Lot 207

Robert Howlett (1831-1858)
Starboard bow of the Great Eastern, 12th November 1857

Rare Books, Manuscripts, Maps & Photographs
Auction: 07 February 2024 from 10:00 GMT
Description
albumen print photograph (28.5 x 34cm), dated in negative, laid down on recent mount, spotting above skyline, a hint of rubbing and two short closed nicks along right-hand edge, one closed tear and one small nick to foot [V&A PH.255-1979]
Footnote
Robert Howlett’s iconic images of the construction of the Great Eastern are remembered as ‘some of the most significant photographs of the 19th century’ (Hannavy, Encyclopaedia of Nineteenth-Century Photography, 2008, vol. 1, pp. 717-18). The Great Eastern was by far the largest ship ever built at the time, and remained so when she was scrapped in 1888. Though an unprecedented marvel of engineering, the project was a financial disaster. Brunel died a few days after her departure on its maiden voyage in 1859. Howlett himself had died the previous year, his colleagues believing that his untimely death had been brought about by the chemicals used in his photographic work; his Great Eastern series is today regarded as ‘epitomizing the spirit of Victorian engineering and endeavour’ (ODNB).
