Joseph Mallord William Turner View of Edinburgh from Leith, with the Royal Squadron at Anchor 1822
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Folio 62 Verso:
View of Edinburgh from Leith, with the Royal Squadron at Anchor 1822
D17616
Turner Bequest CC 62a
Turner Bequest CC 62a
Pencil on white wove paper, 114 x 187 mm
Inscribed in pencil by Turner ?‘No 1’ upper right
Blindstamped with the Turner Bequest stamp bottom left
Inscribed in pencil by Turner ?‘No 1’ upper right
Blindstamped with the Turner Bequest stamp bottom left
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.612, CC 62a, as ‘Views of Edinburgh, from Leith; also shipping on the Forth.’.
1975
Gerald Finley, ‘J.M.W. Turner’s Proposal for a “Royal Progress”’, The Burlington Magazine, vol.117, January 1975, p.32 note 22.
1981
Gerald Finley, Turner and George the Fourth in Edinburgh 1822, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1981, pp.85, [184] (reproduced as ‘View of Edinburgh from Leith, with the royal squadron at anchor. This view associated with the design of the vignette of Scott’s Provincial Antiquities and Picturesque Scenery of Scotland, Volume 2: The Mission of Sir Walter Scott’).
Gerald Finley associates the sketches over this and the following page (folio 63; D17617) ‘with the design of the vignette of Scott’s Provincial Antiquities and Picturesque Scenery of Scotland, Volume 2: The Mission of Walter Scott’. His statement is presumably based on the similarity of the largest vessel on the present page with the Royal George in the vignette design, and its similar position against the distant Edinburgh skyline; as well as the detailed drawings of Edinburgh and Leith from the north on this page and folio 63 that may have informed the background in the vignette.
Although the two sketches on the present page both appear to be continued across folio 63 because the lines of the hillsides match, the drawings on each page are in fact distinct, with one view of shipping in Leith Roads and another of Leith with Edinburgh in the background on each page. At the top of the present page is a view taken from a boat on the Firth of Forth looking south towards Leith with Edinburgh in the distance. At the left is Nelson’s Monument on Calton Hill, with Calton Gaol on its western slope. On the skyline to the right are the spires of the Tron Kirk and St Giles’s Cathedral on Edinburgh High Street, then the Melville Monument in St Andrew’s Square and the spire of St Andrew’s church on George Street with Edinburgh Castle at the right and the Pentland Hills beyond. Leith is represented with a series of blocks with no particularly distinctive parts.
The lower sketch shows two vessels, one moored in front of the other, and while the larger one could be the King’s yacht, the Royal George, as Finley’s description suggests, the other is too large to be Sir Walter Scott’s barge which is seen approaching in the vignette. The closely grouped boats to the left, however, to somewhat resemble those at the left of the vignette composition.
Another problem with Finley’s reading is that the viewpoint of both sketches differs from that of the vignette. While the same topographical features are shared, the relative positions of Arthur’s Seat and Calton Hill differ, with Calton Hill to the right of Arthur’s Seat in the present drawing, but to the left in the vignette. In other words the viewpoint shifts from the north to north by north-west.
One final clue to a connection with the subject of the vignette, although it is not mentioned by Finley, is the inscription ‘no 1’ on this page and again on folio 63 which could refer to the composition in the King at Edinburgh sketchbook that Turner numbered ‘1’ and Finley has identified as a plan for a picture of ‘The Mission of Sir Walter Scott’.1 If this correspondence is correct then it provides considerable support for Finley’s argument that Turner conceived of a ‘Royal Progress’ cycle of paintings recording George IV’s visit to Scotland, as it indicated that Turner’s numbering of 19 proposed compositions in the King at Edinburgh sketchbook (Tate D40979, D40980; Turner Bequest CCI 43a, Inside Back Cover) was consistent with at least one other drawing.
Thomas Ardill
September 2008
How to cite
Thomas Ardill, ‘View of Edinburgh from Leith, with the Royal Squadron at Anchor 1822 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, September 2008, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://www