Turner. Eric Shanes
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Название: Turner

Автор: Eric Shanes

Издательство: Parkstone International Publishing

Жанр: Иностранные языки

Серия: Mega Square

isbn: 978-1-78160-829-6

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ or even that he wanted to be some kind of abstractionist, both of which notions are untrue.

      Folly Bridge and Bacon’s Tower, Oxford

      1787

      pen and ink with watercolour, 30.8 × 43.2 cm

      Turner Bequest, Tate Britain, London

      The work is a transcription of an image made for The Oxford

      Almanack by Michael Angelo Rooker

      Instead, that continuity demonstrates how single-mindedly Turner pursued his early goals, and how magnificently he finally attained them. To trace those aims and their achievement by means of a selected number of works, as well as briefly to recount the artist’s life, is the underlying purpose of this book.

      Joseph Mallord William Turner was born at 21 Maiden Lane, Covent Garden, London, sometime in late April or early May 1775. (The artist himself liked to claim that he was born on 23 April which is both our national day, St George’s Day, and William Shakespeare’s birthday, although no verification of that claim has ever been found.) His father, William, was a wig-maker who had taken to cutting hair after wigs began to go out of fashion in the 1770s.

      Harewood House from the South-East

      1798

      pencil and watercolour, 47.4 × 64.5 cm

      Trustees of The Harewood House Trust

      We know little about Turner’s mother, Mary (born Marshall), other than that she was mentally unbalanced, and that her instability was exacerbated by the fatal illness of Turner’s younger sister, who died in 1786. Because of the stresses put upon the family by these afflictions, in 1785 Turner was sent to stay with an uncle in Brentford, a small market town to the west of London. It was here he first went to school. Brentford was the county town of Middlesex, and had a long history of political radicalism, which may have surfaced much later in Turner’s work. But more importantly, the surroundings of the town – the rural stretches of the Thames downriver to Chelsea, and the countryside upriver to Windsor and beyond – must have struck the boy as Arcadian (especially after the squalid surroundings of Covent Garden), and done much to form his later visions of an ideal world.

      The Archbishop’s Palace, Lambeth

      RA 1790

      watercolour, 26.3 × 37.8 cm

      Indianapolis, Museum of Art, Indianapolis,

      Indiana, U. S.A

      By 1786 Turner was attending school in Margate, a small holiday resort on the Thames estuary far to the east of London. Some drawings from this stay have survived and they are remarkably precocious, especially in their grasp of the rudiments of perspective. His formal schooling apparently completed, by the late 1780s Turner was back in London and working under various architects or architectural topographers. They included Thomas Malton, Jr, whose influence on his work is discernible around this time.

      After Turner had spent a term as a probationer at the Royal Academy Schools, on 11 December 1789 the first President of the Royal Academy, Sir Joshua Reynolds (1723–92), personally interviewed and admitted him to the institution. The Royal Academy Schools were then the only regular art training establishment in Britain.

      Interior of King John’s Palace, Eltham

      c. 1791

      watercolour, 33.2 × 27 cm

      Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut

      Painting was not taught there – it would only appear on the curriculum in 1816 – and students merely learned to draw, initially from plaster casts of antique statuary and then, when deemed good enough, from the nude. It took the youth about two and a half years to make the move. Amongst the Visitors or teachers in the life class were History painters such as James Barry RA and Henry Fuseli RA whose lofty artistic aspirations would soon rub off on the young Turner.

      Naturally, as Turner lived in the days before student grants, he had to earn his keep from the beginning. In 1790 he exhibited in a Royal Academy Exhibition for the first time, and with a few exceptions he went on participating in those annual displays of contemporary art until 1850.

      The Pantheon, the Morning after the Fire

      RA 1792

      watercolour, 39.5 × 51.5 cm

      Turner Bequest, Tate Britain, London

      In that era the Royal Academy only mounted one exhibition a year, and consequently the show enjoyed far more impact than it does today, swamped as it now is by innumerable rivals (some of the best of which are mounted by the Royal Academy itself). Turner quickly provoked highly favourable responses to his vivacious and inventive offerings. In 1791 he briefly supplemented his income by working as a scene painter at the Pantheon Opera House in Oxford Street. This contact with the theatre bore long-term dividends by demonstrating that the covering of large areas of canvas held no terrors, that light could be used dramatically and that the stage positionings of actors and props could usefully be carried over to the staffing of images. Thus in his mature works Turner would often place his figures and/or objects in downstage left, centre and right locations when he especially wanted us to notice them.

      Tom Tower, Christ Church, Oxford

      1792

      watercolour, 27.2 × 21.5 cm

      Turner Bequest, Tate Britain, London

      At the 1792 Royal Academy Exhibition Turner also received a lesson that would eventually move his art into dimensions of light and colour previously unknown to painting. He was especially struck by a watercolour, Battle Abbey, by Michael Angelo Rooker ARA (1746–1801), and copied it twice in watercolour (the Rooker is today in the Royal Academy collection, London, while both of Turner’s copies reside in the Turner Bequest). Rooker was unusually adept in minutely differentiating the tones of masonry (tone being the range of a given colour from light to dark). The exceptionally rich spectrum of tones Rooker had deployed in his Battle Abbey demonstrated something vital to Turner. He emulated Rooker’s multiplicity of tones not only in his two copies but also in many elaborate drawings made later in 1792. Very soon the young artist attained the ability to differentiate tones with even more subtlety than the master he emulated.

      St Anselm’s Chapel, with part of Thomas-à-Becket’s Crown Canterbury Cathedral

      RA 1794

      watercolour, 51.7 × 37.4 cm

      Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester, U.K

      The СКАЧАТЬ