Cloud study of cumulus and cirrostratus
Cloud study by Luke Howard, c1803-1811: Cumulus and cirrostratus above silhouette landscape. Blue and grey wash, with cream and white. Inscribed in pencil: Cumulo Stratus
Chemist and amateur meterologist Luke Howard captured the different shapes and colours of clouds in these delicate pencil and watercolour sketches. Along with observations of height and movement, he managed the unimaginable and classified the clouds. Howard identified three basic families of clouds, using Latin names: cirrus ('curl of hair'), stratus ('layer') and cumulus ('heap' or 'pile'). He then added a further four subcategories - cirro-cumulus, cirro-stratus (nimbus) to explain the way clouds could swiftly change in appearance or join with others in the sky. Howard collaborated with the artist Edward Kennion to produce more picturesque cloud sketches for the third edition of his 'Essay on the Modification of Clouds' published in Alexander Tilloch’s 'Philosophical Magazine' in 1865.
Details
- Category:
- Art
- Object Number:
- 1981-862/33
- Materials:
- paper, watercolour
- Measurements:
-
overall (original): 155 mm x 236 mm
overall (secondary support): 225 mm x 307 mm
overall (estimate): 225 mm x 310 mm
- type:
- drawing
- credit:
- On loan from the Royal Meteorological Society