Joseph Mallord William Turner Fire at the Grand Storehouse of the Tower of London 1841
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Fire at the Grand Storehouse of the Tower of London 1841
D27846
Turner Bequest CCLXXXIII 1
Turner Bequest CCLXXXIII 1
Watercolour on white wove paper, 235 x 325 mm
Inscribed in red ink by John Ruskin ‘1’ top right, upside down
Stamped in black ‘CCLXXXIII – 1’ bottom right
Inscribed in pencil ‘9’ bottom left
Inscribed in red ink by John Ruskin ‘1’ top right, upside down
Stamped in black ‘CCLXXXIII – 1’ bottom right
Inscribed in pencil ‘9’ bottom left
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Exhibition history
1978
Watercolours from the Turner Bequest, Lent by the British Museum, Tate Gallery, London, January–June 1978 (no catalogue).
1989
Summer Miscellany: Watercolours from the Turner Bequest, Tate Gallery, London, July–September 1989 (no catalogue).
1993
Turner’s Painting Techniques, Tate Gallery, London, June–October 1993 (not in catalogue).
1996
Turner, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra, March–June 1996, National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, June–September 1996 (70, as ‘Colour Study: The Burning of the Houses of Parliament’, 1834, reproduced in colour).
1998
Moonlight and Firelight: Watercolours from the Turner Bequest, Tate Gallery, London, July–November 1998 (no catalogue).
2004
Turner Whistler Monet, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto, June–September 2004, Galeries nationales du Grand Palais, Paris, October–January 2005, Tate Britain, London, February–May 2005 (not in catalogue, shown in London only).
2007
J.M.W. Turner, National Gallery of Art, Washington, October 2007–January 2008, Dallas Museum of Art, February–May 2008, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, June–September 2008 (119, as ‘The Burning of the Houses of Parliament’, 1834, reproduced in colour).
2013
Turner: Works on Paper, Tate Britain, London, April 2013–[ongoing March 2014] (no catalogue, as ‘The Burning of the Houses of Parliament’, 1834).
References
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.II, p.909, CCLXXXIII 1, as ‘Burning of the Houses of Parliament, from the river’ 1834.
1981
William Gaunt and Robin Hamlyn, Turner, revised ed., Oxford 1981, fig.33 (colour detail, as ‘The Burning of the Houses of Parliament’. 1834).
1982
Guy Weelan, J.M.W. Turner, trans. I. Mark Paris, New York 1982, pl.172 (colour), as ‘Study for a Fire’.
1984
Katherine Solender, Dreadful Fire! Burning of the Houses of Parliament, exhibition catalogue, Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio 1984, pp.51–2, fig.39, as ‘Burning of the Houses of Parliament’. c.1834.
1986
Richard Dorment, British Painting in the Philadelphia Museum: From the Seventeenth through the Nineteenth Century, Philadelphia 1986, pp.400, 401, 405 under no.4, fig.III.5, as a Parliament study 1834.
1987
Andrew Wilton, Turner Watercolours in the Clore Gallery, London 1987, pl.57 (colour, as ‘Study: the Burning of the Houses of Parliament’. 1834).
1991
Michael Bockemühl, J.M.W. Turner 1775–1851: Die Welt des Lichts und der Farbe, Cologne 1991.
1993
Michael Bockemühl, J.M.W. Turner 1775–1851: The World of Light and Colour, trans. Michael Claridge, Cologne 1993, reproduced in colour, p.[44], as ‘The Burning of the Houses of Parliament’ 1834.
1993
Robert Upstone, Sketchbooks of the Romantics, reprint ed., London 1993, p.92, reproduced in colour, p.93, as ‘The Burning of the Houses of Parliament’ 1834.
1994
William Gaunt and Robin Hamlyn, Turner, London 1994, fig.33 (colour detail, as ‘The Burning of the Houses of Parliament’. 1834).
1834
Michael Lloyd, Andrew Wilton, Evelyn Joll and others, Turner, exhibition catalogue, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra 1996, reproduced in colour, p.92, p.234 no.70, as ‘Colour Study: The Burning of the Houses of Parliament’ 1834.
1996
Duncan Robinson, ‘Turner, National Gallery of Australia’, Turner Society News, no.73, August 1996, p.10, as Parliament subject 1834.
1996
Turner 1775 1851, Découvrons l’art, Paris 1996, pl.25 (colour, as ‘L’incendie du Parlement de Londres’. 1834).
2004
Olivier Meslay, Turner: L’Incendie de la peinture, Découvertes Gallimard Arts, [Paris] 2004, p.95 as a Parliament subject 1834, reproduced in colour.
2005
Olivier Meslay, Turner: L’Incendie de la peinture, Découvertes Gallimard Arts, [Paris] 2004, J.M.W. Turner: The Man Who Set Painting on Fire, trans. Ruth Sharman, London 2005, p.95 as a Parliament subject 1834, reproduced in colour.
2007
Sarah Taft, in Ian Warrell (ed.), Franklin Kelly and others, J.M.W. Turner, exhibition catalogue, National Gallery of Art, Washington 2007, p.176 no.119, as ‘The Burning of the Houses of Parliament’ 1834, reproduced in colour.
This watercolour study was originally one of nine consecutive leaves (D27846–D27854; Turner Bequest CCLXXXIII 1–9) in a sketchbook. They have previously been documented with varying degrees of certainty as showing the 1834 fire at the Houses of Parliament beside the River Thames in central London, but are here identified as representing the similarly large and dramatic fire which broke out at the moated Tower of London on 30 October 1841, destroying the late seventeenth-century Grand Storehouse (see the Introduction to the sketchbook for detailed discussion).
Here, the tall windows of the Grand Storehouse are lit by the fire within, and are shown from the north-west across beyond the moat and the dark masses of the outer defences. The composition is comparable with that of Destruction of the Small Armoury in the Tower of London, on the Night of 30th Oct., 1841, a lithograph after William Collingwood Smith (1815–1887) published on 8 November 1841, and the similar view in Destructive Fire at the Tower of London. October 30th 1841, a colour lithograph after J.L. Marks, a more graphic, unsophisticated rendering, enlivened by agitated crowds and galloping horses (see the Introduction for other comparisons between Turner’s studies and contemporary prints).
Addressing the subject in the context of the traditional former 1834 identification, Katherine Solender nevertheless noted that this and another of the studies (D27851) ‘contain shapes alluding to classical architecture’, with ‘suggestions of columns and entablatures more closely resembling Greco-Roman structures than the British Houses of Parliament’,1 comparing them to the Turner watercolour, probably of the middle 1830s, known as The Burning of Rome (Tate D36232; Turner Bequest CCCLXIV 370), inferring the possibility of an ‘allegory’ of political decay.2 The close-set vertical features seem rather to be the narrow brick walls between the storehouse’s many windows. In his extended catalogue entry for Turner’s painting The Burning of the House of Lords and Commons, 16th October, 1834, exhibited at the British Institution in 1835 (Philadelphia Museum of Art),3 Richard Dorment presented a sustained interpretation of the this and the other eight watercolour studies in terms of a sequence reflecting the topography and chronology of the 1834 Westminster fire.4
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘Fire at the Grand Storehouse of the Tower of London 1841 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, April 2014, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, September 2014, https://www