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J. M. W. Turner |

Self portrait, oil on canvas, circa 1799 |
Born |
23 April 1775(1775-04-23)
Covent Garden, London, England |
Died |
19 December 1851 (aged 76)
Cheyne Walk, Chelsea, London, England |
Nationality |
English |
Field |
Painting |
Training |
Royal Academy of Art |
Movement |
Romanticism |
Joseph Mallord William Turner RA (23 April 1775 – 19 December 1851) was an
English Romantic landscape painter, watercolourist and printmaker, whose style
is said to have laid the foundation for Impressionism. Turner was considered a
controversial figure in his day, but is now regarded as the artist who
elevated landscape painting to an eminence rivalling history painting.
Although renowned for his oil paintings, Turner is also one of the greatest
masters of British watercolour landscape painting. He is commonly known as
"the painter of light".
Biography
Turner was born in Maiden Lane, Covent Garden, London, England. His father,
William Gay Turner (27 January 1738 – 7 August 1829), was a barber and wig
maker. His mother, Mary Marshall, became increasingly mentally unstable,
perhaps, in part, due to the early death of Turner's younger sister, Helen
Turner, in 1786. Mary Marshall died in 1804, after having been committed to a
mental asylum in 1799.
Possibly due to the load placed on the family by these problems, the young
Turner was sent to stay with his uncle on his mother's side in Brentford in
1785, which was then a small town west of London on the banks of the River
Thames. It was here that he first expressed an interest in painting. A year
later he went to school in Margate on the north-east Kent coast. By this time
he had created many drawings, which his father exhibited in his shop window.
He entered the Royal Academy of Art schools in 1789, when he was only 14
years old,[6] and was accepted into the academy a year later. Sir Joshua
Reynolds, president of the Royal Academy at the time, chaired the panel that
admitted him. At first Turner showed a keen interest in architecture but was
advised to continue painting by the architect Thomas Hardwick (junior). A
watercolour of Turner's was accepted for the Summer Exhibition of 1790 after
only one year's study. He exhibited his first oil painting in 1796, Fishermen
at Sea, and thereafter exhibited at the academy nearly every year for the rest
of his life.
One of his most famous oil paintings is The fighting Temeraire tugged to
her last berth to be broken up, painted in 1838, which hangs in the National
Gallery, London. See also The Golden Bough.
Turner travelled widely in Europe, starting with France and Switzerland in
1802 and studying in the Louvre in Paris in the same year. He also made many
visits to Venice. On a visit to Lyme Regis, in Dorset, England, he painted a
stormy scene (now in the Cincinnati Art Museum).
Important support for his works also came from Walter Ramsden Fawkes, of
Farnley Hall, near Otley in Yorkshire, who became a close friend of the
artist. Turner first visited Otley in 1797, aged 22, when commissioned to
paint watercolours of the area. He was so attracted to Otley and the
surrounding area that he returned time and time again. The stormy backdrop of
Hannibal Crossing The Alps is reputed to have been inspired by a storm over
Otley's Chevin while Turner was staying at Farnley Hall.
Turner was also a frequent guest of George O'Brien Wyndham, 3rd Earl of
Egremont at Petworth House in West Sussex and painted scenes that Egremont
funded taken from the grounds of the house and of the Sussex countryside,
including a view of the Chichester Canal. Petworth House still displays a
number of paintings.
The shipwreck of the Minotaur, oil on canvas.
As he grew older, Turner became more eccentric. He had few close friends
except for his father, who lived with him for thirty years, eventually working
as his studio assistant. His father's death in 1829 had a profound effect on
him, and thereafter he was subject to bouts of depression. He never married,
although he had two daughters by Sarah Danby, one born in 1801, the other in
1811.
He died in the house of his mistress Sophia Caroline Booth in Cheyne Walk,
Chelsea on 19 December 1851. He is said to have uttered the last words "The
sun is God" before expiring.[7] At his request he was buried in St Paul's
Cathedral, where he lies next to Sir Joshua Reynolds. His last exhibition at
the Royal Academy was in 1850.
The architect Philip Hardwick (1792–1870) who was a friend of Turner's and
also the son of the artist's tutor, Thomas Hardwick, was in charge of making
his funeral arrangements and wrote to those who knew Turner to tell them at
the time of his death that, "I must inform you, we have lost him."
Style
Turner's talent was recognised early in his life. Financial independence
allowed Turner to innovate freely; his mature work is characterised by a
chromatic palette and broadly applied atmospheric washes of paint. According
to David Piper's The Illustrated History of Art, his later pictures
were called "fantastic puzzles." However, Turner was still recognised as an
artistic genius: the influential English art critic John Ruskin described
Turner as the artist who could most "stirringly and truthfully measure the
moods of Nature." (Piper 321)
Suitable vehicles for Turner's imagination were to be found in the subjects
of shipwrecks, fires (such as the burning of Parliament in 1834, an event
which Turner rushed to witness first-hand, and which he transcribed in a
series of watercolour sketches), natural catastrophes, and natural phenomena
such as sunlight, storm, rain, and fog. He was fascinated by the violent power
of the sea, as seen in Dawn after the Wreck (1840) and The Slave Ship (1840).
Turner placed human beings in many of his paintings to indicate his
affection for humanity on the one hand (note the frequent scenes of people
drinking and merry-making or working in the foreground), but its vulnerability
and vulgarity amid the 'sublime' nature of the world on the other hand.
'Sublime' here means awe-inspiring, savage grandeur, a natural world
unmastered by man, evidence of the power of God - a theme that artists and
poets were exploring in this period. The significance of light was to Turner
the emanation of God's spirit and this was why he refined the subject matter
of his later paintings by leaving out solid objects and detail, concentrating
on the play of light on water, the radiance of skies and fires. Although these
late paintings appear to be 'impressionistic' and therefore a forerunner of
the French school, Turner was striving for expression of spirituality in the
world, rather than responding primarily to optical phenomena.
Rain, Steam and Speed - The Great Western Railway painted
(1844).
His early works, such as Tintern Abbey (1795), stayed true to the
traditions of English landscape. However, in Hannibal Crossing the Alps
(1812), an emphasis on the destructive power of nature had already come into
play. His distinctive style of painting, in which he used watercolour
technique with oil paints, created lightness, fluency, and ephemeral
atmospheric effects. (Piper 321)
One popular story about Turner, though it likely has little basis in
reality, states that he even had himself "tied to the mast of a ship in order
to experience the drama" of the elements during a storm at sea.[8]
In his later years he used oils ever more transparently, and turned to an
evocation of almost pure light by use of shimmering colour. A prime example of
his mature style can be seen in Rain, Steam and Speed - The Great Western
Railway, where the objects are barely recognizable. The intensity of hue and
interest in evanescent light not only placed Turner's work in the vanguard of
English painting, but later exerted an influence upon art in France, as well;
the Impressionists, particularly Claude Monet, carefully studied his
techniques.
It has been suggested[who?] that the high levels of ash in the atmosphere
during the 1816 "Year Without a Summer," which led to unusually spectacular
sunsets during this period, were an inspiration for some of Turner's work.
John Ruskin says in his "Notes" on Turner in March 1878, that an early patron,
Dr Thomas Monro, the Principal Physician of Bedlam, was a significant
influence on Turner's style:
His true master was Dr Monro; to the practical teaching of that first patron
and the wise simplicity of method of watercolour study, in which he was
disciplined by him and companioned by Giston, the healthy and constant
development of the greater power is primarily to be attributed; the
greatness of the power itself, it is impossible to over-estimate.
The first American to buy a Turner painting was James Lenox of New York
City, a private collector. Lenox wished to own a Turner and in 1845 bought one
unseen through an intermediary, his friend C. R. Leslie. From among the
paintings Turner had on hand and was willing to sell for £500, Leslie selected
and shipped the 1832 atmospheric seascape Staffa, Fingal's Cave.[9] Worried
about the painting's reception by Lenox, who knew Turner's work only through
his etchings, Leslie wrote Lenox that the quality of Staffa, "a most poetic
picture of a steam boat" would become apparent in time. Upon receiving the
painting Lenox was baffled, and "greatly disappointed" by what he called the
painting's "indistinctness". When Leslie was forced to relay this opinion to
Turner, Turner said "You should tell Mr. Lenox that indistinctness is my
fault." Staffa, Fingal's Cave is currently owned by the Yale Center for
British Art, New Haven, Connecticut.
Legacy
J.M.W. Turner, Calais Pier
Turner left a small fortune which he hoped would be used to support what he
called "decayed artists". Part of the money went to the Royal Academy of Arts,
which does not now use it for this purpose, though occasionally it awards
students the Turner Medal. His collection of finished paintings was bequeathed
to the British nation, and he intended that a special gallery would be built
to house them. This did not come to pass owing to a failure to agree on a
site, and then to the parsimony of British governments. Twenty-two years after
his death, the British Parliament passed an Act allowing his paintings to be
lent to museums outside London, and so began the process of scattering the
pictures which Turner had wanted to be kept together. In 1910 the main part of
the Turner Bequest, which includes unfinished paintings and drawings, was
rehoused in the Duveen Turner Wing at the Tate Gallery. In 1987 a new wing of
the Tate, the Clore Gallery, was opened specifically to house the Turner
bequest, though some of the most important paintings in it remain in the
National Gallery in contravention of Turner's condition that the finished
pictures be kept and shown together.
In 1974, the Turner Museum was founded in the USA by Douglass Montrose-Graem
to house his collection of Turner prints.
A prestigious annual art award, the Turner Prize, created in 1984, was named
in Turner's honour, but has become increasingly controversial, having promoted
art which has no apparent connection with Turner's. Twenty years later the
more modest Winsor & Newton Turner Watercolour Award was founded.
A major exhibition, "Turner's Britain", with material, (including The Fighting
Temeraire) on loan from around the globe, was held at Birmingham Museum & Art
Gallery from 7 November 2003 to 8 February 2004.
In 2005, Turner's The Fighting Temeraire was voted Britain's "greatest
painting" in a public poll organised by the BBC.
In October 2005 Professor Harold Livermore, its owner for 60 years, gave
Sandycombe Lodge, the villa at Twickenham which Turner designed and built for
himself, to the Sandycombe Lodge Trust to be preserved as a monument to the
artist. In 2006 he additionally gave some land to the Trust which had been
part of Turner's domaine. The organisation The Friends of Turner's House was
formed in 2004 to support it.
In April 2006, Christie's New York auctioned Giudecca, La Donna Della Salute
and San Giorgio, a view of Venice exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1841, for
US$35.8 million, setting a new record for a Turner. The New York Times stated
that according to two sources who had requested anonymity the buyer was casino
magnate Stephen Wynn.
In 2006, Turner's Glaucus and Scylla (1840) was returned by Kimbell Art
Museum to the heirs of John and Anna Jaffe after a Holocaust Claim was
made.[12] The painting was repurchased by the Kimbell for $5.7 million at a
sale by Christie's in April 2007.
Between 1 October 2007 and 21 September 2008, the first major exhibit of
Turner's works in the United States in over forty years came to the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the National Gallery of Art, Washington,
and the Dallas Museum of Art. It included over 140 paintings, more than half
of which were from the Tate.
Selected
works
1799 - Warkworth Castle, Northumberland - Thunder Storm Approaching at
Sun-Set, oil on canvas - Victoria and Albert Museum, London
1806 - The Battle of Trafalgar, as Seen from the Mizen Starboard Shrouds of
the Victory, oil on canvas - Tate Gallery, London
1812 - Snow Storm: Hannibal and His Army Crossing the Alps, oil on canvas,
Tate Gallery, London
1817 - Eruption of Vesuvius, oil on canvas, Yale Center for British Art, New
Haven, CT
1822 - The Battle of Trafalgar, oil on canvas, National Maritime Museum,
Greenwich, London
1829 - Ulysses Deriding Polyphemus, oil on canvas, National Gallery, London
1835 - The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons, oil on canvas,
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia
1835 - The Grand Canal, Venice, oil on canvas, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New
York
1838 - The Fighting Temeraire Tugged to Her Last Berth to Be Broken up, oil on
canvas, National Gallery, London
1840 - Slave Ship (Slavers Throwing Overboard the Dead and Dying, Typhoon
Coming On), oil on canvas, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
1840 - Glaucus and Scylla, oil on canvas, Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, TX
1840 - Rockets and Blue Lights (Close at Hand) to Warn Steamboats of Shoal
Water, oil on canvas, Clark Art Museum, Williamstown, MA
1844 - Rain, Steam and Speed - The Great Western Railway, oil on canvas,
National Gallery, London
Date unknown - Shrimpers, Lyme Regis, oil on board, National Trust for England
and Wales, Nunnington Hall, North Yorkshire, UK