Joseph Mallord William Turner A Dentist and his Wife and Son: Study for 'The Unpaid Bill, or the Dentist Reproving his Son's Prodigality' c.1807-8
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Folio 77 Recto:
A Dentist and his Wife and Son: Study for ‘The Unpaid Bill, or the Dentist Reproving his Son’s Prodigality’ circa 1807–8
D06486
Turner Bequest XCIX 73
Turner Bequest XCIX 73
Pencil on off-white wove paper, 115 x 190 mm
Inscribed by John Ruskin in blue ink ‘73’ bottom left, inverted
Stamped in black ‘XCIX 73’ top left, inverted
Inscribed by John Ruskin in blue ink ‘73’ bottom left, inverted
Stamped in black ‘XCIX 73’ top left, inverted
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
References
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.I, p.258, XCIX 73, as ‘Waiter and two figures dining (?)’.
1983
John Gage, Jerrold Ziff, Nicholas Alfrey and others, J.M.W. Turner, à l’occasion du cinquantième anniversaire du British Council, exhibition catalogue, Galeries nationales du Grand Palais, Paris 1983, p.75.
1984
Martin Butlin and Evelyn Joll, The Paintings of J.M.W. Turner, revised ed., New Haven and London 1984, p.61.
Drawn with the sketchbook inverted, this is one of a group of drawings for The Unpaid Bill, or the Dentist Reproving his Son’s Prodigality (collection of the Schindler Family)1 painted for Richard Payne Knight and exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1808. The others are on the verso and folios 78–81 verso (D06487–D06491; Turner Bequest XCIX 73a–75a; D07159; Turner Bequest CXCV (a) 1; D06493, D06494; Turner Bequest XCIX 77, 77a). Payne Knight, an influential collector, connoisseur and arbiter of taste, was forming a collection of pictures to show ‘that the moderns can stand up to the Old Masters’, as reported by the artist Richard Westall to his colleague Joseph Farington in February 1808,2 and Robert Hunt, writing in the Examiner of 15 May the same year, stated that Turner’s picture was conceived as a companion for his client’s ‘cradle-piece’ ascribed to Rembrandt – The Holy Family at Night (Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam), then known as ‘The Cradle’. In 1808, Payne Knight lent the supposed Rembrandt to the British Institution where it was available to copy. In some notes for his lectures as Professor of Perspective at the Royal Academy perhaps written around this time, Turner was critical of its ‘artificial light and shade’, citing it as ‘a solitary instance [where] a great master may appear contrived’ and urging caution in adopting it as a model.3
Recently exhibited together at Tate Britain, the differences between the two pictures seemed more evident than similarities.4 While Turner’s is almost the same size as The Holy Family and likewise painted on panel, its puzzling satirical-genre subject hardly forms a suitable pendant and it is now generally accepted that Turner’s actual model was another picture in Payne Knight’s collection, The Alchemist or Alchemist’s Laboratory then attributed to David Teniers and now to Gerard Thomas.5 Benjamin West, also according to Farington, thought Turner was reacting to David Wilkie’s recent interior genre scenes,6 but if so this must have been a secondary consideration and the differences between Wilkie’s sentiment and Turner’s satire has been discussed, notably by John Gage.7
This drawing must represent an early stage in Turner’s planning for the picture when he was thinking of positioning the over-spending son to the right of his parents. In the picture, he stands between them.
David Blayney Brown
December 2009
How to cite
David Blayney Brown, ‘A Dentist and his Wife and Son: Study for ‘The Unpaid Bill, or the Dentist Reproving his Son’s Prodigality’ c.1807–8 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, December 2009, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://www