J.M.W. Turner, The Fighting Temeraire tugged to her last berth to be broken up, 1838. Oil on Canvas, 91 cm × 122 cm (36 in × 48 in). National Gallery, London
Encompassing oils, watercolours, prints and sketches, the exhibition follows Turner's progression from newly-elected Royal Academician to one of the country’s most celebrated artists. While his style changed considerably, his virtuoso showmanship remained a dazzling constant. Turner and the Sea examines the artist’s 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 Turner's 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 century's 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 Turner's 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.' Turner reportedly had himself lashed to the mast of a ship to better paint a storm at sea.
Turner did an unusual amount of practical research for this work, which is his most complex tribute to Nelson, of whom he was a great admirer. He already had sketches of 'Victory', made on her return to England with Nelson’s body in December 1805 for his earlier The Battle of Trafalgar, painted in 1806-08. For this picture he borrowed a plan of the ship from the Admiralty and asked the marine artist J. C. Schetky, at Portsmouth, to make further sketches of her there. Also unusually, he did two preparatory oil studies (now in the Tate).
The finished work combines a number of incidents from different times in the action, within a more symbolic conception. Nelson's presence, mortally wounded, is only implied in the highlighted crowd around 'Victory's' mainmast. This powerful absence is prefigured by the smallness of Nelson's figure, and those around him, beneath similarly towering masts, in the 1806-08 picture. The small human scale is also a response to de Loutherbourg’s painting, since both in different ways contrast a mass of vulnerable figures with the great floating fortresses in which they are contesting national dominance on a mutually hostile sea. In 'The Harbours of England' (1856, p. 16) Ruskin grasped this elemental component when he likened the uncontrollability of the ship's sails, as Turner shows them, to 'as many thunderclouds', most of 'Victory’s' falling with her foremast and at the same time as Nelson. Also symbolically, the falling mast bears his white vice-admiral's flag, while the code flags spelling d-u-t-y – both the last word of his famous Trafalgar signal and the last coherent thought he spoke ('Thank God I have done my duty') – are coming down from the mainmast.
Self portrait of Turner, oil on canvas, circa 1799
On the right is the French 'Redoutable', from which Nelson was shot, surrendered and sinking, although she in fact went down in the storm after the battle. British seamen in the foreground boats raise a cheer, unaware of the tragedy behind in 'Victory', herself shown on an exaggerated scale as a dominating symbol of British sea power. Other men try to save friends and foes alike from a darkly heaving sea, in which a tangle of floating rigging resembles a monster’s head and a Union flag is spread out above, as if to cover the fallen. Below the surface loom fragments of Nelson’s motto, Palmam qui meruit ferat. This can translate as 'Let him who has earned it bear the Palm', or, in the circumstances, 'the price of glory is death'. That the cost is equal for the common sailor as much as the admiral is thrust into the viewer's face by the dead seaman arching out backwards from the picture plane, in the centre, at what would have been original eye level in St James’s Palace. In imposing recession beyond 'Victory' on the left are the Spanish four-decker 'Santissima Trinidad' and the 'Bucentaure', flagship of Admiral Villeneuve, overall commander of the enemy Combined Fleet.
Further left, the French 'Achille', 74 guns, is on fire with the bow of the 'Neptune' just coming into the frame. Her sister the 'Fighting Temeraire', as Turner called her in his famous picture of 1839 is on the far right, lost in smoke apart from her white ensign. On delivery in 1824 the painting provoked court criticism for its non-chronological approach to Nelson’s victory, and its powerful allusions to the blood price of Britain’s triumph, at Trafalgar and more generally in becoming the world’s dominant sea power. Ambassadors used to classically heroic treatments are said to have sneered at it and seamen, including Sir Thomas Hardy, 'Victory's' captain, have always criticized it on technical grounds.
Turner himself later considered the picture spoilt by the eleven unpaid days that he spent at St James's adjusting it to the views of Admiralty men and he credited the King's naval brother, the Duke of Clarence (William IV from 1830), with the only sensible comments, despite a sharp exchange with him at the time. While George IV, when Prince of Wales, had acquired the cooler and more conventionally theatrical de Loutherbourg in Carlton House, Turner's fierily spectacular but ambivalent pendant proved an embarrassment at St James's. It was also probably mismatched there – at least to the King's polished taste – with the adjacent works by Jones and his favourite portraitist, Lawrence. In late 1829 he presented it, with the de Loutherbourg, as his final gifts to the Naval Gallery at Greenwich Hospital. It has been at Greenwich ever since, and remains to some extent a focus of recurring division between 'sea dogs' and art historians, admirers of Nelson and of Turner.
Exhibition information for visitors:
Venue: National Maritime Museum, Greenwich
Dates: 22 November 2013–21 April 2014
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