Joseph Mallord William Turner Crowhurst c.1816
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Crowhurst circa 1816
D08172
Vaughan Bequest CXVIII R
Vaughan Bequest CXVIII R
Pen and ink, pencil and watercolour on white wove lightweight writing paper, 200 x 277 mm
Bequeathed by Henry Vaughan 1900
Provenance:
...
Bought from Henry Dawe by Charles Stokes by 1848, 15 guineas
Bequeathed by Stokes to Hannah Cooper, 1853
Exchanged 6 October 1854 together with Kingston Bank (Tate D08177; Vaughan Bequest CXVIII W) via Thomas Griffith
...
Henry Vaughan by 1878
...
Bought from Henry Dawe by Charles Stokes by 1848, 15 guineas
Bequeathed by Stokes to Hannah Cooper, 1853
Exchanged 6 October 1854 together with Kingston Bank (Tate D08177; Vaughan Bequest CXVIII W) via Thomas Griffith
...
Henry Vaughan by 1878
Exhibition history
1904
National Gallery, London, various dates to at least 1904 (868).
1921
The Liber Studiorum by Turner: Drawings, Etchings, and First State Mezzotint Engravings with Some Additional Engravers’ Proofs and 51 of the Original Copperplates, National Gallery, Millbank [Tate Gallery], London, November 1921–November 1922 (not in catalogue).
1922
Original Drawings, Etchings, Mezzotints, and Copperplates for the “Liber Studiorum” by J.M.W. Turner, R.A., Whitworth Institute Art Galleries, Manchester, December 1922–March 1923 (not in catalogue).
1938
Four Screens, British Museum, London, September 1938 (frame no.3; no catalogue).
1974
Turner 1775–1851, Royal Academy, London, November 1974–March 1975 (110).
1983
J.M.W. Turner: Dibujos y acuarelas del Museo Británico, exhibition catalogue, Museo del Prado, Madrid, February–March 1983 (20, reproduced).
1986
Turner Exhibition, National Musuem of Western Art, Tokyo, August–October 1986, Municipal Museum of Art, Kyoto, October–November 1986 (67, reproduced in colour).
1998
Turner and the Scientists, Tate Gallery, London, March–June 1998 (38, reproduced fig.50).
2005
Turner’s Picture of Britain, Tate Britain, London, June 2005–April 2006 (no catalogue).
Engraved:
(see main catalogue entry)
(see main catalogue entry)
References
1997
Martin F. Krause, Turner in Indianapolis: The Pantzer Collection of Drawings and Watercolors by J.M.W. Turner and his Contemporaries at the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indianapolis 1997, p.267 (transcribed from Hannah Cooper, ‘The Cooper Notebooks’, circa 1853–8, Indianapolis Museum of Art, vol.II, p.6 no.4, as ‘Crowshurst’).
1878
W[illiam] G[eorge] Rawlinson, Turner’s Liber Studiorum, A Description and a Catalogue, London 1878, p.151 under no.76, ‘Crowhurst, Sussex’.
1904
E.T. Cook and Alexander Wedderburn eds., Library Edition: The Works of John Ruskin: Volume XIII: Turner: The Harbours of England; Catalogues and Notes, London 1904, p.644 no.868.
1906
Ibid., Volume XXI: The Ruskin Art Collection at Oxford: Catalogues, Notes, and Instructions, London 1906, pp.218–19 (‘Catalogue of the Rudimentary Series’ in Instructions in Practice of Elementary Drawing ...).
1906
W[illiam] G[eorge] Rawlinson, Turner’s Liber Studiorum, A Description and a Catalogue. Second Edition, Revised Throughout, London 1906, p.176 under no.76, ‘Crowhurst, Sussex’.
1908
Edward F. Strange, The Etched and Engraved Work of Frank Short, A.R.A., R.E., London 1908, p.65.
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.I, p.323, CXVIII R, as ‘Crowhurst, Sussex’ (Vaughan Bequest).
1910
Alexander J. Finberg, Turner’s Sketches and Drawings, London 1910, p.83, reproduced opposite pl.XLIII.
1911
Liber Studiorum: J.M.W. Turner: Miniature Edition Containing Reproductions (I.) from First Published State of the Seventy-One Published Plates, and (II.) of the Original Drawings for, or Engraver’s Proofs of, All the Unpublished Plates as the Artist Left Them, London and Glasgow 1911, reproduced p.89 no.76.
1921
Untitled typescript list of works relating to 1921 and 1922 Liber Studiorum exhibitions, [circa 1921], Tate exhibition files, Tate Archive TG 92/9/2, p.4.
1924
Alexander J. Finberg, The History of Turner’s Liber Studiorum with a New Catalogue Raisonné, London 1924, reproduced p.[304], p.305 under no.76.
1938
Martin Hardie, The Liber Studiorum Mezzotints of Sir Frank Short, R.A., P.R.E. after J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Catalogue & Introduction, London 1938, p.57.
1974
Gerald Wilkinson, The Sketches of Turner, R.A. 1802–20: Genius of the Romantic, London 1974, p.111, reproduced p.120.
1977
Gerald Wilkinson, Turner Sketches 1789–1820, London 1977, reproduced p.125.
1996
Gillian Forrester, Turner’s ‘Drawing Book’: The Liber Studiorum, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1996, pp.14, 15, 24 note 82, 29, 34, 139 no.76i, reproduced p.140, pp.161, 163.
1996
Joyce H. Townsend, ‘Turner’s “Drawing Book”, the “Liber Studorium” [sic]: Materials and Techniques’, ICOM Committee for Conservation Preprints, London 1996, vol.I, p.378.
1997
Ian Warrell, Turner on the Loire, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1997, p.225.
1998
James Hamilton, Turner and the Scientists, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1998, pp.54, 92.
Turner’s design, engraved for the Liber Studiorum but not published, shows Crowhust Park, East Sussex, about three miles from the Channel coast between Hastings and Battle. He had made drawings of the house and estate, and the landscape southwards to the coast beyond at Bexhill in the Views of Sussex sketchbook (Tate D10327, continued on D10328; Turner Bequest CXXXVIII 8, 9) in preparation for a summery, sunlit watercolour with sheep basking in the foreground near a temporarily-abandoned wheelbarrow and spades, Pevensey Bay, from Crowhurst Park (private collection)1 engraved in 1816 for a short series of Views in Sussex; Crowhurst was the residence of Henry Pelham, Crown Commissioner of Customs, but Turner’s Sussex patron Jack Fuller, who commissioned the watercolours for the series, ‘owned considerable property in the vicinity’.2
For the Liber design, Turner focused in on the central group of trees, cutting out two thirds of the composition both horizontally and vertically, changed the season to deep winter and populated the scene with figures hard at work cutting and gathering wood; he also added more prominent trees and village buildings to the landscape beyond, telescoping the low-lying, flooded countryside so that the once-distant hills terminating in Beachy Head appear much closer and almost mountainous, and the sea much less prominent, its flat horizon indicated by a gleam of light to the left. The Martello towers (represented elsewhere in the Liber – see Tate D08138; Turner Bequest CXVII K) in the Views in Sussex watercolour – and in other watercolours by Turner3 – are omitted, perhaps intentionally since the Napoleonic Wars (which had begun well before Turner’s Liber) had ended in 1815, and with them the topicality of Britain’s southern coastline as the front line of Britain’s defences.
Turner may have intended the design as a contrast to the calm summer rest of the earlier watercolour, and as representing another aspect of the rural labour depicted in published Liber designs including The Straw Yard and Hedging and Ditching (for drawings see Tate D08111, D08151; Turner Bequest CXVI J, CXVII W). The general significance of forestry in relation to the very survival of the nation during the recent wars may be implicit;4 there may also be a more specific element of commentary, as in other Sussex watercolours, on the decline of the local iron industry – reliant on the efficient management of woodland, which had not been successfully implemented locally;5 the trees appear straggling and depleted, and Turner’s figures have an unorganised, archaic quality to them. It has yet to be established whether he had access to reproductions of the two great 1565 winter paintings by Pieter Bruegel the Elder (circa 1525/30–1569), Hunters in the Snow and The Gloomy Day (Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, nos.1838 and 1837 respectively), with their valleys with hills and coasts beyond seen through trees from high foregrounds; Crowhurst seems to refer to the Northern European tradition rather than to the Liber’s more usual Italianate models.
For once, Ruskin criticised the design in terms of the limitations of the generic brown ink used for the corresponding Liber print: ‘He seems to have meant to make it extremely beautiful, and the record of a most solemn impression on his own mind from the Downs of Sussex, under light-falling snow, with heavier storm coming on in twilight. The brown colour, however, of the engraving defeats his purpose’.6
The composition is recorded, as ‘17 Snow +’, in a list of published and unpublished ‘Pastoral’ subjects in the Liber Notes (2) sketchbook (Tate D12160; Turner Bequest CLIV (a) 25a). The ‘+’ probably indicates that the work had yet to be engraved; these notes (D12160–D12171; CLIV (a) 25a–31) were apparently made between 1808 and as late as 1818.7 It is noted again, as ‘Snow ... Daw’, in a list (now rubbed and difficult to decipher) of Liber works in progress around 1817–18 inside the back cover of the Aesacus and Hesperie sketchbook (Tate D40933; Turner Bequest CLXIX).8
The etching and mezzotint engraving, etched by Turner and engraved by Henry Dawe, was among the unpublished Liber Studiorum prints (Rawlinson/Finberg nos.72–91;9 see also Tate D08170, D08171, D08174–D08178, D25451; Turner Bequest CXVIII U, CCLXIII 328, Vaughan Bequest CXVIII P, Q, S, T, V, W, X; and Tate N02782, N03631). Tate does not hold any impressions.
Between 1902 and 1904, Frank Short etched and mezzotinted this composition,10 as one of his interpretations of the unpublished Liber plates (Tate does not hold an impression; see general Liber introduction).
By 1848 the present work had been bought from Henry Dawe by Turner’s friend Charles Stokes, for 15 guineas, and he bequeathed it to his niece Hannah Cooper in 1853.11 It was exchanged the following year together with the Liber design Kingston Bank (Tate D08177; Vaughan Bequest CXVIII W) through Turner’s dealer Thomas Griffith.12 Henry Vaughan owned it by 187813
Eric Shanes, Turner’s Rivers, Harbours and Coasts, London 1981, p.19; see also the same author’s ‘Sussex, Views in’ in Evelyn Joll, Martin Butlin and Herrmann eds., The Oxford Companion to J.M.W. Turner, Oxford 2001, pp.322–3.
See Joyce H. Townsend and Ian Warrell, ‘Picture Note 2’, Turner Studies, vol.11, no.1, Summer 1991, pp.56–7 and note 21.
‘Catalogue of the Rudimentary Series’ in Instructions in Practice of Elementary Drawing..., in Cook and Wedderburn XXI 1906, pp.218–19.
Technical notes:
The sheet is not watermarked, but has been identified as once being part of the Studies for Liber sketchbook (Tate; Turner Bequest CXV),1 made up of ‘J Whatman | 1807’ paper;2 as it has been trimmed to the image as engraved (intact pages in the sketchbook being 230 x 381 mm), it is not possible to establish its original location in the book by matching it to the stubs that remain there. A uniform, overall wash in watercolour was applied, with initial pencil sketching for the figures. Heavy brown ink,3 like printers’ ink, was used for the trees, and some strokes have a ‘spluttered’ outline because they were applied with a pen; this work alternated with brushstrokes of watercolour. There is much scratching-out, notably to indicate snow on the branches of the central trees, and some lights reserved in the sky, giving a high contrast with the dark, inked areas. The overall colour is a mid-brown, due to the use of a burnt sienna pigment and possibly sepia to the lower right.4 A fingerprint is visible on the dark, turreted building in the distance. Ruled pencil lines are evident in the sky a few millimetres from the left- and right-hand edges, corresponding with the limits of the image as engraved.
Verso:
Blank, save for inscriptions.
Inscribed in pencil ‘CXVIII R | Pl 76’ top left, ‘1’ [circled] centre, and ‘D08172’ bottom right
Stamped in black ‘[crown] | N•G | CXVIII – R’ bottom left
Stamped in black ‘[crown] | N•G | CXVIII – R’ bottom left
There is some staining at the top left and the bottom edge, and a few apparently random dark lines on the right.
Matthew Imms
May 2006
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘Crowhurst c.1816 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, May 2006, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://www