Joseph Mallord William Turner The Tower of London from the River Thames; Studies of the Hulk 'Perseus', a Paddle Steamer, and other Shipping c.1823-4
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Folio 34 Verso:
The Tower of London from the River Thames; Studies of the Hulk ‘Perseus’, a Paddle Steamer, and other Shipping c.1823–4
D17820
Turner Bequest CCIV 34a
Turner Bequest CCIV 34a
Pencil on white wove paper, 111 x 190 mm
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.619, CCIV 34a, as ‘The Tower, from the River; also various sketches of shipping’.
1981
Eric Shanes, ‘Turner’s “Unknown” London Series’, Turner Studies, vol.1, no.2, Winter 1981, p.41, ill.7.
1990
Eric Shanes, Turner’s England 1810–38, London 1990, pp.272 under no.247, 286 note 223.
1991
Pieter van der Merwe, ‘“Calais in Twelve Hours”: Turner’s “Tower of London” and the early cross-Channel steam packets’, Turner Society News, no.57, March 1991, p.13.
2014
Ian Warrell, Turner’s Sketchbooks, London 2014, reproduced in colour, p.121, as ‘The Tower of London from the River’.
Inverted relative to the sketchbook’s foliation, the most prominent study is of part of the River Thames waterfront of the Tower of London, with St Thomas’s Tower framing Traitors’ Gate towards the left, seen from the south-west. This is one of a number of sketches which informed Turner’s watercolour of the Tower of about 1825 (private collection),1 as discussed in the entry for folio 34 recto (D17819), the closest to the finished design. The loose shapes to the right appear to indicate the Perseus, a former 22-gun Royal Navy frigate since reduced to a hulk and moored at that point.2 There is a wider view from a similar direction on folio 35 recto opposite (D17821).
Above is an array of shipping closely corresponding to that of the Tower in the watercolour, including the Perseus again on the right. Peter van der Merwe has discussed the vessels in the finished design in considerable detail, noting a collier on the left (two being shown in the watercolour) and concluding that the confidently detailed depictions there of the steamers Lord Melville and Talbot, in the position occupied by the single lightly sketched equivalent to the left of centre here, might have been based as much on information from newspaper advertisements as on direct observation.3 See also the detail of a steamer (or two) on folio 36 recto (D17823).
For other London and Thames views in the present book, see under folio 2 recto (D17775).
Technical notes:
An adventitious splash of grey pigment towards the bottom right probably relates to the colouring of the walls of the Tower in the finished design.
Matthew Imms
November 2014
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘The Tower of London from the River Thames; Studies of the Hulk ‘Perseus’, a Paddle Steamer, and other Shipping c.1823–4 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, November 2014, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, April 2015, https://www