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Saturday, October 18, 2025 |
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The Destruction of Pharaoh's Host, by John Martin, at risk of leaving the UK |
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The Destruction of Pharaohs Host, by John Martin.
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LONDON.- Arts Minister Michael Ellis has placed a temporary export bar on The Destruction of Pharaohs Host, by the British artist John Martin (1789-1854), to provide an opportunity to keep it in the country.
The watercolour is at risk of being exported from the UK unless a buyer can be found to match the asking price of £1,509,102.
The drawing illustrates the Biblical story (Exodus 14) of Moses releasing the waters of the Red Sea, after they had miraculously parted to allow the fleeing Israelites to cross, thereby drowning the pursuing Egyptian army.
Employing a panoramic composition to magnificent effect, Martin plays with the scale of the figures and the scenery to maximise the epic nature of the drama. The emotional force of this scene of deliverance and retribution is heightened by a blood red sunset below a sweeping black sky.
Although Martin is best known for his spectacular oil paintings and mezzotints (a tonal print technique that was ideally suited to capturing his bold use of light and shade for dramatic effect) illustrating John Miltons Paradise Lost and the Bible, he also created a series of framed exhibition watercolours, which in scale and visual impact were intended to compete for attention and patronage with oil paintings.
Martins mezzotints of Biblical subjects, such as The Destruction of Pharaohs Host published in 1833, were hugely popular and influential with admirers including Charles Dickens and the Bronte sisters who grew up with them on the walls of their fathers parsonage.
Martins large-scale watercolour treatment of the same subject from three years later was intended to capitalise on his popular success, and The Destruction of Pharoahs Host demonstrates his bold use of the medium in the eye-catching brightness of the colours, with the tonal range expanded through extensive use of black pigment, bodycolour, and gum arabic.
Martins artistic reputation did not endure despite the influence he played in shaping the epic scale and grandeur of Biblical and historical epics in films by directors like Cecil B. DeMille as his standing suffered from the disapproval of the art critic John Ruskin and the artists focus later in his life shifted to planning ambitious engineering schemes to deliver clean water and an efficient sewage system to London.
The subsequent and enduring shift in taste away from the use of watercolour for grandiose narrative subjects, allied to a longstanding critical downplaying of the significance of the medium to British art, meant that Martins stature as a watercolourist was long overlooked, until interest in his work began to revive in the early 1950s.
Martins importance is now more widely recognised and celebrated, and the ambition, boldness and grandeur of The Destruction of Pharoahs Host exemplifies his unique contribution to British watercolour history.
Arts Minister Michael Ellis said: This incredibly dramatic picture captures the imaginative and apocalyptic subjects for which Martin is best known.
I hope it can remain in the UK, where it can be admired and studied for many years to come.
The decision to defer the export licence follows a recommendation by the Reviewing Committee on the Export of Works of Art and Objects of Cultural Interest (RCEWA), administered by The Arts Council.
RCEWA member Lowell Libson said: Working in watercolour played a significant part in Martins art throughout his career although he is now best remembered for his exhibition works in oil. The Destruction of Pharaohs Host not only demonstrates Martins mastery of the medium but underlines how he employed it to achieve emotional and dramatic effects of a subtlety which were impossible in his larger scale oil paintings. The Destruction of Pharaohs Host numbers amongst the greatest of Martins watercolours.
The RCEWA made its recommendation on the grounds of the pictures outstanding significance in the reassessment of John Martin the most popular artist of his day, dismissed by the art establishment and ignored for almost a century whose influence on the development of epic, visionary landscape painting, both in Britain and in America, is now widely acknowledged.
The decision on the export licence application for the picture will be deferred until 21 May. This may be extended until 21 September if a serious intention to raise funds to purchase it is made at the recommended price of £1,509,102.
Organisations or individuals interested in purchasing the picture should contact the RCEWA on 0845 300 6200.
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