February 23, 2017 to May
14, 2017
Joseph Mallord William
Turner (1775–1851), nineteenth-century Britain’s greatest land- and seascape
artist, depicted ports throughout his career, both in monumental oil paintings
and in watercolors. An insatiable traveler and an artist with a deep fascination
with light, topography, and local traditions, as well as with classical
antiquity, Turner brought an innovative approach to the depiction of both
modern and ancient ports. In the spring of 2017, The Frick Collection presents
Turner’s Modern and Ancient Ports: Passages through Time, a major exhibition
that brings together some thirty-five works from the 1810s through the late
1830s in oil, watercolor, and graphite that capture contemporary cities in
England, France, and Germany, as well as imagined scenes set in the ancient
world. It will unite for the first time the museum’s two paintings of Dieppe
and Cologne with a closely related, yet unfinished, work from Tate Britain that
depicts the modern harbor of Brest. The exhibition is organized by Susan Grace
Galassi, Senior Curator at The Frick Collection; leading Turner scholar Ian
Warrell; and Joanna Sheers Seidenstein, the Frick’s Anne L. Poulet Curatorial
Fellow. It is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue, published in
association with Yale University Press.
The springboard for this
show is a pair of monumental paintings by Turner in The Frick Collection
acquired by the museum’s founder over a century ago — the Harbor of Dieppe of
1825 and Cologne, The Arrival of a Packet-Boat: Evening of 1826. Due to travel
restrictions, however, they have never before been part of an exhibition
outside of the Frick. While they are widely recognized as significant turning
points in the artist’s career, a focused examination of these works is long
overdue and will provide an ideal occasion to consider afresh one of the
central motifs of Turner’s art. This exhibition will also unite for the first
time Dieppe and Cologne with a closely related, yet unfinished, work from Tate
that depicts the modern harbor of Brest. As supported by recent technical
analysis, The Harbor of Brest was likely intended to form a series of
monumental European ports with the two Frick paintings. This trio of canvases —
all made at a time when Turner was experimenting with the representation of
light — offers a fascinating glimpse into his technique as well as the everyday
life of major European ports of distinctly different regions. Displayed
alongside these paintings will be two sketchbooks filled with drawings made on
site by Turner during his travels to the Continent, the material from which he
later developed his canvases.
The exhibition also
features three oil paintings from the later 1820s and 1830s in which Turner
continues to explore the motif of the port, now as a setting for narrative
scenes drawn from classical history: Regulus (London, Tate Britain); Ancient
Italy: Ovid Banished from Rome (private collection); and Ancient Rome:
Agrippina Landing with the Ashes of Germanicus (London, Tate Britain). These
evocations of ancient Rome and Carthage share with the artist’s modern ports
their compositional format — a central expanse of water, with land on either
side, beneath a luminous sky — and their array of quotidian detail — the same
variety of mundane objects and figures at work and at leisure that appear in
the Harbor of Dieppe and Cologne — now evoking the daily life of a long bygone
era. Into these light-filled and richly detailed scenes, Turner integrates his
narrative content — momentous scenes of arrival and departure that look forward
and back. The close relationship of Turner’s modern and ancient ports reveals
the extent to which observation and imagination overlap in his process.
Central to the exhibition
are a selection of some two-dozen of Turner’s watercolors from these same
years, often made for series of prints for a bourgeoning class of leisure
travelers in the post-Napoleonic era. Representing port towns and cities along
the various waterways of the British Isles and Continental Europe, these
dazzling small-scale works share with the grand harbors of the 1820s their
picturesque subject matter and formal qualities of composition and color. The
breathtaking effects of light and color that Turner achieved in watercolor, in
fact, informed his work on canvas, resulting in a freer approach to his use of
materials and painting technique, as seen in the Frick pictures and in the
ancient scenes.
http://www.frick.org/exhibitions/turner
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