dinsdag 12 mei 2020

Turner: Horloge

Zie ets van JDB in Rouen.





Turner

Turner worked gouache and watercolour paints over this ink drawing to depict the fourteenth-century Grand Horloge timepiece at Rouen with the cathedral rising behind. Particular attention has been paid to capturing the busy life of the street and the heavily ornamented urban architecture by the application of dense, sketchy pen marks and irregular patches of blue and ochre paint. This is one of seven colour studies of Rouen which Turner worked up around this date with a view to potential publication; for a list of these, see the entry for Tate D24655 (Turner Bequest CCLIX 90). Art historian Ian Warrell has identified two pencil sketches in the earlier Dieppe, Rouen and Paris sketchbook as sources for the present study: see Tate D24518 (Turner Bequest CCLVIII 10) and Tate D24520 (Turner Bequest CCLVIII 11).1 For the finished watercolours of Rouen in the Turner Bequest, see Tate D24672–D24674 (Turner Bequest CCLIX 107–109). All this activity culminated in three engravings in the 1834 volume of Turner’s Annual Tour: Wanderings by the Loire and Seine (1833–5; later reissued as Rivers of France); see Tate impressions T05604, T05605, T05607.

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