Joseph Mallord William Turner Three Sketches of Edinburgh from Calton Hill 1834
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Folio 37 Recto:
Three Sketches of Edinburgh from Calton Hill 1834
D26331
Turner Bequest CCLXIX 37
Turner Bequest CCLXIX 37
Pencil on off-white wove paper, 190 x 113 mm
Inscribed in blue ink by John Ruskin ‘37’ top left running vertically and ‘340’ top right running vertically
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIX 37’ top right running vertically
Inscribed in blue ink by John Ruskin ‘37’ top left running vertically and ‘340’ top right running vertically
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIX 37’ top right running vertically
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.865, CCLXIX 37, as ‘Stirling (?): three views.’.
1936
Henry J. Crawford, Turner’s Sketches and Drawings of Stirling and Neighbourhood with Some Notes on the Artist’s Scottish Tours also a Note on John Ruskin and Stirling, Stirling 1936, p.25.
1990
Dr David Wallace-Hadrill and Janet Carolan, ‘Turner’s Sketches North of Stirling’, Turner Studies: His Art and Epoch 1775 – 1851, Vol.10 No.1, Summer 1990, p.12.
A.J. Finberg tentatively identified these sketches as Stirling,1 a suggestion that was later taken up by Henry Crawford in his little book on Turner’s sketches of Stirling, though he also raised the possibility of Edinburgh as an alternative identification.2 A number of distinctive features make this latter suggestion certain, and we can now assert that these are three sketches of Edinburgh from Regent Road to the south of Calton Hill.
The sketch at the top of the page is the most readily identifiable. The castle stands on a rock above the town with North Bridge before it and the open-crown steeple of St Giles’s Cathedral and the gothic spire of the Tron Kirk to the left. The shaded building in the foreground just to the right of centre is the Governor’s House of Carlton Gaol.
Many of the same buildings and structures can be made out in the sketch below which includes in the foreground the road sweeping around the lower slopes of Calton Hill. The Governor’s House is now at the centre of the sketch with North Bridge and the castle to the left. Just to the right of the Gaol is the half-domed apse and steeple of St Cuthbert’s church.
At the bottom of the page is a sketch from just above the Governor’s House, part of which can be seen further down the slope of the hill at the bottom left of the sketch. The profile of Edinburgh Castle is prominent on the skyline with North Bridge below it and the spire of St Giles’s and the Tron Kirk to its left. At the top right of the sketch is part of the Dugald Stewart Monument on Calton Hill.
Many of these buildings and structures were familiar to Turner who had painted a watercolour of Edinburgh from Calton Hill circa 1819 (National Gallery of Scotland).3 Turner visited Calton Hill in the company of Robert Cadell on 4 October 1834 and there are sketches from the top of the hill on folios 76 verso–79 verso (D26405–D26411) of this sketchbook that may have been made on that occasion. There is also a sketch of Nelson’s Monument on the hill on folio 85 (D26422).
Verso:
Blank
Thomas Ardill
November 2010
How to cite
Thomas Ardill, ‘Three Sketches of Edinburgh from Calton Hill 1834 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, November 2010, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://www