Joseph Mallord William Turner A Dawn or Sunset Sky above a Landscape c.1820-40
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
A Dawn or Sunset Sky above a Landscape c.1820–40
D25412
Turner Bequest CCLXIII 289
Turner Bequest CCLXIII 289
Gouache and watercolour on white wove paper, 188 x 227 mm
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIII – 289’ bottom right
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIII – 289’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Exhibition history
1966
Turner: Imagination and Reality, Museum of Modern Art, New York, March–May [June] 1966 (49, as ‘The Pink Sky’, after 1820, reproduced in colour).
1995
Sketching the Sky: Watercolours from the Turner Bequest, Tate Gallery, London, September 1995–February 1996 (no catalogue number, as ‘A Pink Sky above a Grey Sea’, c.1822).
2009
Turner / Rothko, Tate Britain, London, March–July 2009 (no catalogue).
References
1820
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.II, p.836, CCLXIII 289, as ‘The pink sky’, c.1820–30.
1966
Lawrence Gowing, Turner: Imagination and Reality, exhibition catalogue, Museum of Modern Art, New York 1966, reproduced in colour p.29, p.61 no.49, as ‘The Pink Sky’, after 1820.
1825
Martin Butlin, Aquarelle aus dem Turner-Nachlass: Les aquarelles du Legs Turner: Watercolours from the Turner Bequest 1819–1845, London 1968, pl.5 (colour), as ‘Pink Sky’, c.1825.
1825
John Walker, Joseph Mallord William Turner, The Library of Great Painters, New York 1976, p.156, pl.54 (colour), as ‘Pink Sky’, c.1825.
1989
Jeremy Robinson, The Light Eternal: A Study of J.M.W. Turner, Kidderminster 1989, p.60.
1997
Eric Shanes, Turner’s Watercolour Explorations 1810–1842, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1997, p.102, Appendix I, under ‘Sky Sketches’.
2004
Olivier Meslay, Turner: L’Incendie de la peinture, Découvertes Gallimard Arts, [Paris] 2004, reproduced in colour p.124.
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, reproduced in colour p.124.
1822
Sam Smiles, J.M.W. Turner: The Making of a Modern Artist, Manchester and New York 2007, fig.6.2, as ‘A Pink Sky above a Grey Sea’, c.1822.
1822
Turner Society News, no.112, August 2009, reproduced in colour across front and back covers (cropped, as ‘A Pink Sky above a Grey Sea’, c.1822).
This economical but evocative study is ambiguous both as to its setting and the time of day it depicts, respectively whether sea or land and dawn or dusk. Finberg called it simply ‘The pink sky’,1 while the darkening towards the slightly convex horizon and the possibly fortuitous strokes above it at the right suggest rising ground with silhouetted buildings or trees. Compare Tate D25329 (Turner Bequest CCLXIII 207).
Having been reproduced prominently in colour in the catalogue for Lawrence Gowing’s Turner: Imagination and Reality exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 1966,2 which perhaps marked the high point of Turner’s being considered in a Modernist context,3 this work came to be compared with paintings by the American Abstract Expressionist Mark Rothko (1903–1970), typified by symmetrical horizontal, soft-edged bands of colour (see Tate T04148, T00275, and particularly T04149). The artist is known to have admired Turner (see for example the full catalogue text for Tate T03031). The American curator John Walker suggested that the present work ‘seems to anticipate’ Rothko in its search for ‘color [sic] relationships which would have a sensual appeal’ with the ‘illustrative element ... subordinate to these chromatic harmonies.’4 Jeremy Robinson developed this theme: ‘It is so simple: sky and earth: yet so expressive. It is a pure colour sketch, with the sky and land marked simply by these two washes, resembling some of Rothko’s last paintings, which were grey and black in equal portions on vertical canvases.’5
As a rejoinder in the context of Celmins Selects Turner, a selection of relatively ‘abstract’ Turner’s alongside her own work by the American artist Vija Celmins (born 1938) at Tate Britain (May 2012–March 2013), Andrew Wilton, who has been concerned along with other Turner scholars since the 1970s to place Turner in his historical context as well as to explore his artistic development,6 noted in relation to Gowing’s 1966 selection and reproduction of this work:
It is the kind of lay-in that all watercolour artists were taught to apply preparatory to painting a landscape: slight to the point of being virtually meaningless, though one can, of course, enjoy it as a sample of well-laid washes. Although this was a genuinely ‘abstract’ sheet, Gowing, ironically, interpreted it as a landscape: he called it ‘The Pink Sky’ ... When Rothko saw this, he famously said that he would like to sue Turner for breach of copyright.7
In terms of being a ‘lay-in’ and the kernel of a conventional landscape, it is possible to compare Turner’s sky study with, for example, the unfinished, elemental composition of Fonthill Abbey ?from the South-West, from as early as 1799 (Tate D02187; Turner Bequest XLVII 10). Nicholas Alfrey has remarked in relation to the 2009 Turner / Rothko display at Tate Britain (re-examining the 1966 exhibition), in which the present work featured: ‘There is, finally, no significant affinity between the vigorous austerity and existential anguish of late Rothko and the confidence, energy and ... sheer optimism of Turner’s last decades.’8
See Sam Smiles, J.M.W. Turner: The Making of a Modern Artist, Manchester 2007, pp.119–20, [193]–204.
Andrew Wilton, ‘J.M.W.Turner: A lesson in modern art history’, The Turner Society, accessed 17 September 2015, http://www.turnersociety.org.uk/dox/Turner%20and%20Modernism.pdf ; first published in the Times Literary Supplement, 7 September 2012.
Technical notes:
There is a minute hole at the bottom centre, possibly a manufacturing fault, where colour has bled through slightly to the verso.
Verso:
Blank; inscribed in pencil ‘70’ left of centre, upside down; inscribed by John Ruskin in pencil ‘AB 70 P O’ towards bottom right; inscribed in pencil ‘CCLXIII | 289’ bottom right; stamped in black with Turner Bequest monogram over ‘CCLXIII – 289’ towards bottom left.
Some colour shows through the thin paper from the recto.
Matthew Imms
March 2016
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘A Dawn or Sunset Sky above a Landscape c.1820–40 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, March 2016, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, November 2016, https://www