Christa Zaat
John Frederick Lewis (British painter) 1804 - 1876
A Bedouin Encampment; or, Bedouin Arabs, 1841-51
watercolour, white gouache and graphite with scratching out on medium, slightly textured, beige wove paper
34.9 x 51.8 cm. (13.75 x 20.38 in.)
Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection, New Haven, United States of America
Lewis specialized in Oriental and Mediterranean scenes and often worked in exquisitely detailed watercolour. He was the son of Frederick Christian Lewis (1779–1856), engraver and landscape-painter.
Lewis lived in Spain between 1832 and 1834. He lived in Cairo between 1841 and 1850, where he made numerous sketches that he turned into paintings even after his return to England in 1851. He lived in Walton-on-Thames until his death.
Lewis became an Associate of the Royal Academy (ARA) in 1859 and a member (an RA) in 1865.
After being largely forgotten for decades, he became extremely fashionable, and expensive, from the 1970s and good works now fetch prices into the millions of dollars or pounds at auction.
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across the US to clear anti-Israel protests, encampments Law enforcement
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