After London and Before Madrid, the Grand Palais in Paris Welcomes Turner and the Masters
- Art Listings
- News
- Archive
- After London and Before Madrid, the Grand Palais in Paris Welcomes Turner and the Masters
The British landscapist J.M.W. Turner (1775-1851) was highly unusual in that he used elements from old Masters and his contemporaries throughout his lengthy career. This often anxious, pernickety, deliberately competitive but always fertile exchange was an integral part of his work as a painter. Turner emerged in the mid-1790s as a particularly gifted and ambitious watercolourist, rivalling his greatest contemporaries (including his friend Thomas Girton (1775-1802)) but also eager to better his painting technique by studying the Welsh landscapist Richard Wilson (1713-1782) and visiting private collections. In the absence of museums, the early British collections gave him access to the old masters he sought to equal.
As a young man he was moved to tears by one of Claude Lorrain’s paintings (1600-1682), despairing that he would ever do as well. But his work did not go unnoticed and he exhibited at the Royal Academy at an early age, readily emulating contemporary painters and watercolourists. Driven by a powerful ambition, he broadened his fields of investigation: topographic watercolours, seascapes, classical landscapes, fantastic landscapes, genre scenes and history paintings. This variety reflects the wide range of references he had accumulated.
At first he loyally applied the methods of the budding English watercolour tradition. When he turned to oil painting, he took inspiration from the Dutch landscape painters in the Rembrandt tradition, using a narrow, sombre colour range. The stimulating and already classical example of his great predecessor Richard Wilson led him, towards the turn of the century, to tackle classical landscapes of broader scope and brighter colours. At the same time he studied the art of the great landscape painters working in Italy in the 17th century: Salvatore Rosa (1615-1673) and Nicolas Poussin (1596-1665). Far from producing pastiches of these great models, Turner let powerful, turbulent energy upset the perfection of their harmonious compositions and came close to launching the masterly British tradition of fantastic landscapes with The Deluge (1805, Tate) directly inspired by the painting of the same name by Nicolas Poussin (1664, Louvre). The two canvases will be shown side-by-side in the exhibition. Turner’s few sallies into history painting (The Holy Family, 1803, Queen’s collection, or Venus and Adonis: Adonis departing for the chase circa 1805, private collection) used richer, deeper colours influenced by Titian (circa 1490-1576) (Virgin with a Rabbit circa 1530, Louvre) and Claude Lorrain. His small figure paintings rival with lesser known masters from the period such as Watteau (1684-1721) (What you will!, 1822, Williamstown, Clark Institute) or his most famous rivals such David Wilkie (1785-1841). The fruitful dialogue with the landscape artists of the following generation, Bonington (1802-1828) (French Coast with Fishermen 1826, Tate) and Constable (1776-1837) (The opening of Waterloo Bridge, 1829, Tate) amplified the freedom of Turner’s brushwork and tone (Calais Sands, Low Water, Poissards Collecting Bait, 1830, Bury Art Gallery or Beached Boat circa 1828, Tate). After 1820, his discovery of Venice (Venice from the Porch of the Madonna della Salute, 1835, New York, Metropolitan Museum) and a more intensive study of Claude Lorrain led to more sophisticated colour and a mastery of multiplane, vaporous compositions (Palestrina Composition, 1828, Tate). As Turner himself wished, the exhibition will compare one of his most complex masterpieces, The Decline of the Carthaginian Empire (1817, Tate) with two of Claude Lorrain’s magnificent visions which inspired it: Sunset at sea (Louvre, 1639) and Le Débarquement de Cléopâtre à Tarse (Louvre)
By purposely engaging with other painters, Turner developed his incredible freedom to paint which reached its apogee in the last decade of his career (Snow Storm, Steam-Boat Off a Harbour’s Mouth, 1842, London, Tate).
“Turner and the Masters” is an illustrated demonstration of the way Turner constructed his remarkable vision throughout his long career. It brings together a hundred paintings and graphic works (studies, engravings) from major British and American collections, the Louvre, the Prado and the Tate Britain.
More news
![]() |
Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York, will hold an exhibition of new work by Dutch artist Jacco Olivier. This is the artist's third solo show at the gallery.
24 February '10
|
![]() |
Radical, imaginative and avant garde, Henry Moore (1898-1986) was one of Britain’s top artists. A major exhibition at Tate Britain will be put together by ‘Henry Moore’, an organization between Tate Britain and the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto. Henry Moore hopes the exhibition will re-assert his position at the forefront of progressive twentieth-century sculpture, bringing together the most comprehensive selection of his works for a generation. Henry Moore will present over 150 works which include stone sculptures, wood carvings, bronzes and drawings.
24 February '10
|
![]() |
Staff at Witte de With, Center for Contemporary Art, Rotterdam, are baffled by the mystery that unfolded yesterday, when an artwork measuring 30 x 11m disappeared from its façade.
20 February '10
|
![]() |
František Kupka took painting to its vital elements: the plane, line and dot. During his career he developed a highly distinctive and exceptional style that still defies any attempt to classify it due to its focus on science, philosophy and mysticism. In addition, Kupka’s work suggests new approaches to interpreting the birth and evolution of modern art.
17 February '10
|
![]() |
Discover how Cézanne transformed American art at the beginning of the 20th century. Cézanne and American Modernism, on view February 16 - May 23, 2010, brings together 16 of the French master's paintings and watercolors with more than 80 works by 33 American artists, including Marsden Hartley, Maurice Prendergast, Alfred Stieglitz, and Man Ray. Along with the Baltimore Museum of Art’s two great Cézanne paintings, Mont Sainte-Victoire Seen from the Bibémus Quarry and Bathers, the exhibition showcases outstanding works from public and private collections throughout the U.S., including The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Art Institute of Chicago, and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. This nationally traveling exhibition is co-organized by the Montclair Art Museum and The Baltimore Museum of Art. It is a special ticketed event that includes complimentary audio tours for both adults and children.
17 February '10
|
![]() |
Like many of the memorable, two sided characters he has played, one of the best actors of all time, Sir Anthony Hopkins, is revealing another side to himself in his beautiful, recently completed artwork. This superb art collection will be exhibited in the UK at Gallery 27, Cork St, London 16th to 20th February, and in The Dome, Edinburgh 2nd to 6th March.
17 February '10
|
![]() |
Nevermore, which is on display at The Courtauld Gallery London, was chosen by artist and broadcaster Matthew Collings, and was selected from a list of five works chosen by well known public figures.
17 February '10
|
![]() |
16 February '10
|
![]() |
An envelope seen in a Van Gogh painting provides a clue that could help to explain why the artist cut his ear. The envelope, in Still Life: Drawing Board with Onions, 1889, is addressed to Vincent from his brother Theo. Up to now, no one has ever asked the question whether the artist was illustrating a specific letter.
16 February '10
|
![]() |
After the success of Sotheby’s inaugural auction of Turkish Contemporary Art in March 2009, which realised a total of £1.3 million and attracted bidders and buyers from across the globe, Sotheby’s London announced that it will stage its second sale in this collecting category, on Thursday, 15 April, 2010. This auction will present new and existing collectors with the opportunity to acquire important pieces from this exciting and expanding area of the art market by both modern masters and contemporary artists of Turkish origin.
16 February '10
|
![]() |
Zurich's Kunsthaus museum will offer the first public glimpse of a Swiss art collection that has been under lock and key since thieves stole its most-prized painting in a $160 million heist two years ago.
16 February '10
|
![]() |
Banksy, the secretive British artist whose work has appeared on city streets around the world, said on Sunday he hoped his documentary film "Exit Through The Gift Shop" will raise the standing of urban art
16 February '10
|
![]() |
Between 1618 and 1621, two supposedly identical works entitled St Jerome with an Angel were produced in Van Dyck’s Antwerp studio; one painting now belongs to the Nationalmuseum in Stockholm and the other is on long-term loan to the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam. Now after almost 40 years of debate, new research has finally answered the question as to which came first.
16 February '10
|
![]() |
After Paris, where it earned both public and critical acclaim, the exhibition "Tiffany Glass: A Passion for Colour" will be shown in Montreal from February 12 to May 2, 2010. It is the first exhibition of such quality on one of the most famous American designers, Louis C. Tiffany (1848-1933), to be presented in Canada. Developed and produced by the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, it will highlight Tiffany’s outstanding contribution to the design and technology of glass, gave him an international reputation. In an exhibition space twice as large as the one in Paris, some 180 works have been brought together, including a series of magnificent large-scale ecclesiastical stained glass windows and secular stained glass, magnificent blown-glass vases and lamps with shapes and decoration inspired by nature, some examples of paintings and mosaics, as well as original designs from the Tiffany Studios and period photographs. The many prestigious institutions that have lent important works include the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Chrysler Museum of Art, the State Hermitage Museum, the Musée des arts décoratifs de Paris and the Musée d’Orsay, Paris.
16 February '10
|
![]() |
A new book and an exhibition at Windsor Castle in Berkshire, England, will celebrate the work of Marcus Adams, who devoted 50 years to photographing children, particularly royal children. The son of the photographer Walton Adams, Marcus Adams created an exceptional record of two generations of the royal children between 1926 and 1956. He presented a new, relaxed image of royalty, overturning the long tradition of formal royal portraiture. Vintage prints from almost all the royal sittings are among the more than 150 photographs included in the book and the 56 shown in the exhibition, many from the personal collection of Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother. Of his long relationship with the Royal Family, Marcus Adams said, ‘I have had more joy from that family than from any. They are full of fun.’
16 February '10
|
![]() |
The Royal Museum of Fine Arts in Antwerp (KMSKA), with financial support from the Getty Foundation, is carrying out in depth scientific research into its Rubens collection. Every year, selected interim findings are shown to the public as part of a series entitled 'Rubens Revealed'. The most recent research and publication offer an unprecedented insight into Rubens’s expert painting technique.
16 February '10
|
![]() |
The National Cowgirl Museum, Forth Worth, Texas, presents the never before seen Georgia O’Keeffe and the Faraway: Nature and Image exhibition. This will be shown in Fort Worth, Texas, from February 12th through to September 6th. The exhibition, a partnership between the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame and the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa Fe will look at the relationship that artist and Crowned Cowgirl Hall of Fame Honoree, O’Keeffe, had with nature through her camping experiences and artifacts.
16 February '10
|
![]() |
Performance art is known for sometimes dealing with intimate acts. It is widely known that artist Andrea Fraser, for example, famously had sex with a collector who paid $20,000 to participate in a 60–minute, videotaped act. The newest idea recently however, is marriage as performance art. Brian Feldman, a performance art artist, says he plans to use one of humanity’s most personal, sacred bonds — marriage — as a vehicle for his latest piece.
16 February '10
|
























