Joseph Mallord William Turner The Washburn Valley, with Leathley Church from Lindley Mill ?1808
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
The Washburn Valley, with Leathley Church from Lindley Mill ?1808
D12120
Turner Bequest CLIV V
Turner Bequest CLIV V
Pencil on heavyweight white wove paper, 446 x 592 mm
Inscribed by Turner in pencil ‘corn’
Stamped in brown ‘CLIV V’ bottom right
Inscribed by Turner in pencil ‘corn’
Stamped in brown ‘CLIV V’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Exhibition history
1965
Turner at Farnley Hall, Bradford City Art Gallery, October 1965 (47).
1980
Turner in Yorkshire, York City Art Gallery, June–July 1980 (31, as ‘The Valley of the Washburn, with Leathley Church from Lindley Mill, 1808?’).
References
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.I, p.437, CLIV V, as ‘Leathley Old Church’.
1965
P.B., Turner at Farnley Hall, exhibition catalogue, Bradford City Art Gallery 1965, no.47.
1980
David Hill, Stanley Warburton, Mary Tussey and others, Turner in Yorkshire, exhibition catalogue, York City Art Gallery 1980, p.29 (no.31 as ‘The Valley of the Washburn, with Leathley Church from Lindley Mill, 1808?’).
2008
Early British Drawings, Watercolours and Portrait Miniatures, Sotheby’s 4 December 2008, no.147 reproduced.
This is one of ten large pencil drawings including D12110, D12111, D12113, D12115, D12116, D12117, D12118, D12119 and D12121 (Turner Bequest CLIV L, M, N, Q, R, S, T, U, W), that form a coherent group of views in the Wharfe and Washburn Valleys near Farnley Hall, the Yorkshire home of Turner’s patron Walter Fawkes, and record a tour up the River Wharfe from Farnley to Bolton Abbey. Several formed the bases of finished watercolours, some of which are dateable to 1809. The present writer has dubbed the group the ‘Wharfedale and Washburn’ sketchbook, and although the drawings do not actually form a sketchbook, they nevertheless appear to represent a single campaign, probably in the summer of 1808 on Turner’s first visit to Farnley. It is remarkable that Turner chose to sketch in pencil on such large sheets as these, and it is not at all clear what purpose the large scale was supposed to serve. They must have been problematic to handle in the open air, and we must presume that weather conditions were benign to have made it at all feasible to work with them.
The present sketch shows a view in the lower Washburn Valley not far from Farnley Hall, taken from a position above Lindley Mill looking downstream to Leathley Church. Turner sketched a similar view, but from a slightly higher viewpoint, in the Large Farnley sketchbook (Tate D09055; Turner Bequest CXXVIII 39) and revisited that viewpoint almost exactly in a slightly later sketch in the Kirkstall Lock sketchbook (Tate D12259; Turner Bequest CLV 18). The latter formed the basis of a watercolour, The Valley of Washburn and Leathley Church (private collection)1 painted for Walter Fawkes about 1818. The present writer and other scholars have mistakenly made the present sketch, rather than that in Kirkstall Lock, the basis of the watercolour,2 and this was followed by Sotheby’s in 2008.
David Hill
July 2009
How to cite
David Hill, ‘The Washburn Valley, with Leathley Church from Lindley Mill ?1808 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, July 2009, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, September 2014, https://www