating it, securing British control of the Mediterranean and ensuring the retaking of Malta from the French. To the right is a close-up of the port-side bow of the French 'La Spartiate', 70 guns. Its main mast split and broke, sending the sailors in the rigging crashing down over the side; they are shown clinging to, or falling off, the mast. Other sailors pull their comrades back aboard. In the right foreground, under the broken mast, a sailor is dragged into a boat containing an apparently dead French officer supported by two sailors. In the left foreground, is the bow of a boat full of sailors, with a lieutenant pointing towards the stricken ship.
The ship in the background to the left is possibly the British 'Alexander', 74 guns. Her sails billow from the explosion of the French flagship, 'L'Orient', 120 guns, in the left centre background, in port-quarter view. The artist captures the chaotic confusion of battle, focusing on the sailors' plight. British officers demonstrate humanity by rescuing the defeated enemy. The central subject of this painting is the explosion of 'L'Orient', yet the main focus is the human cost of the battle.
Brown was born in America and worked in England. He showed 80 paintings at the Royal Academy. Despite phenomenal early success, he fell on hard times and was disinherited by his father. He then concentrated on creating large religious and historical subjects, which were unsaleable. He died in London in poverty, in a room crowded with unsold paintings. The painting has been signed by the artist.
Title
The Battle of the Nile: Destruction of 'L'Orient', 1 August 1798
Date
1825
Medium
oil on canvas
Measurements
H 103.4 x W 123.2 cm
Accession number
BHC0510
Work type
Painting