Painting. World artists. Joseph Mallord William Turner
(1775-1851)
Joseph Mallord William Turner was a Londoner. He had no
mystical attachment to nature. He made frequent trips
throughout the Continent, especially Germany,
Switzerland and Italy, revelling in mountain landscapes,
gorgeous cities (especially Venice), and the most
extreme effects of storms, fires and sunsets. Once he
even had himself tied to a mast during a storm at sea so
that he could experience the full force of the wind,
waves, and clouds swirling about him. Turner made
beautiful and accurate colour notes on the spot in
water-colour, and painted his pictures in the studio, in
secrecy, living under an assumed name and accepting no
pupils. He was the first to abandon pale brown in favour
of white, against which his brilliant colour effects
could sing with perfect clarity.
Turner often painted historical subjects, usually those
of Delacroix, involving violence as well as shipwrecks
and conflagrations, in which the individual figures
appear as scarcely more than spots in a seething tide of
humanity. He liked to accompany the labels with
quotations from poetry, often his own. Nonetheless, at
his death a great many unfinished canvases were found
that had no identifiable subject or representation at
all. Turner really enjoyed and painted the pure
movement of masses of colour - a kind of colour music,
strikingly relevant to Abstract Expressionism of the
1950s. Shortly before the opening of an exhibition at
the Royal Academy, the ageing Turner, would send
unfinished works, and on varnishing day paint in the
details to make the pictures exhibitable to a
nineteenth-century public.
The Slave Ship, of 1840, represents an incident common
in the days of slavery, when entire human cargoes were
thrown into the sea, either because of epidemics or to
avoid arrest. The ship itself, the occasional figures,
and the fish feasting on the corpses in the foreground
were obviously painted at great speed only after the
real work, the movement of fiery waves of red, brown,
gold, and cream, had been brought into completion.
Rain, Stream and Speed, of 1844, is one of the first
paintings of a railway train, and its Romantic
idealisation of "progress" - man conquering nature by
utilising its force. The train with its light carriages
moving across the high bridge is enough of a subject
already, but Turner lifts it to an almost unearthly
realm in which insubstantial forces play through endless
space. The veils of blue and gold are real subjects of
the picture. Turner's heightened and liberated colour
sense provided a revelation to those Impressionists
(especially Monet) who took refuge in London in 1870.
Literature: Book "Western European
art" A.P. Minyar-Belorucheva |