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Notes
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This shows the English and Dutch fleets engaged during the Battle of the Gabbard, 2 June 1653. The increasing conflict of trade interests between England and the Netherlands in the first half of the seventeenth century came to a head in 1651 when Cromwell's Navigation Act restricted English trade to English ships and thereby struck at the Dutch position as 'the carriers of Europe'. A Dutch diplomatic mission to resolve problems failed and the first of three rapidly ensuing Anglo-Dutch sea wars that lasted to 1674 broke out in 1652–1654. The Gabbard action took its name from the shoal off the Suffolk coast near Solebay where it was fought. Both sides fielded their full force, the English with 100 ships and five fireships and the Dutch with 98 ships and six fireships.
The technique of grisaille involved drawing with pen and ink on prepared gesso panels or canvas and is more accurately described as pen-painting (penschilderij). It enabled the drawing to be highly detailed and demonstrate the artist's ability and knowledge of shipping and was pioneered by Witmont and his friend Willem van de Velde the Elder, who were its two finest practitioners.
Title
The Battle of the Gabbard, 2 June 1653
Date
after 1653
Medium
oil & grisaille on canvas
Measurements
H 111.7 x W 179 cm
Accession number
BHC0276
Work type
Painting