GREENWICH.- Turner and the Sea at the
National Maritime Museum is the first full-scale examination of J.M.W Turners lifelong fascination with the sea. Dramatic, contemplative, violent, beautiful, dangerous and sublime the sea was the perfect subject to showcase Turners singular talents, and the 120 pieces on display include some of the most celebrated paintings of the artists long career.
The extraordinary quality of the works gathered together for Turner and the Sea confirms his status as the pre-eminent painter of water, and demonstrates his unique ability to represent the elemental power of the sea. The exhibition features items on loan from some of the worlds most prestigious artistic institutions including: The National Gallery, Tate, Yale Center for British Art, British Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Royal Collection Trust, Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon and National Gallery of Art, Washington.
From his transformative Royal Academy paintings of the late 1790s and early 1800s to the unfinished, experimental seascapes he produced towards the end of his life, more than half of Turners artistic output depicted maritime subjects. It should come as no surprise that a man who spent much of his life along the coastlines of Britain and Europe, who spent days fishing the river Thames, and who reportedly had himself lashed to the mast of a ship to better paint a storm at sea, captured this subject so often and with such evocative mastery. Nonetheless, the sheer volume of material Turner created in his quest to depict the sea is remarkable.
The Fighting Temeraire (1839), Snow Storm Steam-Boat off a Harbours Mouth (1842), Staffa, Fingals Cave (1832), Now for the Painter (1827), Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Moonlight (1835), Whalers (c.1845) and Calais Pier (1803) all are shown, alongside works by other major British and European artists, including Willem van de Velde, Claude-Joseph Vernet, Thomas Gainsborough, Nicholas Pocock, John Constable and Richard Parkes Bonington. Turner and the Sea re-evaluates the compelling appeal of the sea for Turner and his contemporaries, and gives visitors the opportunity to see the ways in which he responded to the art of the past, while challenging his audiences with a new and exciting maritime vision.
Further highlights include: Turners largest painting and only royal commission, The Battle of Trafalgar (1824), one of the jewels in the National Maritime Museums fine art collection; Fishermen at Sea, the first oil painting Turner exhibited at the Royal Academy; The Wreck of a Transport Ship (c.1810), not seen in London since 1970s, displayed alongside The Shipwreck (1805) and Calais Pier the first time these three storm paintings have been shown together; and The Wreck Buoy (1849), Turners last exhibited marine painting.
Encompassing oils, watercolours, prints and sketches, the exhibition follows Turners progression from newly-elected Royal Academician to one of the countrys most celebrated artists. While his style changed considerably, his virtuoso showmanship remained a dazzling constant. Turner and the Sea examines the artists new and often unexpected response to the prestigious history of European marine painting, as well as the relish with which he competed with other artists of his generation, ultimately leaving them in his wake as he took his work in a new, uninhibited and innovative direction.
Having begun by responding to the artists of the 17th century at the start of his career, the works from the end of Turners life seem almost as if they could come from the 20th century. As he left behind the rules and conventions of maritime art, dividing critics and public alike, Turner created a unique vision of the overwhelming power of nature the final stage in a lifelong engagement with the sea.
Dr. Kevin Fewster, Director of Royal Museums Greenwich, said J.M.W. Turner is one of the most influential painters in the history of British art. He was also the 19th centurys greatest and most prolific marine artist, and one for whom naval and maritime Greenwich provided a rich source of inspiration, making the National Maritime Museum an especially appropriate venue for this exhibition. So obvious is Turners fascination with the sea, I was surprised to discover that a major exhibition devoted to this theme in his work had not been previously staged. I am glad that this omission has allowed us to put together this wonderful exhibition which I hope will be an inspiration for art lovers and lovers of the sea alike.