J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours

ISBN 978-1-84976-386-8

Joseph Mallord William Turner Hals and Burg Hals above the River Ilz, from the South-West 1840

Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Hals and Burg Hals above the River Ilz, from the South-West 1840
D29011
Turner Bequest CCXCII 60
Gouache, pencil and watercolour on grey-brown wove paper, 146 x 218 mm
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom left
Stamped in black ‘CCXCII 60’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
As recognised by Cecilia Powell,1 Burg Hals is shown high above the village of the same name along the neck of a tight meander of the River Ilz,2 in hilly wooded countryside barely a mile due north of Passau in southern Germany, which Turner reached in mid-September 1840 (see under Tate D28993, D29006, D33871; Turner Bequest CCXCII 46, 57, CCCXLI 174, in this subsection). The view here is to the north-east from the hills just outside the city, with the castle ruins and houses in the upper part of Hals barely differentiated from each other, their white highlights giving the impression of a jagged rock formation. There is a hint of the river flowing north up the valley on the left.
The ruins are the focus of six atmospheric colour studies on both brown and grey papers (see also Tate D24776, D28960, D28997, D29012, D36162; Turner Bequest CCLIX 211, CCXCII 13, 49, 61, CCCLXIV 305). They were also drawn in pencil from numerous angles in the contemporary Venice; Passau to Würzburg sketchbook (see under Tate D31391; Turner Bequest CCCX 58a), and on Tate D33667, D33669 and D33670 (Turner Bequest CCCXL 2, 4, 5) in the larger Passau and Burg Hals book, D33667 being developed with watercolour.
Compare in particular D31403 (CCCX 64a) in the Venice; Passau to Würzburg book, a study of the ruins and houses, and D28997, a more finished view from this angle on a slightly smaller sheet of pale grey paper, with its tints suggesting calm sunlight. The effect here is more dramatic, with the surrounding landscape evoked through colour alone, the blues of the hills on the right merging with low cloud against lurid patches of sky, seemingly evoking the beginning or end of the day. D29012, on a similar sheet, presents the scene with the top of the castle caught in golden sunset beams above raw blues in the valley (albeit both works appear to have been affected and perhaps coarsened by water damage, as discussed in the technical notes below).
1
See Powell 1995, p.161.
2
See also ibid., pp.69, 160–3.
Technical notes:
Pencil has been used over the white highlights to articulate architectural forms, with hatching (very unusually for Turner) being used to evoke localised shadow. As is more evident from the back, the sheet is slightly wrinkled, likely as a result of the 1928 Tate Gallery flood, which also appears to have caused localised dark staining, particularly below the centre. A rubbed diagonal crease is evident across the colours of the sky towards the top right.
Cecilia Powell observed that Tate D36162 (Turner Bequest CCCLXIV 305), another Burg Hals view, ‘was drawn on an Italian brown paper that had been used by Turner in Venice just a few weeks earlier for several coloured drawings of this size’, citing the present sheet and its variant, D29012 (CCXCII 61) as having ‘strong similarities of style and palette to some of the Venetian drawings’ in Turner Bequest section CCCXIX: ‘One of the torn edges of [the present work] makes a perfect fit with TB CCCXIX 1 [D32249], depicting the Salute.’1
Ian Warrell has since noted that the Salute view was indeed ‘formerly attached at bottom edge’ to the present sheet. As discussed under D32249, they are among numerous mostly Venetian 1840 subjects that Warrell has noted as being on ‘Grey-brown paper produced by an unknown maker (possibly ... a batch made at Fabriano [Italy])’;2 for red-brown Fabriano sheets used for similar subjects, see for example under Tate D32224 (Turner Bequest CCCXVIII 5). For general discussion of the brown and grey papers Turner used in the Passau area, see the overall Introduction to the tour;3 Powell’s presentation of the direct technical relationship between 1840 German subjects and Venetian views was a key factor in dating the latter to the same year.
1
Ibid., p.161.
2
Ian Warrell, ‘Appendix: The papers used for Turner’s Venetian Watercolours’ (1840, section 11) in Warrell, David Laven, Jan Morris and others, Turner and Venice, exhibition catalogue, Tate Britain, London 2003, p.259; see also ibid., sections 9 and 10.
3
See also Powell 1995, pp.69, 81 notes 2 and 42.
Verso:
Blank; inscribed in pencil ‘CCXCII.60’ bottom right.

Matthew Imms
September 2018

How to cite

Matthew Imms, ‘Hals and Burg Hals above the River Ilz, from the South-West 1840 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, September 2018, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2019, https://www.tate.org.uk/art/research-publications/jmw-turner/joseph-mallord-william-turner-hals-and-burg-hals-above-the-river-ilz-from-the-south-west-r1197072, accessed 24 November 2024.