John William Turner oil oil paintings
John Mallord William Turner
(Apr. 23, 1775 London - Dec. 19, 1851 Chelsea) English Oil Painting Artist Biography.
John
Mallord William Turner was one of the finest landscape artists was, his
work was exhibited when he was still a teenager. His entire life was
devoted to his art. Unlike many artists of his era, he was successful
throughout his career.
Joseph
Mallord William Turner was born in England. His father was a barber,
his mother died when he was very young. The boy received little
schooling. His father taught him how to read, but this was the extent of
his education except for the study of art. By the age of 13 he was
making drawings at home and exhibiting them in his father's shop window
for sale.
Turner
was 15 years old when he received a rare honor, one of his oil
paintings was exhibited at the Royal Academy. By the time he was 18 he
had his own art studio. Before he was 20, print sellers were eagerly
buying his drawings for reproduction. He quickly achieved a fine
reputation and was elected an associate of the Royal Academy. In 1802,
when he was only 27, Turner became a full member. He then began
traveling widely in Europe. Venice was the inspiration of some of
Turner's finest work. Wherever he visited, he studied the effects of sea
and sky in every kind of weather. His early training had been as a
topographic draftsman. With the years, he developed a painting technique
all his own. Instead of merely recording factually what he saw, Turner
translated scenes into a light-filled expression of his own romantic
feelings. Subjects that lent themselves to dramatic effect particularly
fascinated Turner. Like Caspar David Friedrich, he
loved Gothic cathedrals and he also painted numerous watercolors of them
early in his career. Traveling through mountains, he recorded the
chasms and waterfalls that were both beautiful and dangerous. He had a
lifelong passion for the sea and for rivers. It is not surprising that
his favorite foreign city was Venice, the ultimate fusion of water and
civilization, where he made countless sketches on his visits in 1819 and
again in 1828. During the 1830s and 1840s Turner developed his mature
vision, in which the forces of nature and history were given grandiose
expression in his seascape and landscape oil paintings.
As
he grew older and despite his success, he was a recluse, secretive,
short (in both stature and speech), and uninterested in society. Rumpled
in dress, Turner became an eccentric. Except for his father, with whom
he lived for 30 years, he had no close friends. He allowed no one to
watch him while he painted. He gave up attending the meetings of the
academy. None of his acquaintances saw him for months at a time. Turner
continued to travel but always alone. He still held exhibitions, but he
usually refused to sell his paintings. When he was persuaded to sell
one, he was dejected for days. His handling of paint by 1844 had become
purely personal and intuitive. Scraped, brushed and smeared, its purpose
was to create sweeping movements and general atmospheres, to imply,
rather than describe, both setting and details. Specific forms
occasionally loom out of the organic, pulsing stretches of paint, giving
context and reference points to the overall blots of color.
In
1850 he exhibited for the last time. One day Turner disappeared from his
house. His housekeeper, searching for many months, found him hiding in a
house in Chelsea. He had been ill for a long time. He died the next
day. Turner left a large fortune that he hoped would be used to support
what he called "decaying artists." His collection of paintings was
bequeathed to his country. At his request he was buried in St. Paul's
Cathedral. Although known for his oil paintings, Turner is regarded also
as one of the founders of English watercolor landscape painting.
Some of his most famous oil paintings are Rain, Steam and Speed, The Fighting Temeraire and The Grand Canal, Venice.
Joseph Mallord William Turner was precocious, brilliant, and
successful. To modern eyes, looking back over the last hundred years,
when painters removed all subject except the paint, Turner's work is not
only great, but way ahead of its time, inspiring many future world
artists.
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Rain, Steam and Speed
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The Fighting Temeraire | The Grand Canal, Venice |
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