Joseph Mallord William Turner A Storm off the Dutch Coast, after Jacob van Ruisdael 1802
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Folio 14 Verso:
A Storm off the Dutch Coast, after Jacob van Ruisdael 1802
D04289
Turner Bequest LXXII 14a
Turner Bequest LXXII 14a
Pencil, with some scratching out, on white wove paper prepared with a grey wash, 128 x 114 mm
Stamped in black ‘LXXII–14a’ bottom left
Stamped in black ‘LXXII–14a’ 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.181, LXXII 14a, as ‘Men of War off the Coast; stormy sea and sky ... Copy of Ruysdael’s [sic] “Tempest”’.
1961
Alexander J. Finberg, The Life of J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Second Edition, Revised, with a Supplement, by Hilda F. Finberg, revised ed., Oxford 1961, p.90.
1963
Jerrold Ziff, ‘Turner and Poussin’, The Burlington Magazine, vol.105, 1963, p.320 note 34.
1965
Jerrold Ziff, ‘Copies of Claude’s Paintings in the Sketchbooks of J.M.W. Turner’, Gazette des Beaux-Arts, vol. 65, 1965, pp.54, 64 note 14.
1981
A.G.H. Bachrach, ‘Turner, Ruisdael and the Dutch’, Turner Studies, vol.1, no.1, Summer 1981, pp.20–1.
1985
Jack Lindsay, Turner: The Man and His Art, London 1985, p.38.
1993
Jean-Pierre Cuzin and Marie-Anne Dupuy, Copier créer. De Turner à Picasso: 300 oeuvres inspirées par les maîtres du Louvre, exhibition catalogue, Musée du Louvre, Paris 1993, p.80.
1994
Fred G.H. Bachrach, Turner’s Holland, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1994, pp.13, 19–20, 46–7 reproduced.
1997
Anthony Bailey, Standing in the Sun: A Life of J.M.W. Turner, London 1997, p.69.
2001
A.G.H. Bachrach, ‘Ruisdael’, in Evelyn Joll, Martin Butlin and Luke Herrmann eds., The Oxford Companion to J.M.W. Turner, Oxford 2001, p.274.
2001
Seymour Slive, Jacob van Ruisdael: A Complete Catalogue of his Paintings, Drawings and Etchings, New Haven and London 2001, p.461 reproduced fig.653a.
2009
Ian Warrell, in David Solkin ed., Turner and the Masters, exhibition catalogue, Tate Britain, London 2009, pp.182, 230 note 3.
Turner’s copy continues across folio 15 of this sketchbook (D04390). Ruisdael’s (Jacob Isaacz. van Ruisdael 1628/9–82) picture is presently known as ‘Une Tempête sur le bord des Digues de la Hollande’. Having been in various French collections, it was acquired by Louis XVI in 1783. Finberg was the first to observe that this copy is not literal, omitting a house in the foreground and reducing the light on the surf. These changes can be explained by Turner’s strictures on the picture on folio 23 (D04299); these include the observations that ‘the introducing of the house on the embankment destroys all the dignity of the left’, and that ‘the chief light is upon the surge in the foreground, but too much is made to suffer, so that it is artificial – and shows the brown in a more glaring point of view and His inattention of the form which waves make upon a lee shore embanked’.
This transcription follows Bachrach’s earlier reading of the underlined word near the end as ‘His’ rather than Finberg’s ‘this’.1 In the context it carries an unmistakable note of pique, and Bachrach suggests that Turner’s critique of Ruisdael’s ‘inattention’ to the forms of waves on a lee-shore could have been provoked by adverse comparison of his own marine pictures to the Dutch masters. Turner’s Fishermen upon a Lee-Shore, in Squally Weather (Southampton Art Gallery)2 had been in the Royal Academy in 1802. Bachrach further shows that Turner rushed too hastily to judgement, Ruisdael’s handling of a lee shore (one with the wind blowing in from the sea) being in fact correct for a Dutch situation owing to the prevailing force of the winds and tides; moreover that the house on the dyke, which Turner thought an unsightly intrusion and left out of his copy, was a typical Dutch harbour-master’s house, invariably present at the mouth of a river.
Turner also copied and discussed Ruisdael’s Burst of Sunshine (‘Coup de Soleil’) in this sketchbook, folios 22 verso, 81 (D04298, D04380). Bachrach notes Turner’s adaptation of Ruisdael-like elements in his Calais Pier, with French Poissards Preparing for Sea; an English Packet Arriving (National Gallery, London),3 itself a depiction of a lee shore; this follows Ziff’s idea that Turner painted it ‘in private competition’ with Ruisdael’s Storm.4 Bachrach also suggests that the three-word heading of Turner’s notes on Ruisdael’s Louvre picture – ‘Sea Port Ruysdael’ – may have prompted his otherwise puzzling title for his own picture exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1827, Port Ruysdael (Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut) – ‘an improved version of the Louvre composition’. Butlin and Joll, however, argue that this was more probably a collective tribute to various Ruisdaels in British collections5 while Ian Warrell notes another possible source in Ruisdael’s Rough Sea at a Jetty (Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth, Texas) which was on the London art market in 1826; this picture was shown alongside Turner’s at Tate Britain in 2009.6 Turner’s interest in the Dutch painter and copying of his work – at least through the medium of a print – is documented from the early 1790s in a sketchbook in the Art Museum, Princeton University.7
David Blayney Brown
October 2009
How to cite
David Blayney Brown, ‘A Storm off the Dutch Coast, after Jacob van Ruisdael 1802 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, October 2009, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://www