Turner Exhibition Brings Splash of Colour In Depths of Winter

Submitted by edg on Fri, 24 Dec '10 6.42am

Each New Year brings a welcome return of watercolours by Romantic landscape painter J M W Turner (1775–1851) to the National Gallery Complex.

The thirty-eight works on display were bequeathed in 1900 by philanthropist Henry Vaughan, a London art collector who amassed an outstanding group of watercolours by the British artist. A perennial favourite in the Gallery’s exhibition calendar, the display runs throughout January, providing a welcome diversion during the darkest month of the year.

Vaughan acquired examples from every period of the artist’s career, from early wash drawings of the 1790s, to colourful and atmospheric watercolour sketches of continental Europe, executed in the 1830s and 1840s.

For Turner, as for many artists and writers at the end of the eighteenth century, the vastness and violence of nature inspired a sense of awe, or even a terror, which was described as an experience of the ‘Sublime’.

It was the opportunity to express these emotions through landscape painting which attracted Turner repeatedly to the mountains of Britain and the Continent, and to paint the savage elemental forces seen in avalanches, storms and mountainous seas. These experiences can be seen in works such as Loch Coruisk, Skye which was painted after one of the artist’s trips to the Scottish Highlands, in 1831, and Sion, Capital of the Canton Valais, which was created following one of his many journeys to the Swiss Alps.

Turner also visited Venice on three occasions, in 1819, 1833 and 1840, and the Vaughan Bequest features six of the artist’s impressionist views of the city.

In The Piazzetta, Venice, one of Turner’s most dramatic Venetian studies, a bolt of lightening illuminates the Doge’s Palace and St. Mark’s Basilica. Turner created such effects by scratching away to reveal the paper once he had painted on it: he sometimes used his thumbnail, which he is reputed to have grown like an ‘eagle-claw’, for such a purpose.

Other works, such as The Grand Canal by the Salute, Venice, and The Sun of Venice, which were made in the city in 1840, demonstrate Turner’s mastery of atmospheric lighting effects. In these watercolours, light itself seems to have become the main subject.

For much of his career, Turner was engaged in commissions to provide illustrations for books, and many of his trips were undertaken with a specific publishing project in mind. The artist’s prolific activities as an illustrator are represented here by a number of images, including scenes painted for Robert Cadell’s collected editions of the Poetical and Prose Works of Sir Walter Scott.

In his will Henry Vaughan stipulated that the Turner watercolours must be shown "all at one time free of charge during the month of January". Vaughan did not want the watercolours to be subjected to permanent display, since continual exposure to light would result in their fading. January is when daylight is at its weakest.

Turner In January: The Vaughan Bequest is at the National Gallery Complex, 1-31 January.

The Gallery is open on 1 January from 12 noon until 5 pm; from 2 January opening hours revert to normal: Monday to Sunday 10 am – 5 pm, Thursday 10 am –7 pm.

Admission is free.

National Galleries exhibitions 2011