Painting. World artists. John Constable (1776-1837)
The mainstream of English painting in the first half of
the nineteenth century was landscape. Constable and
Turner, the greatest of the landscapists, approached
nature with excitement. At that time nature was
beginning to be swallowed up by the expanding cities of
the Industrial Revolution.
John Constable, the son of a miller on the River Stour
in Suffolk, honoured all that was natural and
traditional, including the age-old occupation of farmer,
miller, and carpenter, close to the land whose fruits
and forces they turned to human use. He loved the poetic
landscapes of Gainsborough, he studied the constructed
compositions of the Baroque, he admired Ruisdael's
skies. Rebelling against the brown tonality then
fashionable in landscape painting - actually the result
of discoloured varnish darkening the Old Masters – he
supplemented his observations of nature with a study of
the vivacity of Rubens's colour and brushwork.
As early as 1802, Constable started to record the
fleeing aspects of the sky in the rapid oil sketches
made outdoors. "It will be difficult to name a class of
landscape in which sky is not the keynote, the standard
of scale, and the chief organ of sentiment," he wrote.
Constable systematically studied cloud formation in
1821-22. These studies show his surrender to the forces
of nature, a passionate self-identification with
sunlight, wind, and moisture.
Constable never left England and made dutiful sketching
tours through regions of acknowledged scenic beauty. His
superb The Hay Wain, of 1821, sums up his ideals and his
achievements. Composed as if accidentally - though on
the basis of many preliminary outdoor studies - the
picture, painted in the studio, shows Constable's
beloved Stour with its trees, a mill, and distant
fields. In his orchestra of natural colour the solo
instrument and conductor at once is the sky. The clouds
sweep by, full of light and colour, and their shadows
and the sunlight spot the field with green and gold. As
the stream ripples, it mirrors now the trees, now the
sky. The trees are made up of many shades of green and
patches of light reflect from their foliage. These white
highlights were called "Constable's snow". The Hay Wain
was triumphantly exhibited at the Salon of 1824, where
Constable's broken colour and free brushwork set in
motion a new current in French landscape art, which
later culminated in the Impressionist movement.
In 1829 Constable became member of the Royal Academy.
In later life, after the death of his wife, Constable
entered a period of depression in which his passionate
communion with nature reached a pitch of semi-mystical
intensity. One of his late pictures is Stroke-by-Nayland,
of 1836-37, a large canvas in which the distant church
tower, the wagon, the plough, the horses, and the boy
looking over the gate are instruments on which light
plays. The symphonic breadth, of the picture, and its
crushing chords of colour painted in a rapid technique,
bring to the finished painting the immediacy of the
colour sketch. Such pictures are equalled in earlier art
only by certain landscape backgrounds in Titian or by
the mythical reveries of the late Rembrandt.
Literature: Book "Western European
art" A.P. Minyar-Belorucheva |