A New World
England’s first view of America
15 March – 17 June
2007
Room
5
Admission charge
Supported by The Annenberg Foundation
John White, a gentleman and artist, was largely responsible for
shaping England’s first view of America, though few are familiar
with his name. In the 1580s, White sailed with the earliest
expeditions to Virginia and produced a series of amazing
watercolours that documented the complex and sophisticated culture
of the North Carolina Algonquian Indians and the local flora and
fauna. These drawings are the only surviving original visual record
of this early period of America’s history.
All of White’s drawings are in the British Museum’s collection
and will go on public display as a group for the first time in
forty years. Loans of portraits, maps and navigational instruments
from the National Portrait Gallery, British Library and National
Maritime Museum among others will be used to set the scene at the
Elizabethan Court.
The 16th century was an age of voyage and discovery for
Europeans. The English were relative latecomers to exploration but
under Elizabeth I a concerted effort was encouraged by men such as
John Dee. John White may have been associated with Martin
Frobisher's search for the Northwest Passage and was the earliest
English artist to draw the Inuit they encountered in Baffin Island.
A few years later, White was on the first of several voyages Sir
Walter Raleigh sent to the land he named 'Virginia' after his queen
(present day North Carolina). Raleigh hoped to find minerals and
other valuable commodities, a good safe harbour from which to
harass Spanish ships and to establish a permanent foothold for
England in America.
After a fact-finding expedition in 1584, Raleigh sent a second
expedition a year later which included his tutor in navigation,
Thomas Harriot, and John White. Harriot was sent as a linguist,
recorder and surveyor to establish the land’s potential for farming
and trade. White was sent to produce visual records and maps of
what they found in order to encourage further investment and
colonists for an English ‘plantation’. We know very little about
John White but this exhibition reveals new facts about his life and
explores his work as an artist in relation to his position in
society as a gentleman. The 1585 voyage anchored off the Outer
Banks of what is now North Carolina, exploring the coastline and
building a small fort on the island of Roanoke. Harriot and
White also recorded the people, their language and way of life -
most spectacularly in White's series of nearly twenty watercolours
of the people and villages of Pomeiooc, Secotan and Roanoke and in
his drawings of local wildlife and plants.
In 1585, John White returned from 'Virginia' with visions of
Paradise, the perfect place to plant the English in the New World
soil. White and Raleigh continued their preparations for a
permanent colony of one hundred and fifteen men, women and children
at the 'Cittie of Raleigh' on the Chesapeake and John White was
appointed their Governor with twelve assistants. The expedition set
off in 1587 but landed again at Roanoke with insufficient supplies.
White was sent home to obtain assistance but because of the Spanish
Armada his relief ships were not allowed to sail. When he finally
returned in 1590, the colonists had disappeared and the legend of
the ‘Lost Colony’ of Roanoke was born.
John White's drawings have been vitally important in forming the
way that Europe viewed America and its inhabitants. As America
prepares to celebrate the 400th anniversary of the first permanent
settlement of Jamestown in May 2007, this exhibition provides a
once-in-a-generation opportunity to revisit the earlier ‘lost
colony’ of Roanoke through White’s drawings and to catch a glimpse
of the land and people as they encountered Europeans for the first
time.
For further information or images please contact Benjamin Ward
on 020 7936 1297, bward@brunswickgroup.com
or Hannah Boulton on 020 7323 8522, hboulton@thebritishmuseum.ac.uk
Notes to Editors:
- An accompanying Book ‘A New World: England’s first view of
America’ is published by The British Museum Press from February
2007. Price £25.
- An extensive public programme of lectures, films, performances
and workshops will accompany the exhibition. For further
information please contact the press office.
- After its run at the British Museum, the exhibition will tour
to several venues in America.