viernes, marzo 08, 2013

J.M.W.TURNER


To make the spectator participate vicariously in the scene taking place upon the raft, Géricaulthad to join a major image observed from nearby with one observed at a distance. Turner, a master at manipulating codes and conventions, makes a particularly effective contrast between distant and near views in The Slave Ship. When Ruskin, who once owned the picture, described it in the chapter "Of Water, as Painted by Turner" in the first volume of Modern Painters, he correctly placed major emphasis upon the way Turner created an image of shipwreck as punishment. After an elaborate purple passage that describes the various colors and forms of the heaving waters, he turns to that part of the ocean surrounding the slave-ship:
Purple and blue, the lurid shadows of the hollow breakers are cast upon the mist of night, which gathers cold and low, advancing like the shallow of death upon the guilty ship as it labours amidst the lightning of the sea, its thin masts written upon the sky in lines of blood, girded with condemnation in that fearful hue which signs the sky with horror, and mixes its flaming flood with the sunlight, and, cast far along the desolate heave of the sepulchral waves, incarnadines the multitudinous sea.
The Slave Ship, detail
Slaves cast overboard (detail of The Slave Ship).
As Ruskin's closing allusion to Macbethindicates, Turner's painting in part represents nature about to punish guilty human beings. The full title of the picture is Slavers Overthrowing the Dead and Dying — Typho[on]n Coming On, and in the left distance the beholder observes the guilty vessel about to meet its deserved end, while in the right and central foreground he encounters thrust upon him slaves being devoured by the sea and its creatures. Although Turner's painting presents images of fanciful ocean predators, his image of Gothic [196/197] horror is not the product of his imagination. In fact, he was portraying what had become sound business practice: since insurance on slave-cargoes covered only those drowned at sea and not slaves who perished from brutality, disease, and the dreadful conditions on board, profit-minded captains cast the dead and dying into the ocean. As John McCoubrey has demonstrated the artist painted his picture specifically for an anti-slavery campaign, and one may add that he has succeeded in creating a particularly effective image Of these horrors. Works as different as Heinrich Heine's "Das Sklavenschiff," Robert Hayden's "Middle Passage," and Norman Mailer's Of A Fire on the Moon have elaborated upon the situation and paradigm of the slave-ship, but few, if any, have done so more powerfully than this painting. The closing lines of Turner's epigraph — "Hope, Hope, fanacious Hope!/Where is thy market now?" — further suggest that he was attacking not only the specific horror s of the slave-trade but also the situation of an men in a society whose basic bond had become the cash nexus.1
Like Carlyle's The French RevolutionThe Slave Ship thus opposes vantage-points to communicate both sympathy and judgment. Whereas Carlyle's work makes us experience the plight of those he yet sees justly destroyed in the Revolution, Turner's painting, in contrast, makes us sympathize with the victims of those about to receive deserved retribution. Since this opposition of near and far images in this way demonstrates for the viewer the essential justice of the ship's destruction, one effect of using this Romantic (or "close up") vantage-point is to make The Slave Shipiconologically quite traditional. But the very closeness of the dying slaves to the spectator creates a second effect, which is the recognition that the nature which will justly punish the ship is the same nature that is already unjustly devouring the ship's innocent victims.
Ryder's Jonah Ryder's Lord Ulin's Daughter
Left: Albert Pinkham Ryder, Jonah,1885, Oil on canvas, 27 1/4 x 34 3/8 inches. National Coll.
of the Fine Arts, Washington, D.C. Right: Albert Pinkham Ryder, Lord Ulin's Daughter, Oil.
National Coll. of the Fine Arts, Washington, D.C. This work, which derives from a ballad by Thomas
Campbell, also depicts punishment for disobeying a father: a Scottish chieftan's daughter and
her lover drown while fleeing from her father. [Click on the thumbnails for larger images.]
To Turner's combination of distances which complicate his painting, one may compare Albert Pinkham Ryder's Jonah, a work that may well derive from The Slave Ship. Like his English predecessor, Ryder places his castaway, here Jonah himself, in the foreground to the right of center, and as in Turner's picture a frightful inhabitant of the deep approaches from the right distance and will soon engulf the swimmer . Ryder positions his ship, which is not a guilty vessel, quite close to the castaway, and together with the approaching giant fish and surrounding waves it bends to a powerful rhythm that surrounds [197/198] the fleeing Jonah. At the top center of the painting appears God, Who controls the fierce energies of the ocean with calm power. By including this image of the Lord — which he does include in Lord Ulin's Daughter — the artist provides the spectator with not a visual, but an intellectual, vantage-point within the picture space. Like Turner, the American painter places his castaway close to us so we can feel ourselves implicated in his situation; but by including a representation of God overseeing this imperiled swimmer, he forces us to realize that this is not an image of abandonment or isolation.

JMW TURNER

Most Expensive British Painting by JMW Turner
most expensive british paintingJoseph Mallord William Turner's painting of Venice has become the most expensive British painting to be sold at auction. The work titled "Giudecca, La Donna della Salute and San Giorgio", sold at Christies in New York for $35.8 million (£20.5 million), breaking the previous record for a British painting by almost $15 million. JMW Turnerbroke his own auction record by about $25 million, with his "Seascape" painting selling for $10 million back in 1984.
Turner's vision of Venice sells for £20m to become most expensive British painting
Nicholas Hall, Christie's international director for old masters, who took the buyer's bids, said: "This is a great painting. It's an incredibly rare painting and it fully deserved to make this record for the artist which is more than three times the previous amount ever achieved by a Turner at auction. "In my personal view, Turner is the greatest of all British artists. This was a perfectly preserved example of his work and an absolutely beautiful composition."

TURNER STYLE


JMW Turner's Style  is described in a running discourse throughout this website. The following specifics are presented to help Turner advocates better understand the enigmatic character of this enigmatic master.
              
 Shipwreck, the Rescue, detail: three men adrift on a spar, one with both armsraised high to hale the rescue boat, the other two draped and clinging for dear life. The loose brushwork is rendered as Sir George Beaumont would later disparage over. The much echoed statement that he made while viewing other early Turner oil paintings, including Calais Pier: “his foregrounds are comparative blots, & faces of figures witht. a feature being expressed.” The sensitive Turner would soon react to such criticism with a higher level of finish and impasto.

                                                   Art World’s Dirty Little Secret
 Because of their particular relationship it can be assumed that when the aging Turner presentedShipwreck, the Rescue to Griffith, his friend and gentlemanly agent, the two men felt the monumental sea piece was a key example of the artist’s work. It is closely linked to Shipwreck, one of Turner’s most innovative and popular works of the day. Certain characteristics would date Shipwreck, the Rescue to a time shortly before Shipwreck, at a point when Turner was developing the early stages of his famous lozenge shaped composition, an invention that would culminate with the all-consuming vortex composition years later. Kenneth Clark singled out this innovation succinctly when he wrote: “only Turner could have conceived, a fearful melee of conflicting directions occupying a diamond-shaped area, an agitated lozenge in the middle of the composition. This picture, The Shipwreck, is one of Turner’s first assertions that the force of the elements could not be conveyed by traditional schemes of landscape painting. It might be said to be one of his first great anti-classical pictures.” [i]
Another implication of this painting having been presented to Thos. Griffith, Turner's friend and gentlemanly dealer is that Turner must have considered large oil-sketches completed artworks under certain circumstances. This must be true in order for him to make such an auspicious gift, titled and signed, on a fine commercial stretcher, and ready for display.
      He was known to exhibit oil-sketches in his own gallery and elsewhere, but when it came to the Royal Academy exhibitions he felt a need to produce conservative pictures more in the public taste. He would lavish them with thick impasto and additional pigments. This practice came after criticisms by potential patrons and colleagues alike who condemned his early exhibited pieces for lack of finish. First Fuseli said, ‘Perhaps the foregrounds too little attended to – Too undefined’,[1] then Sir George Beaumont, “his foregrounds are comparative blots, & faces of figures witht. a feature being expressed.” [ii] 
                       

This is an intermediately detailed portrait of one of the survivors in the rescue boat of Shipwreck, the Rescue (greatly enlarged). There is a considerable difference of finish on the figures and faces throughout the painting, ranging from the highly finished portrait in the stern of the boat ( which is seen on the book cover of Rescuing Turner: A New Age of Art Discovery--likely a self-portrait), to the faceless figures in the foreground that cling desperately to the spar.  Except for the portrait, which one would expect to be more highly finished, the rest are very much in keeping with the above descriptions by Fuseli and Beaumont.
Was Turner giving a gestural reply to such hurtful remarks several years later when he offered his colleagues a dramatic performance of paint slinging? Yes, he reached the polar extreme of what he had been doing early on. His watercolour painting technique in oils had turned to heavy impasto applied in what appeared to be a slap dash fashion. Perhaps this was meant to make the attendees at the Royal Academy exhibition aware that their wishes were now being granted—but only under protest. Hamerton makes it clear that he did not suffer fools gladly, “Turner bitterly despised the public for not understanding.”[iii] In fact, “all his life Turner was in open and notorious revolt against ‘proper finish’”[iv]
 Eventually, confidence inspired by his growing success refueled these fires, and with the use of the vortex composition to aid his purpose, his late works became even freer. This is the point in time that Shipwreck, the Rescue might have been reworked, c.1844, and along with the relining and re-stretching it appears that Turner did a certain amount of touching up and revitalizing of the pigments in the area of the water around the rescue boat. This added brushwork is very similar to that seen in his, Rain Steam and Speed also of 1844 as well as Snow Storm of 1842. Sorrowfully, and incongruously, this was also the point in his life that the public was beginning to question both Turner’s power and competence, calling his submissions to the Royal Academy, “Mr. Turner’s little jokes.”[v]

Detail: Shipwreck, the Rescue
  In 1844, if Turner had wanted to rework the water of Shipwreck, the Rescue to a point reminiscent of his early exhibited sea-pieces such as Calais Pier or Shipwreck, but at the same time maintain a uniform level of finish throughout the painting, he would have needed to rework the entire painting including the survivors in the boat. It is unlikely this would have appealed to him considering that the clear vision he wanted to express had already been fully described. Additional reworking and impasto would have only defeated this vision by deadening his first inspired idea and the feeling of immediacy and action that normally accompanies swift brushwork.
In Turner's Snow Storm from 1842 it is evident that his brushwork is meant to describe the forces of nature on a more visceral level.
Joyce Townsend notes in a very appropriate context, the artist’s use of both dark and light scumbling, “Thin, dark scumbles can be seen in the shore of the foreground of Waves Breaking Against the Wind (c. 1835; BJ 457) and in many other unfinished seascapes of this decade. Numerous light-coloured scumbles of localized extent can be seen in the sea and sky inSnow Storm - Steam Boat Off a Harbours Mouth (RA 1842; BJ 398).”[vi]
In light of Turner’s very early overall lack of finish and in-articulation of his figures, many reviewers at the time treated him wretchedly. Surely the key to understanding where the aesthetic conflict arose is hidden within the fundamentals of Turner early training in watercolour. What Butlin and Joll describe as, “careful but thinly painted, in just the manner one might suppose a watercolour artist might paint.”[ vii]
“Turner has frequently been reproached with basing his practice in oils on his watercolour technique. This was…one of the charges which Sir George Beaumont brought against him, and even Constable echoed it.”[viii] John Gage confirms that, “Turner’s thoroughly unconventional attitude towards the status of watercolour, and his capacity to develop watercolour methods in his oil paintings, are so striking that it would be surprising if they were not related to views on the nature and role of water itself.”[ix]  Philip Hamerton put it even more succinctly when he said that Turner “painted much in oil, but the influence of his water-colour practice is evident in nearly all his pictures; in many of them it is even painfully evident, so that Constable, not unjustly, called them ‘Large Water-colours.’”[x]


Detail:
 Shipwreck, the Rescue showing Turner’s unusual brushwork - unblended, done largely in the technique of his watercolours.

According to one writer on Turner, Mary Chamot, the simple rendering seen on the figures in the rescue boat might elevate Shipwreck, the Rescue to an exemplary level of aesthetic importance. The ‘lack of finish’ of those tormented figures, as they are found woven carefully into the rescue boat, should add rather than detract from the impact of the painting according to this scholar. As she put it: "probably the chief reason why Turner left so many vivid direct studies in their pristine condition is that he realized how much the 'finish' demanded by the public would detract from their quality. The difference seen by the comparison of the oil-sketches with the exhibited pictures is even more apparent in front of the actual paintings. The figures in particular, often so inarticulate and blurred in the finished pictures, even seem to fit into the landscape better when indicated only by a few apt touches of colour without any attempt at modeling."[xi] 
       This is clearly an echo of a 1958 statement by the same author: “Today however our interest is undoubtedly focused on the slighter sketches, of which he must have had a large stock in his studio, perhaps for the purposes of finishing off when required for exhibition, or more probably, because he himself realized that some of the beauty would be inevitably sacrificed with the addition of details… a number of seascapes are among the most remarkable of these.”[xii] From this description, it is almost as though Mary Chamot had seen Shipwreck, the Rescue.

In attempting to rationalize the connection between sketches, studies, and “finished” pictures; A.J. Finberg comes closest to understanding the relevance of Turner’s early “unfinished” work, as well as, the spiraling force of his latter work. Finberg concurs as early as 1910 with what he calls the “consensus of educated opinion,” that “the subjects lost rather than gained by elaboration…some mental and emotional contents are incapable of definite embodiment.” [xiii]

Certainly, Shipwreck was Turner’s first successes at escaping the contemporary criticism being leveled at him over lack of finish. This is the work that one of the most artistically adroit of Turner’s biographers, Walter Bayes, used to establish the defining moment of Turner’s conversion. Bayes reiterated the criticism “detractors leveled at some of Turner's work, the reproach that his oils were but enlarged water colours,” but goes on to describe his new vision: “In the early years of the nineteen century he had already advanced a step further and had come to feel not only that the basic masses of his pictures had to be given the precedence over detail and be painted first, but that, to give them their due predominance, they must be endowed with the major weight of impasto." (Bayes, 1931, p. 99)

     Key to Turner’s development at this time was the synthesis of classical figure drawing he had laboured for years on at the Royal Academy school and the move toward his sublime shipwreck series. The lead into this of course was the Bridgewater Sea-piece of 1801. About the sketchbook that mapped out this transition, or rather, integration, Finberg tells us “studies for the Bridgewater Sea-piece were made in a…book which seems to have been devoted at first to the purpose of making life studies at the Academy classes.” [xiv] A strategic sketchbook indeed, and one that helps clarify why there are several carefully studied figures in Shipwreck, the Rescue. There are indications that he firstly drew the figures with a fine brush, even articulating the musculature in the arms of the heroic trio of rescuers found in the foreground of the rescue boat. This clearly indicates that the painting was done early; at a point when he still believed his watercolour-style touches would be adequate to finish a picture. By this Turner betrayed his inexperience and the lack of understanding about oil painting. He did not fully understand the oil painting sequence used in modern painting versus that used by old masters who used translucent glazes to finish their work.

SWR four desperate souls cling to the spar

Alas
, Turner would soon learn that the impasto required in bringing these works to the level of finish that the public demanded would expunge much of his figure drawing. His labored articulations would soon wane as he realized that such finish would eventually negate the effect of expressing his talents in this area—the fine detailing would need obliterating by additional layers of paint. As the spontaneity of his brushwork needed preserving above all, articulate figure drawing gave way to the need for a uniform finish. Turner was not going to sacrifice his watercolour-style completely. Shipwreck, the Rescue seems to have been consciously preserved by Turner as a developmental watershed within his body of work, “inarticulate and blurred” was not to be its fate. Turner apparently held this painting in storage for nearly half a century in order to preserve what was one of his best examples of integrated figure drawing.
Using Shipwreck (or The Storm, as it was called at first) for an example of Turner's figuredrawing, Ruskin expressed his reverence such: "infinitely more power of figure-painting than ever landscape painter showed before." (Finberg, 1961,  p116) It would be absorbing to see the two paintings, the highly finished Shipwreck, and Shipwreck, the Rescue displayed side by side in light of Chamot’s comments, “indicated only by a few apt touches of colour.” It would also provide a better idea of their relationship to one another.

On stylistic grounds it is reasonable to believe that Turner's early but extensive sea-piece ‘series’ was sketched within a short period of perhaps five years, circa 1799 -1804, before and shortly after Turner’s first trip to France. “The result of this was a series of pictures more ambitious and varied than he had previously attempted. Vivid memories of his rough channel crossing inspired him to paint Calais Pier, with French Poissards preparing for Sea: an English Packet Arriving (National Gallery). Here and inShipwreck exhibited two years later, but probably painted about the same time, his mastery in painting a stormy sea appears coupled with a new and more emphatic use of chiaroscuro, giving drama and depth to the design.”[xvi]
It would make more sense to expect Turner to experiment his way through this sequence of several large aquatic disasters (most of which are roughly the same dimension) at roughly the same time. It might even be suggested that other early large-scale works not exhibited until years later, perhaps even, The Goddess of Discord exh.1806, or Wreck of a Transport Ship, were also done around this time.

The auspicious establishment of his new workspace might give us a terminus ad quem for the entire sea-piece series and similar works. “In 1801, 1802, 1803, and 1804, his new address in the Royal Academy Catalogue is 75, Norton Street, Portland Road; but in 1804 it is again 64, Harley Street.”[xvii] He had taken on this new studio in addition to his better-known one for only a brief four-year period. One might only imagine Norton Street replete with tumultuous sea-pieces at various stages of completion, somewhat in the fashion of his approach to “watercolours en masse.[xviii] A concise description by Sophia Booth shows that such work done “as a series” continued through till the end of his working life: "The paintings were set out in a row and he went from one to the other, working one and touching up another, and so on, in turn.”[ xix]

Walter Bayes, from his own experience as a watercolourist, is able to give special insight into why Turner might have chosen this craft-like method of mass production: "Even the more elaborate compositions in water colour which he made in his studio were probably rapidly executed, for with admirable good sense he was wont to have three going at once, thus avoiding what any water-colour painter will remember as the most irresistible temptation to go on with one before it is properly dry."(Bayes, 1931, p 220) Of course, the necessary drying time between stages while using oil-paints would have been even more frustrating.
 
When Thornbury wrote, “The Turner Gallery contains no picture that is with certainty known to have been painted in 1801, but 1802 yielded a full harvest,”[xx] one clearly understands how Turner was obsessed. Indubitably, in 1801 he dove into his new project on such a grand scale that he had no time or energy to demonstrate, and thus, verify his production through exhibition of it. And by the time the series was at a point where the odd picture could be harvested for immediate completion, there was a deluge. After the first flood of sea-pieces, wrecks, and disasters were shown to the public over the next five or so years, this monumental creative body of oft' times; dark, foreboding, and sublime work was mined for decades afterwards.
 
It is understandable that the dating of such work is dubious and that the dates given by Butlin and Joll are often tentative. It is evident that some of these works have been given dates later than they deserve. Butlin and Joll apparently fell prey to Turner’s stealthy plan. According to his own intentions Turner exhibited his works in a haphazard fashion in order “‘to put the critics off the scent,’ as he said, he often doubled on his tracks.” This was easy for him to do because, “at any one time he kept a large quantity of work on hand.”[xxi] For the project at hand, the work most in need of re-dating is probably Wreck of a Transport Ship. We see in both this painting and Shipwreck, the Rescuethe same figure with speaking-trumpet in hand trying to summon help. Its use in both pictures would seem more than coincidence. This device most often employed by a ship's captain was at its apex of use in the late eighteenth century, and was used to give orders over the length of a ship. They were as a rule custom fabricated.


 Shipwreck, the Rescue (enlarged detail) Turner's poetic inclination might suggest that this image  is a reference to Gabriel

During the first few years of the century it is easy to envision the factory setting at the Norton studio with bolts of large dimension canvas, easels, pigment materials, and his old daddy in a distant corner toiling away on strainers to support those monstrous canvases. Oh yes: and on occasion there would be Sebastian Grandi stopping in to apply those brown ‘Venetian’ grounds for which he was famed - but always done under the watchful eye of the old man who was ever concerned over the use of costly materials. Stories connected to Orrock’s painting master W.L. Leitch give us a sense of this same working method: “The Fawkes girls also told Leitch that they had seen in Turner’s bedroom at Farnley ‘cords spread across the room as in that of a washer woman, and papers tinted with pink and blue and yellow hanging on them to dry,” [xxii] then again from Walter Sparrow (1903):
 
“Leitch, the watercolour painter told a friend of mine [certainly Orrock][2] that he once accompanied Pickersgill to Turner’s studio, where he had the privilege of watching the great man at his labours. There were four drawing-boards, each of which had a handle screwed to the back. Turner after sketching in his subject in a fluent manner grasped the handle and plunged the whole drawing into a pail of water by his side. Then, quickly, he washed in the principle hues that he required. Leaving this first drawing to dry, he took the second board and repeated the operation. By the time the fourth drawing was laid in, the first would be ready for the finishing touches.”[xxiii]


Detail: Wrecked Ship from Ship Wreck, the Rescue

By
 the time Turner had produced all of his great works the Athenaeum in 1849 published: “For the credit of England and of Mr. Turner let it be said that the picture of most excellence and interest in this assemblage [of Old Masters] is from his hand… We have no recollection of any production in its class – whether of the Dutch, the Italian, or the French school – which surpasses – or even equals – the artist’s Shipwreck.” It shows “a grasp of mind and the command of hand that have exhibited in a high moral sense the excitement and action of the tempest in its wrath.”
 
This news article, two years before Turner’s passing, mirrored the paramount respect Turner himself had for his early turbulent sea-pieces during his entire lifetime. The Shipwreck exhibited in 1805 was purchased back by Turner decades earlier in 1806, and was certainly destined early on to be part of his bequest to the Nation. He was apparently exhibiting these early sea-pieces with utmost pride right up until the end. Another one of Turner’s executors Charles Turner had engraved Shipwreck in 1806, the first of his oils to be engraved, and the public attention this effort garnered was a vital boost to the artist’s fame.
 

SNOWSTORM

Snowstorm
1842
Oil on canvas
91.5 x 122 cm (36 x 48 in.)
National Gallery, London

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This is only a thumbnail image. Use the Image Viewer to study the much larger full-sized image. The Image Viewer allows you to resize the image to fit your screen, display as a thumbnail, zoom in up to 200%, or even change the background color.For information regarding possible commercial licensing of this image from Scala Group, Art Resource or Bridgeman Art Library, click here. Text from Kenneth Clark,Looking at Pictures.
MY FIRST EMOTION is sharpened by amazement. There is nothing else remotely like it in European art, except, of course, other pictures by Turner, and I can understand why, until recently, critics brought up in the classical tradition were unwilling to accept such a freak. Not only is the subject exceptional, but the whole rhythmic organization is outside the accepted modulus of European landscape painting. We have been brought up to expect inside a frame a certain degree of balance and stability. But in Turner's Snowstorm nothing comes to rest. The swathes of snow and water swing about in a wholly unpredictable manner, and their impetus is deflected by contrary movements of spray and mysterious striations of light. To look at them for long is an uncomfortable, even an exhausting, experience.
Of course other painters have attempted to render the movement of rain and sea; but rough sea usually has a theatrical pasteboard look, and when it comes to rain even the greatest artists have found it necessary to formalize what they cannot accurately describe. Leonardo da Vinci comes nearest to Turner in his desire to render elemental power. But as he contemplated the movement of water (and no man has looked at it more searchingly) he fastened on those rhythms which had some relation to geometry. In his drawings at Windsor of a deluge the curling loops of rain end in circular vortices equivalent to the logarithmic spirals of a shell. These are the highly intellectual forms which his hand traced, consciously or unconsciously, when he came to represent universal destruction. Similarly, in Chinese art, the movement of waves and rain nourishes the ancient tradition of cursive ornament, and clouds are formalized till they become the commonest motif of decoration. Between the Dragon scroll at Boston and Hokusai's Views of Fuji oriental painting is full of rough seas and threatening skies; but how delightfully harmless they are. Perfect taste has cast out fear.
Looking again at the Snowstorm, with these decorative deluges in mind, I am astonished by the way in which Turner has accepted the apparent disorder of nature, but I do not question that his version of the subject is correct. it has the visual tremor of an immediate experience. The chaos of a stormy sea is portrayed as accurately as if it were a bunch of flowers.
Turner, who was well aware of the licence he often took with nature, was unusually insistent on the truth of this particular scene. In the Royal Academy catalogue of 1842 the entry reads 'Snowstorm - steam boat off a harbor's mouth making signals in shallow water, and going by the lead. The author was in this storm on the night the Ariel left Harwich.' There were no quotations from Byron or 'The Fallacies of Hope'. And when the Rev. Mr Kingsley told Turner that his mother liked the picture, Turner said, "I only painted it because I wished to show what such a scene was like; I got the sailors to lash me to the mast to observe it; I was lashed for four hours and did not expect to escape, but I felt bound to record it if I did. No one has any business to like it."
But of course the Snowstorm is very far from rapportage. It is the essence of all that Turner had discovered about himself and his art during forty years of practice. In 1802 the Peace of Amiens had given him his first opportunity to travel on the continent and visit the Alps, and in his drawings of the source of the Arveron and the falls of Reichenbach he suggests for the first time how the power of nature would force him into a new means of expression. At this time, and for some years to come, he was still engaged in an imaginary competition with his predecessors in the art of landscape painting. But however hard he tries to build his designs in the manner of Claude and Poussin, they will not settle down. They rock and wobble and go off at tangents and contradict themselves in a wholly unclassical manner. And underlying many of them is a curious movement, half-way between the fling of a lasso and the cross section of some hard pressed rock, a movement which has no ready assonance in geometry, but which, once we recognise it, we rediscover everywhere in nature.
This is the rhythm of his first great storm at sea, the Shipwreck of 1805, which was also painted from personal experience. And how superbly it renders the destructive power and weight of the waves. What more can painting do with that particular subject? The unforeseeable answer is the Snowstorm.
When I look back at it across the gallery, with Turner's dark, early sea pieces in mind, I no longer think about its design, but about its colour; and I see that the dramatic effect of light is not achieved by contrast of tone (as it is in theShipwreck) but by a most subtle alternation of colour. As a result oil paint achieves a new consistency, an iridescence, which is more like that of some living thing - in this case the flower of an iris - than a painted simulacrum. The surface of a late Turner is made up of gradations so fine and flecks of colour so inexplicable that we are reminded, whatever the subject, of flowers and sunset skies. To substitute colour for tone as a means of rendering enlightened space could not be achieved by mere observation: it was a major feat of pictorial intelligence and involved Turner in a long struggle. One can follow some of his experiments in his sketch books, where bands and blocks of colour are set down side by side to see how they influence each other, with an effect like the canvases of some modern American painters, pleasantly reduced in scale. At the same time he was attempting to convey the feelings aroused by his first visit to Italy, where the heat and glitter of the Mediterranean was symbolised by a key of colour so high that the darkest shadows are carmine or peacock blue. But these highly artificial concoctions could not satisfy him for long. He had written in the margin of Opie's lectures 'Every look at nature is a refinement on art', and it was necessary for him to relate his discoveries in the theory of colour to his acute perception of natural appearances and his marvellously retentive memory. This he achieved in the 1830s; and by the time of his last visit to Petworth, when he painted the famousInterior, he could render the visible world in progressions of colour as naturally and immediately as Mozart rendered his ideas in sound.
Having once more established a direct relationship with nature, he ceased to depend on 'poetic' subjects. Baiae was abandoned in favour of Waterloo Bridge, the Gardens of the Hesperides in favour of the Great Western Railway. In fact the new steam age suited him very well. The Fighting Temeraire tugged to her last berth is a sentimental picture, because, as a painter, Turner was not at all sorry to see the last of sail. He disliked painting sails perhaps he was troubled by the memory of classical draperies and the intricate geometry of rigging bored him. But he loved the brilliance of steam, the dark diagonal of smoke blowing out of a tall chimney and the suggestion of hidden furnaces made visible at the mouth of a funnel. All his life he had been obsessed by the conjunction of fire and water. It is the subject of his earliest oil, the Cholmondeley sea piece, and of his many pictures of fire at sea, which often involved a certain straining of romantic imagery. The steamship gave him the opportunity of introducing it naturally. Sometimes this love of conflict between heat and cold leads to an opposition of red and blue which seems to us rather crude, although I think that the deafening discord in the Fighting Temeraire must be partly due to a change in the pigments. But in the Snowstorm everything is subordinate to the icy aquamarine of the whole, and the fires in the Ariel's stoke hole reveal themselves only in two flashes of lemon yellow. There is also a tiny red port hole, reflected twice in the waves, and there are a few delicate touches of rose madder over the paddle wheels. Otherwise the colour at the centre is cool, and was even cooler when the picture was painted, for the vertical glare of the rocket, now softened by a little dirt and yellow varnish, was once pure white. Only in the dispersing smoke and its reflection on the waves does some burnt umber give the necessary minimum of warmth.
How Turner drew from the recalcitrant medium of oil paint these refinements and transparencies is a mystery. No one ever saw him at work, except on varnishing day at the Royal Academy, and even then he took great pains to hide what he was doing. Of course he had a repertoire of technical tricks: but the delicacy of every touch is beyond mechanical skill, and leads us to look past the process to the state of mind in which such works were created.
By the time he came to paint the Snowstorm Turner's responses to nature had become extremely complex, and may be said to have operated on three or four different levels. The first response, and the only one to which he would admit, was the need to record an event. His exceptional powers of memory were deliberately strengthened by practice. Hawkesworth Fawkes, the son of his old patron, described how Turner studied a storm which they witnessed together over the Yorkshire hills, saying, when it was over, "There, Hawkey, in two years time you will this, and call it Hannibal Crossing the Alps." Besides this active and purposeful observation of the scene, there was a contemplative delight in the elements of colour and form which it presented. Turner, lashed to the mast and in danger of his life, has been able to look at the Snowstorm with aesthetic detachment. When it was over he remembered not only how the waves broke over the stern, but how the light from the engine room had taken on a peculiar delicacy when modified by the blinding snow. At every point the visual data had adjusted themselves to his pre-established understanding of colour harmony, so that this somewhat drastic look at nature was adding a refinement to art.
At another level is the actual choice of subject: the fact that he has chosen to paint this almost unpaintable episode instead of the golden beaches of Capua. Turner's deepest impulse was towards catastrophe, and Ruskin was right in recognising as one of his chief characteristics a profound pessimism. He believed that mankind was 'ephemeral as the summer fly', and his formless, intermittent poem, 'The Fallacies of Hope' which he kept going for over thirty years, is a genuine reflection of his feelings. Ruskin thought that this pessimism came over him owing to some evil chances of his life about the year 1825. 1 cannot see any evidence for this date, for Turner's compositions, from 1800 onwards, are chiefly of gloomy subjects - the Plagues of Egypt, the destruction of Sodom, the Deluge; and Hannibal crossing the Alps, where a full scale whirlwind is joined to the first quotation from 'The Fallacies of Hope', was painted in 1812. Ruskin knew more about Turner's life than he ever disclosed, and he may have known of some occurrence in the year 1825 to which he attributed what he called 'a grievous metamorphosis' in his hero's character. But to judge solely from his paintings, it was not till 1840, when he painted the Slave Ship, that death and destruction, blood red and thundery black, began to dominate his finest work. Thenceforward he looked for an apocalypse. His storms become more catastrophic, his sunrises more ethereal, and his ever increasing mastery of truth is used in the projection of his dreams.
'Dreams', 'visions' - these words were commonly applied to Turner's pictures in his own day, and in the vague, metaphorical sense of the nineteenth-century, they have lost their value for us. But with our new knowledge of dreams as the expression of deep intuitions and buried memories, we can look at Turner's work again and recognise that to an extent unique in art his pictures have the qualities of a dream. The crazy perspectives, the double focuses, the melting of one form into another and the general feeling of instability: these are kinds of imagery which most of us know only when we are asleep. Turner experienced them when he was awake. This dream-like condition reveals itself by the repeated appearance of certain motifs which are known to be part of the furniture of the unconscious. Such, for example, is the vortex or whirlpool, which became more and more the underlying rhythm of his designs, and of which there is a strong suggestion in the Snowstorm. One is sucked in to the chaos and confusion, one's eye staggers uncertainly along the path of darkness which leads to the Ariel's hull and then shoots up into the blinding whiteness of the rocket. It is a dream experience; and I suppose that the apparent truth and the beauty of colour of the Snowstormwould not have affected me so strongly without this added appeal to my unconscious mind

JOSEPH MALLORD WILLIAM TURNER


Joseph Mallord William Turner – Painting Landscapes Like Never Before

The Fighting Temeraire, J.M.W. Turner
Joseph Mallord William Turner was a landscape artist from England whose work was said to be the start of Impressionism. The start of his own artistic path occurred when he entered the Royal Academy of Art Schools at the age of 16. Turner was admitted into the school by a panel led by Sir Joshua Reynolds. This man became an important figure in Turner’s life later on. Turner began his career with a focus on architecture, but the architect Thomas Hardwick advised him to paint instead. That proved to be one of the greatest pieces of advice Turner ever got.
Turner became well known for his oil paintings, but his watercolors were also something special. He is considered one of the founders of English landscape oil paintings, using watercolors to evoke a sense of light. During his times of creation, Turner liked to travel a lot. He went all throughout Europe to experience different arts and landscapes to inspire him, which is why you may see an array of scenes in his collection. He studied in the Louvre and was known to make trips to Venice on multiple occasions. He pulled ideas from a variety of sources, and he made a lasting impression on the field.
One of the greatest tragedies in Turner’s life was the death of his father. The artist was never the same after that, and he frequently went into stages of depression because of it. He and his father worked together, and they lived together for more than thirty years. This man was his best friend, and after he was gone, Turner was never the same man as before. He became immersed in sorrow, and he eventually passed away in 1851. He is now buried next to Sir Joshua Reynolds in the cemetery at St. Paul’s Cathedral, and his mark lives on in the art world.
Getting a hold of a Turner original paintings may be hard to do, but you could always look for somereproduction oil paintings like the ones found here at www.ArtsHeaven.com. We offer a variety of famous artist’s works, and we have our own artists that hand paint the museum quality  reproductions so you can have a realistic work hanging in your home. Turner’s style is fitting for a lot of decoration ideals of the modern world, and one of our affordable replica paintings could be the perfect match for your living space. Take a look around and see what we have to offer today.

J.M.W.TURNER


The English artist J. M. W Turner (1775-1851) exhibited this watercolour ofVesuvius in 1817. It was one of a pair: its companion depicted ‘Vesuvius in Repose’. At the time of painting these pictures Turner, who did not visit Naples until 1819, had not seen Vesuvius for himself and worked from studies made by other artists. He had already painted a dramatic image of ‘The Eruption of the Souffrier Mountains’ (1815), depicting the major 1812 eruption of Soufrièrevolcano on St Vincent. Volcanoes offered the sublime spectacle of a natural phenomenon both beautiful and destructive, and appealed to Turner’s sense of the dynamic cycles of destruction and renewal that governed both natural processes and the workings of human history.
J. M. W. Turner, 'Vesuvius in Eruption (1817)
The dramatic light effects of this picture vividly evoke the power of the eruption as it roars across the sky and bathes the land and sea in its red glare. The dazzling brightness of the heart of the eruption is created by Turner scraping away layers of paint to the white canvas beneath: the same technique is used to create the jagged lightning that flickers through the eruption cloud. Elsewhere, thickly applied repeated watercolour and gum washes give the picture a depth and intensity of a kind more usually associated with oils. The characteristically Turnerian compositional device of a vortex draws the eye in from the outer edges of the picture to the fiery summit of the volcano, almost swallowed up in swirling contrasts of light and dark. In the foreground, emphasizing the vast scale of the natural forces unleashed by the eruption, the tiny shapes of people can be seen gazing up at the spectacle.
Turner’s expressionistic vision of the volcano can be interestingly compared with the more rationalized classical vision represented by Xavier Della Gatta’s‘Eruption of Vesuvius’ of 1794. Della Gatta seeks to represent the spectacle of the volcanic eruption, Turner to transcend representation and engage directly with the onlooker’s emotional response.
For all ‘Saturday volcano art’ articles: Saturday volcano art « The Volcanism Blog.

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