This pencil and watercolour drawing by the British architect James William Wild (1814–1892) shows five stucco and glass windows, arranged symmetrically. In the centre, there is a window with the motif of a vase of flowers; this is flanked below by two windows with the motif of a cypress tree entwined by a tendril with blossoms and above by two further windows with stylized flower stems. In a fine pencil drawing on the left-hand side, Wild studied the central rose blossom, which can be seen in the coloured window in the upper row.
Only three of the five stucco and glass windows – the central one and the two on the left – are completely coloured. The two on the right-hand side were only sketched in fine pencil outlines, with the lower one coloured with a little pink, as their motifs are the mirror image of those in the windows on the left-hand side. The colours green, yellow, purple, and pink predominate in all the windows, with the result that their motifs and colour form a harmonious ensemble. Wild has added several pencil notes in this drawing.
25G41 · Blumen
41A6711 · Blumen in einer Vase
48A98312 · Ornamente in Form von Ranken
Mr. abbots room / vol. II (in the upper right corner)
E. Saelani Bey.. Harem (in the lower left corner)