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The building on the right is the tomb of Dido\'s husband, Sychaeus. He was murdered by her brother Pygmalion, and as a result she fled from Tyre to North Africa, where she founded the city of Carthage (Virgil, Aeneid, Book I).
NG 498 was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1815. Two years later Turner exhibited The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire (London, Tate Gallery), which he appears to have regarded as a companion for it.
In his will Turner asked that NG 498 hang between Claude\'s Seaport with the Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba (NG 14) and \'The Mill\' (NG 12). The composition and mood of NG 498 were intended as a conscious homage to the work of Claude, which Turner deeply admired.
Turner Bequest, 1856.
Davies 1959, p. 96
Butlin 1977, pp. 84-5', 'ObjectStatusID' : '1', 'PublicAccess' : '1', 'GroupNumber' : '', 'GroupTitle' : '', 'GroupArtist' : '', 'GroupDate' : '', 'GroupParts' : '', 'ImageID' : '144', 'ImageFile' : 'N-0498-00-000033-WZ-PYR.tif', 'ImageCode' : 'N-0498-00-000033-WZ', 'ImagePath' : '/pics/tmp/websiteimages/Website_Collection_Online/Web Zoom Images/WZ web NG Fronts/', 'ImageLevels' : '6', 'ImageXsize' : '6000', 'ImageYsize' : '4031', 'FileGroup_ID' : '14', 'impos' : '2425'} /* Array ( [0] =>
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SELECT * FROM Object, Image WHERE Object.ObjectID = Image.ObjectID AND ImageID = '144'

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2425 --> 144 N-0498-00 Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1775 - 1851
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    [ObjectID] => 142
    [ObjectCode] => N-0498-00
    [ObjectNumber] => NG498
    [ObjectDateBegin] => 1815-01-01
    [ObjectDateEnd] => 1815-12-31
    [ObjectDisplayDate] => 1815
    [ObjectDimensions] => 155.5 x 230 cm
    [ObjectMedium] => Oil on canvas
    [ObjectAlphaSort] => Turner, Joseph Mallord William
    [ObjectAuthor] => Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1775 - 1851
    [ObjectTitle] => Dido building Carthage, or The Rise of the Carthaginian Empire
    [ObjectShortTitle] => Dido building Carthage
    [ObjectCreditLine] => Turner Bequest, 1856
    [ObjectString] => NG498: Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1775 - 1851, Dido building Carthage, 1815, Oil on canvas, (155.5 x 230 cm), Turner Bequest, 1856.
    [ObjectLocation] => Room 15
    [ObjectPrivateLocation] => Gallery 15
    [ObjectPublicLocation] => Room 15
    [ObjectSchool] => British
    [ObjectCurator] => Susan Foister
    [ObjectDescription] => The tomb at the right is inscribed: SICHAEO (Sychaeus). At the extreme left is the following inscription: DIDO/ BUILDING/ CARTHAGE/ OR/ THE/ RISE/ of the/ CARTHAGINIAN/ EMPIRE/ J.M.W. Turner/ 1815.
The building on the right is the tomb of Dido\'s husband, Sychaeus. He was murdered by her brother Pygmalion, and as a result she fled from Tyre to North Africa, where she founded the city of Carthage (Virgil, Aeneid, Book I).
NG 498 was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1815. Two years later Turner exhibited The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire (London, Tate Gallery), which he appears to have regarded as a companion for it.
In his will Turner asked that NG 498 hang between Claude\'s Seaport with the Embarkation of the Queen of Sheba (NG 14) and \'The Mill\' (NG 12). The composition and mood of NG 498 were intended as a conscious homage to the work of Claude, which Turner deeply admired.
Turner Bequest, 1856.
Davies 1959, p. 96
Butlin 1977, pp. 84-5 [ObjectStatusID] => 1 [PublicAccess] => 1 [GroupNumber] => [GroupTitle] => [GroupArtist] => [GroupDate] => [GroupParts] => [ImageID] => 144 [ImageFile] => N-0498-00-000033-WZ-PYR.tif [ImageCode] => N-0498-00-000033-WZ [ImagePath] => /pics/tmp/websiteimages/Website_Collection_Online/Web Zoom Images/WZ web NG Fronts/ [ImageLevels] => 6 [ImageXsize] => 6000 [ImageYsize] => 4031 [FileGroup_ID] => 14 [impos] => 2425 )
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