Turner's 'Blue Rigi' Sells For GBP 5.832M, A Record

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Turner's 'Blue Rigi' Sells For GBP 5.832M, A Record
Joseph Mallord William Turner, R.A. (1775-1851), The Blue Rigi: Lake of Lucerne, Sunrise. Copyright: © Christie's Images Limited.



LONDON, ENGLAND.- An exceptional work by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. (1775-1851), the most important watercolor to appear at auction for over 50 years and one of the most impressive ever painted by the artist, led Christie’s sale of British Art on Paper on 5 June 2006 selling for a record for a British watercolor for £5.832 million.

The Blue Rigi is a remarkable work of art by the universally acknowledged master of watercolour and the ‘precursor of Impressionism’ which could become the most expensive British watercolour ever sold at auction when it is offered during British Art Week at Christie’s in June. It is expected to realise in excess of £2 million.

Noël Annesley, Honorary Chairman of Christie’s, says, ‘This exceptional watercolour marks the culmination of Turner’s achievement in the medium that he made his own, and its appearance at auction offers a special opportunity for both museums and private collectors. In a technique of almost unimaginable subtlety Turner expresses his lifelong preoccupation with the effects of light, shade and atmosphere.’

The Blue Rigi: Lake of Lucerne, Sunrise is an extraordinary study in light, colour and texture. The watercolour depicts the expansive calm of sunrise interrupted by sudden movement as a gunshot spurs a pair of dogs to leap from a small boat in the foreground towards a group of startled ducks. Through his masterful control of light and shade, the artist evokes a tranquil yet expectant atmosphere, with the morning mist lingering and seemingly draping the Rigi.

Between 1841 and 1844 Turner undertook annual tours to Switzerland where he was inspired by the dramatic scenery around Lake Lucerne and the Rigi Mountain rising from the eastern shore. In 1842, on his return from Switzerland, Turner produced four ‘exemplary’ and highly finished watercolours, including The Blue Rigi, and went with them to his agent, Thomas Griffith, in order to secure further commissions. John Ruskin, the foremost art critic of the 19th century, said of this series that ‘Turner had never made any drawings like these before and never made any like them again.’ The Blue Rigi was the most impressive of the four, and was acquired by Elhanan Bicknell from whose collection it was sold at Christie’s in 1863 for 296 guineas. The work returned to Christie’s in 1912 as part of the landmark auction of J.E. Taylor’s collection of works by Turner and sold for 2,700 guineas. In 1942 The Blue Rigi returned to Christie’s for a third time, when it was purchased by the family of the present owner. The Blue Rigi was illustrated as the frontispiece of the Royal Academy’s exhibition Turner: The Great Watercolours in 2000.

Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851) is widely recognized as one of the greatest and most original landscape painters in history. Born in London in 1775, he became a student of the Royal Academy Schools in 1789 and first exhibited a watercolour there in 1790, when he was only fifteen years old. His talent and progress were made apparent when in 1802, at just 27, he became the youngest ever artist to be appointed a Royal Academician. His early style was dramatic and romantic, but he drew inspiration from his travels around Europe, developing a looser and often almost abstract style that anticipated Impressionism. He has come to be recognized as one of the painters who most influenced the Impressionist and Modern Art movements, and one of the true geniuses of Western Art.










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