Joseph Mallord William Turner The Tower of the Cologne Rathaus from the Alter Markt, with the East End of the Cathedral Beyond 1840
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Folio 21 Verso:
The Tower of the Cologne Rathaus from the Alter Markt, with the East End of the Cathedral Beyond 1840
D30497
Turner Bequest CCCIII 20a
Turner Bequest CCCIII 20a
Pencil on flecked pale blue laid paper, 104 x 170 mm
Partial watermark: Tree of Liberty
Partial watermark: Tree of Liberty
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.II, p.979, CCCIII 20a, as ‘Buildings’.
1995
Cecilia Powell, Turner in Germany, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1995, pp.72, 82 note 70, 246, as ‘Cologne: the town hall and cathedral from the old market’.
The drawing was made with the page turned horizontally. As identified by Cecilia Powell,1 it shows the Gothic tower of Cologne’s Rathaus from the Alter Markt, with the staircase turret on its south side, and a perfunctory indication of the elaborate east end of the cathedral beyond at the left. Extensive war damage and subsequent redevelopment precludes a directly equivalent view today, although the tower retains its distinctive appearance after restoration.
Powell has noted that Turner neared the end of this tour following ‘the familiar route of the Rhine between Mainz and Cologne. He almost certainly travelled by steamer, ... sketching most of the well-known sights perfunctorily as he passed.’2 Given that this sketchbook was used in reverse of its subsequent foliation, she has specified the overall range of this phase as ‘TB CCCIII 68v–20v; 11r’,3 indicating folios 12 recto and 21 verso–69 verso (D30479, D30497–D30592; Turner Bequest CCCIII 20a–68a); see this book’s Introduction for the full itinerary of this part of the journey.
Although this hurried drawing is the only sign of Turner’s presence in 1840, his coverage of Cologne over the years was extensive. See the 1817 Itinerary Rhine Tour, Waterloo and Rhine and Rhine sketchbooks (respectively Tate D12598–D12600, D12602; Turner Bequest CLIX 47, 47a, 48, 49; D12752, D12871–D12873; CLX 27a, 87, 87a, 88; D12981–D12983, D12985, D12987–D12990; CLXI 53–54, 55, 56–58a), the 1824 Rivers Meuse and Moselle sketchbook (D19844, D19846–D19847; CCXVI 147, 148, 148a), the 1825 Holland and Holland, Meuse and Cologne sketchbooks (D19116–D19118, D19120–D19122, D19124–D19125, D19127–D19130, D19145; CCXIV 140–141, 142–143, 144, 144a, 145a–147, 154a; D19452–D19453, D19457–D19460, D19462–D19467, D19508–D19511; CCXV 28a, 29, 31a–33, 34a–37, 65a–67), the 1833 Brussels up to Mannheim – Rhine sketchbook (D29667, D29678–D29679; CCXCVI 36a, 42a, 43), the 1835 Prague, Nuremberg, Frankfurt and Rhine sketchbook (D30762–D30763, D30766, D30770, D30772, D30774, D30778; CCCIV 69a, 70, 71a, 73a, 74a, 75a, 77a), and the 1844 Rhine and Rhine Castles sketchbook (D35181, D35184; CCCLI 6a, 8). See also two undated pencil studies on grey paper (Tate D33685; D33918; Turner Bequest CCCXLI 10; CCCXLI 212), and a loose colour study of about 1824–32, unrelated to any finished composition (D25312; CCLXIII 190).
There are two 1817 watercolours: Rhine Gate, Cologne (National Museum Wales, Cardiff);4 and Cologne (currently untraced).5 Subsequent watercolours are Cologne, of about 1820 (currently untraced),6 that year’s Cologne from the River (Seattle Art Museum),7 engraved in 1824 (Tate impression: T06068) and 1859 (T05195, T06323), and Cologne, of about 1832–3 (Courtauld Gallery, London),8 engraved in 1833 for Byron’s Works (Tate impression: T06189). A major oil painting, Cologne, the Arrival of a Packet Boat, Evening, was exhibited in 1826 (Frick Collection, New York).9
Matthew Imms
September 2018
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘The Tower of the Cologne Rathaus from the Alter Markt, with the East End of the Cathedral Beyond 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