Küssnacht, Lake of Lucerne: Sample Study
circa 1842-3
Pencil, watercolour and pen on paper
support: 228 x 292 mm on paper, unique Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856 D36053
Finberg number: CCCLXIV a 208
This view of Kussnacht is a study for the now in Manchester City Art Gallery, which was commissioned by H.A.J.Munro of Novar in 1843. Like much of the area around Lake Lucerne, the history of Kussnacht is steeped in the legends associated with William Tell and his part in the liberation of Switzerland from Austrian rule. By the time of Turner's visit in 1842, Schiller and Rossini had already turned Tell's life into the stuff of theatre and opera. Although there were already doubts about some details of the Tell myth, Turner dutifully recorded the chapel just outside the village, which stands close to the spot where Tell is supposed to have killed the oppressive Gessler.
(From the display caption August 2004)
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