The EY Exhibition: Late Turner – Painting Set Free is the first exhibition devoted to the extraordinary work J.M.W. Turner created between 1835 and his death in 1851.
Bringing together spectacular works from the UK and
abroad, this exhibition celebrates Turner’s astonishing creative flowering in
these later years when he produced many of his finest pictures but was also
controversial and unjustly misunderstood.
Highlights of the exhibition include such important
pictures as Ancient Rome; Agrippina Landing with
the Ashes of Germanicus and Modern Rome – Campo Vaccino, rarely reunited
since first exhibited together in 1839; The
Wreck Buoy 1849; and magnificent watercolours like Heidelberg: Sunset c.1840 and
the seldom-seen Bamburgh Castle, Northumberland c.1837.
The show also brings together major series of works
including a group of unusual square pictures, casting a light on Turner’s
innovative techniques. Newly identified watercolours of a fire at the Tower of
London in 1841 are shown with the spectacular painting Burning of the Houses of
Lords and Commons 1835 and the exhibition concludes with Turner’s last exhibited
pictures from 1850, depicting the classical lovers Dido and Aeneas. It is a
panoramic survey of a bountiful and significant period of exceptional energy
and vigour, maintained despite failing health.
By taking a fresh look at Turner’s late works, the exhibition
sheds new light on his life and art. Challenging the myths, assumptions and
interpretations that have grown around his later work, it reveals a painter as
distinguished by the broad scope of his knowledge and imagination as he was by
his radical and exploratory techniques, processes and use of materials. As much
as he brought renewed energy to the exploration of the social, technological
and scientific developments of modern life, in such icons of the machine age as
Rain, Steam, and Speed – The Great
Western Railway 1844, he remained as deeply engaged with the
religious, historical or mythological themes that linked him to the cultural
traditions of his era.
John Ruskin’s description of Turner as ‘the greatest of the
age’ is brought to life amongst the many large-scale oil paintings, drawings,
prints and watercolours on display at The
EY
Exhibition: Late Turner – Painting Set Free, an unmissable
exhibition that will redefine ideas of one of Britain’s greatest and
best-loved painters.
Curated by Sam Smiles, Professor of Art History and Visual
Culture, Exeter University, with David Blayney Brown, Manton Curator of British
Art 1790–1850, Tate Britain and Amy Concannon, Assistant Curator 1790–1850,
Tate Britain.
http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/exhibition/ey-exhibition-late-turner-painting-set-free
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