Joseph Mallord William Turner Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence: A Sketch from Memory exhibited 1830
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence: A Sketch from Memory exhibited 1830
D25467
Turner Bequest CCLXIII 344
Turner Bequest CCLXIII 344
Watercolour and gouache on white wove paper, 560 x 766 mm, mounted on white wove paper 616 x 823 mm
Inscribed by the artist in brown watercolour ‘Funeral of Sir Thos Lawrence, PRA | Janr 21 1830 | SKETCH from MEMORY | IMWT’ bottom left
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIII 344’ bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIII 344’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Exhibition history
1830
Royal Academy, London 1830 (493).
1904
National Gallery, London, various dates to at least 1904 (551).
1933
English Art, British Museum, London, January–December 1933 (no catalogue).
1963
Turner Watercolors from The British Museum: A Loan Exhibition Circulated by the Smithsonian Institution, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, September–October 1963, Museum of Fine Arts of Houston, Texas, November 1963, M.H. de Young Memorial Museum, San Francisco, December 1963–January 1964, Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, January–March 1964, William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art, Kansas City, Missouri, March–April 1964, Brooklyn Museum, New York, May 1964, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, June–July 1964 (26).
1968
Bicentenary Exhibition 1768–1968, Royal Academy of Arts, London, December 1968–March 1969 (540).
1974
Turner 1775–1851, Royal Academy, London, November 1974–March 1975 (436).
1983
Turner and the Human Figure: Watercolours from the Turner Bequest, Loaned by the British Museum, Tate Gallery, London, December 1983–July 1984 (no catalogue).
1987
Watercolours from the Turner Bequest, Tate Gallery, London, April–October 1987 (no catalogue).
1989
Turner and the Human Figure: Studies of Contemporary Life, Tate Gallery, London, April–July 1989 (22, reproduced).
1992
Turner: The Fifth Decade: Watercolours 1830–1840, Tate Gallery, London, February–May 1992 (1, reproduced).
1997
J.M.W. Turner 1775–1851: A Tate Gallery Collection Exhibition, Yokohama Museum of Art, June–August 1997, Fukuoka Art Museum, September–October 1997, Nagoya City Art Museum, October–December 1997 (84, reproduced).
1997
Joseph Mallord William Turner, Bank Austria Kunstforum, Vienna, March–June 1997 (94, reproduced).
2000
Turner: The Great Watercolours, Royal Academy of Arts, London, December 2000–February 2001 (71, reproduced).
2007
Hockney on Turner Watercolours, Tate Britain, London, June 2007–February 2008 (no number).
References
1859
John Burnet and Peter Cunningham, Turner and his Works: Illustrated with Examples from his Pictures, and Critical Remarks on his Principles of Painting, 2nd ed., revised by Henry Murray, London 1859, p.101 no.159 [exhibited RA 1830].
1870
Turner’s Celebrated Landscapes: Sixteen of the Most Important Works of J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Reproduced from the Large Engravings in Permanent Tint by the Autotype Process, London 1870, p.103, no.163.
1901
C[harles] F[rancis] Bell, A List of the Works Contributed to Public Exhibitions by J.M.W. Turner, R.A., London 1901, p.53 no.81.
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.II, p.541, as ‘Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence at St Paul’s’.
1910
C[harles] Lewis Hind, Turner’s Golden Visions, London and Edinburgh 1910 and 1925, pp.162–3.
1939
Camille Mauclair, Turner, trans. Eveline Byam Shaw, London and Toronto 1939, p.160, as ‘Funeral of Sir Thomas.
1960
Sir John Rothenstein, Turner (1775–1851), London 1960, reproduced p.24 (bottom).
1963
Edward Croft-Murray, Turner Watercolors from The British Museum: A Loan Exhibition Circulated by the Smithsonian Institution, exhibition catalogue, National Gallery of Art, Washington DC 1963, no.26, reproduced p.[36], as ‘The Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence, P.R.A., at St Paul’s Cathedral’.
1968
Graham Reynolds, Bicentenary Exhibition 1768–1968, exhibition catalogue, Royal Academy of Arts, London 1968, no.540, as ‘The Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence at Saint Paul’s’.
1969
John Gage, Colour in Turner: Poetry and Truth, London 1969, p.230 note 69.
1974
Martin Butlin, Andrew Wilton and John Gage, Turner 1775–1851, exhibition catalogue, Royal Academy, London 1974, no.436, p.124, as ‘Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence, a Sketch from Memory’.
1975
Ph. Dumoulin, Un Peintre et son critique: Turner et Ruskin, Le Revest Saint-Martin 1975, pp.66 notes 74, 91.
1975
Joseph R. Goldyne, J.M.W. Turner: Works on Paper from American Collections, exhibition catalogue, University Art Museum, Berkeley, California 1975, p.76 under no.6.
1975
Gerald Wilkinson, Turner’s Colour Sketches 1820–34, London 1975, pp.16, 47, reproduced in colour.
1975
Andrew Wilton, Turner in the British Museum: Drawings and Watercolours, exhibition catalogue, British Museum, London 1975, p.96 under no.147.
1979
Andrew Wilton, J.M.W. Turner: His Life and Work, Fribourg 1979, p.359 no.521, reproduced.
1980
John Gage (ed.), Collected Correspondence of J.M.W. Turner with an Early Diary and a Memoir by George Jones, Oxford 1980, p.137 note 4.
1985
Jack Lindsay, Turner: The Man and His Art, London 1985, p.109.
1987
Andrew Wilton, Turner in his Time, London 1987, pp.163, 168, reproduced p.[136] pl.89 in colour [cited incorrectly as CCLXXIII 344].
1988
Nicholas Alfrey, ‘Turner and the Cult of Heroes’, in Turner Studies, vol.8, no.2, Winter 1988, p.42, reproduced p.43 fig.14.
1989
Ann Chumbley and Ian Warrell, Turner and the Human Figure: Studies of Contemporary Life, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1989, no.22, p.36, reproduced and in colour, p.19.
1989
Evelyn Joll, ‘Turner and the Human Figure’, exhibition review, Turner Studies, vol.9, no.1, Summer 1989, p.59.
1991
Michael Bockemühl, J.M.W. Turner 1775–1851: Die Welt des Lichts und der Farbe, Cologne 1991,.
1993
Michael Bockemühl, J.M.W. Turner 1775–1851: The World of Light and Colour, trans. Michael Claridge, Cologne 1993, p.51, reproduced pl.95.
1992
Evelyn Joll, ‘Review: Turner: The Fifth Decade: Watercolours 1830–1840’, Turner Society News, no.61, August 1992, p.7.
1992
Anne Lyles, Turner: The Fifth Decade: Watercolours 1830–1840, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1992, no.1, pp.11, 41, reproduced.
1995
Cecilia Powell, ‘Turner’s Sketches: Purpose and Practice’, in Joyce H. Townsend (ed.), Turner’s Painting Techniques: In Context: 1995, London 1995, p.56, reproduced fig.1.
1996
Gillian Forrester, Turner’s ‘Drawing Book’: The Liber Studiorum, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1996, p.38 note 50.
1997
Anthony Bailey, Standing in the Sun: A Life of J.M.W. Turner, London 1997, p.262.
1997
David B[layney] Brown, Yasuhide Shimbata and Hideko Numata, J.M.W. Turner 1775–1851: A Tate Gallery Collection Exhibition, exhibition catalogue, Yokohama Museum of Art 1997, no.84, reproduced in colour.
1997
David Blayney Brown, Klaus Albrecht Schröder, Evelyn Benesch and others, Joseph Mallord William Turner, exhibition catalogue, Bank Austria Kunstforum, Vienna 1997, no.94, p.41, reproduced in colour.
1997
Eric Shanes, Turner’s Watercolour Explorations 1810–1842, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1997, pp.30, 32 note 29, 97, 99.
1999
Celina Fox, ‘Turner and London: The Kurt Pantzer Memorial Lecture, delivered in the Clore Auditorium on 23 April 1998’, Turner Society News, no.81, March 1999, p.14.
2000
Eric Shanes, Evelyn Joll, Ian Warrell and others, Turner: The Great Watercolours, exhibition catalogue, Royal Academy of Arts, London 2000, no.71, pp.12, 28, 42, 171, reproduced in colour, as ‘Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence, a sketch from memory’.
2001
Robin Hamlyn, ‘Sir Thomas Lawrence’, in Evelyn Joll, Martin Butlin and Luke Herrmann (eds.), The Oxford Companion to J.M.W. Turner, Oxford 2001, p.162.
2001
Andrew Kennedy, ‘London’, in Evelyn Joll, Martin Butlin and Luke Herrmann (eds.), The Oxford Companion to J.M.W. Turner, Oxford 2001, p.176.
2001
Eric Shanes, Phillip King and Anthony Bailey, The Death of JMW Turner RA, 19 December 1851: A Commemoration on the 150th Anniversary: The Turner Society, St Paul’s Cathedral, London, 19 December 2001, London 2001, p.7, reproduced p.6.
2001
Robert Yardley, ‘Exhibited Watercolours’, in Evelyn Joll, Martin Butlin and Luke Herrmann (eds.), The Oxford Companion to J.M.W. Turner, Oxford 2001, p.97.
2002
Joyce H. Townsend, ‘The Analysis of Watercolor Materials, in Particular Turner’s Watercolors at the Tate Gallery (1790s to 1840s)’ in Harriet K. Stratis and Britt Salvesen (eds.), The Broad Spectrum: Studies in the Materials, Techniques and Conservation of Color on Paper, London 2002, p.83, reproduced fig.2.14.
2003
Joyce H. Townsend (ed.), Robin Hamlyn (consultant ed.) and others, William Blake: The Painter at Work, London 2003, pp.144, 145, reproduced fig.120.
2004
Eric Shanes, Turner: The Life and Masterworks, New York 2004, p.44.
2005
Michael Levey, Sir Thomas Lawrence, New Haven and London 2005, p.299, reproduced in colour p.298, pl.163, as ‘Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence from Memory’.
2006
Andrew Wilton, Turner in his Time, revised ed., London 2006, p.151, reproduced pl.151 in colour.
2007
David Blayney Brown, Turner Watercolours, exhibition catalogue, Tate Britain, London 2007, p.15, reproduced in colour p.71.
2007
Sam Smiles, J.M.W. Turner: The Making of a Modern Artist, Manchester and New York 2007, pp.15–16, 47 note 26.
2007
Ian Warrell (ed.), Franklin Kelly and others, J.M.W. Turner, exhibition catalogue, National Gallery of Art, Washington 2007, p.257.
2010
A. Cassandra Albinson, Peter Funnell and Lucy Peltz, Thomas Lawrence: Regency Power & Brilliance, exhibition catalogue, National Portrait Gallery, London 2010, p.261, reproduced in colour p.262, fig.87, as ‘Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence from Memory’.
Technique and condition
This work on cream coloured wove paper is composed of rapidly superimposed washes of colour which have been tested out on the edges of the sheet. Turner’s brush-strokes overrun the edges of the sheet in some cases. Many Turner Bequest watercolours have been trimmed in the past, and it is impossible to know now how typical this sheet is of his working practice.
This sketch must have taken longer to complete than usual, since many of the horses and figures are developed in some detail. The application of dense black washes made form black pigment only is rather uncharacteristic of Turner, but entirely appropriate to the subject. Much of the paper is covered with multiple watercolour washes, while washing-out and small amounts of gouache were used for highlights.
The identification of the colours at the edges was done by removing tiny samples the size of a pin-point, and placing them in the sample chamber of a scanning electron microscope, under an X-ray beam. This beam interacts with the elements that make up each pigment, and the resulting spectrum makes it possible to work out which elements are present, and therefore which pigments are likely to be present. Sometimes the lack of detectable elements, in combination with surface colour and appearance in ultraviolet light, can serve in combination to identify a material. For example, the traditional and fast-fading watercolour pigment gamboge (deep yellow) is likely to be present in yellow areas where no elements were detected, while in other yellow areas the detection of chromium and lead indicate that chrome yellow is definitely present. Lime green was created by mixing gamboge and black, an unusual combination for Turner, though for this subject black must have been abundantly available on his palette already. (More than one white ceramic watercolour palette of Turner’s has survived, none linked to any particular painting or period of his life.) Vermilion, Prussian blue, and brown ochre were also confirmed in this sketch. These analyses give more confidence to visual judgements on the materials that Turner was using at this time in other watercolours.
The existence of the colour trials also made it possible to take marginally larger samples in order to analyse Turner’s paint medium, the gum water. Several gums were available in Turner’s era: notably gum arabic and gum tragacanth. The former is today used alone in commercial watercolour paints. The latter could be a practical choice because it does not ‘wash up’. This nineteenth-century term means that a later wash in gum tragacanth, applied to dried paper, would not wet and re-activate an earlier wash as much as would happen when gum arabic alone were used. That makes it very useful for an artist who applies multiple washes, uses plain water for washing out, and generally works his paper extensively, all of which describe Turner’s working methods. A method of chemical analysis called gas chromatography was used, which separates out components of a complex mixture to allow later identification. This was combined with mass spectrometry for more precise identification of the separated components. The result was that the gum used here was a mixture: gum arabic as the largest component, with gum tragacanth, and some sugar or honey added.
Added sugar or honey give flexibility to the paint film, useful if the artist chooses to apply it thickly as Turner often did. This is quite a specific mixture, and it could have suggested that Turner might have mixed it himself, to obtain the working properties he sought from his paint, until further materials were analysed. Several analyses from this sketch gave the same result, which has also been obtained for Venice: Looking across the Lagoon at Sunset (Tate D32162; Turner Bequest CCCXVI 25), and (except for the sugar) from the analysis of several commercial watercolour cakes made up into a travelling watercolour palette by Turner.1 This example is today at the Royal Academy of Arts, London. A Turner watercolour palette, privately owned, proved to have gum arabic alone in its paint when analysed by the same method. Thus we know from the travelling palette that he chose his materials by purchasing so-called ‘hard’ watercolour blocks, which did not include sugar, but added it himself as needed. Commercially available ‘soft’ watercolour blocks included sugar as an easily-detected major component combined with gum arabic, as was found for a watercolour box labelled as containing ‘honey colours’, sold by Ackermann the colourman prior to1837.2
Helen Evans
October 2008
Revised by Joyce Townsend
March 2011
See Bronwyn A. Ormsby, Joyce H. Townsend, Brian W. Singer and John R. Dean, ‘British Watercolour Cakes from the Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Century’, Studies in Conservation, no.50, 2005, pp.45–66.
How to cite
Helen Evans, 'Technique and Condition', October 2008, revised by Joyce Townsend, March 2011, in Nicola Moorby, ‘Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence: A Sketch from Memory exhibited 1830 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, May 2011, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://wwwOne of Turner’s most prominent contemporary advocates was the artist, Sir Thomas Lawrence (1769–1830). The leading portraitist of the age, Lawrence was famed throughout Europe for his portraits of royalty, statesmen, military leaders and fashionable society, and his achievements brought him many honours including Principal Painter-in-Ordinary to the King, and also from 1820, President of the Royal Academy. Famously describing Turner as ‘indisputably the first landscape painter in Europe’,1 he not only owned some of the younger man’s paintings,2 but also supported his friend in other practical ways, such as helping to secure his only royal commission,3 and, in 1819, encouraging Turner to join him in Italy, writing to Joseph Farington: ‘Turner should come to Rome. His Genius would here be supplied with new Materials, and entirely congenial with it ... It is a fact, that the Country and scenes around me, do thus impress themselves upon me, and that Turner is always associated with them.’4 Following Turner’s arrival in Rome, Lawrence assisted him by introducing him to artistic society and facilitating his access to the Vatican and other artistic institutions.5 Turner was therefore greatly shocked by Lawrence’s sudden demise aged sixty-one on 7 January 1830, writing sorrowfully to fellow Academician Charles Lock Eastlake, ‘Do but think what a loss we and the arts have in the death of Sir Tho[ma]s Lawrence’.6 The news followed hard on the heels of other recent bereavements: that of Turner’s father in September 1829; another Academician, George Dawe in October; and finally, his close acquaintance, Harriet Wells, on 1 January 1830. In the wake of Lawrence’s funeral on 21 January, Turner poured his feelings of sadness and respect into this painted rendition of the event which he subtitled in an inscription ‘A sketch from memory’.
Lawrence’s funeral was a public occasion of great pomp and pageantry, unrivalled by any since that of Lord Nelson twenty-five years earlier. At the request of the Royal Academy the body was taken the night before the ceremony to Somerset House where it lay in repose in the model room, transformed by candles and black cloth hangings.7 The following day, at about 12.30pm, the velvet-draped coffin was transferred to a hearse and taken in solemn procession to St Paul’s Cathedral. Vast numbers of people gathered to witness the spectacle and members of the recently established Metropolitan Police Force were drafted in to control the crowds and traffic along the Strand.8 The event was reported in exhaustive detail by the Times newspaper who recorded that the order of the carefully stage-managed funerary procession was comprised of the following dignitaries and attendants:
Twelve Peace-officers, to clear the way
Four Marshal’s men, two by two.
The two City Marshal’s, with scarves and hatbands, and crape round the left arm, with a constable on each side.
The carriage of the Lord Mayor, empty.
The Sheriff, Messrs. Ward and Richardson, in the carriage.
The Under Sheriffs.
The Undertaker (Mr. Thornton, jun.) on horseback.
Four Mutes on horseback, in gowns, two by two.
Six Horsemen, in cloaks, two by two.
A Lid of Feathers, with Two Pages.
The Hearse, drawn by six horses, with sixteen pages, eight on each side.
The Pall-bearers, in mourning coaches.
The following mourning coaches then followed, with
The Family of the Deceased;
The Old Servant of Sir Thomas Lawrence;
The Executor [Mr Archibald Keightley];
The Rector of St. George, Bloomsbury;
Sir Henry Halford, the Physician of Sir Thomas;
The Chaplain to the Academy;
The Keeper of the Royal Academy;
The Secretary to the Royal Academy;
The Treasurer to the Royal Academy;
The Academicians and Associates, two in each.
The Students, two by two, in each of the following mourning coaches.
Private mourners, two by two, in each of the succeeding mourning coaches.
The Officers, &c. of the Society of Painters in Water Colours, two by two.
The Officers of the Society of British Artists, two by two.
The Officers, &c., of the Artists’ General Benevolent Institution,
Forming, in the whole, a procession of 42 mourning coaches, each drawn by two horses caprisoned with plumes and velvet. Next followed –
The carriage of the late Sir Thomas Lawrence;
Carriages of the Pall-bearers
The Carriages of the Nobility and Gentry; amounting in number to about eighty.9
Four Marshal’s men, two by two.
The two City Marshal’s, with scarves and hatbands, and crape round the left arm, with a constable on each side.
The carriage of the Lord Mayor, empty.
The Sheriff, Messrs. Ward and Richardson, in the carriage.
The Under Sheriffs.
The Undertaker (Mr. Thornton, jun.) on horseback.
Four Mutes on horseback, in gowns, two by two.
Six Horsemen, in cloaks, two by two.
A Lid of Feathers, with Two Pages.
The Hearse, drawn by six horses, with sixteen pages, eight on each side.
The Pall-bearers, in mourning coaches.
The following mourning coaches then followed, with
The Family of the Deceased;
The Old Servant of Sir Thomas Lawrence;
The Executor [Mr Archibald Keightley];
The Rector of St. George, Bloomsbury;
Sir Henry Halford, the Physician of Sir Thomas;
The Chaplain to the Academy;
The Keeper of the Royal Academy;
The Secretary to the Royal Academy;
The Treasurer to the Royal Academy;
The Academicians and Associates, two in each.
The Students, two by two, in each of the following mourning coaches.
Private mourners, two by two, in each of the succeeding mourning coaches.
The Officers, &c. of the Society of Painters in Water Colours, two by two.
The Officers of the Society of British Artists, two by two.
The Officers, &c., of the Artists’ General Benevolent Institution,
Forming, in the whole, a procession of 42 mourning coaches, each drawn by two horses caprisoned with plumes and velvet. Next followed –
The carriage of the late Sir Thomas Lawrence;
Carriages of the Pall-bearers
The Carriages of the Nobility and Gentry; amounting in number to about eighty.9
On its arrival at St Paul’s, the procession was met by the Dean, the Chapter and the Choir before proceeding according to a pre-arranged order into the cathedral.10 The service was held underneath Wren’s famous dome, with the mourners and Academicians arranged in a circle to the left and right around the coffin.11 According to Turner’s biographer, Walter Thornbury, Turner was seated in between John Constable and David Wilkie, the latter of whom remarked upon the fine visual effect created by the event, ‘from which untimely observation Turner turned away with disgust’.12 Finally the body was transferred to the vault of the crypt where it was buried near to other former Academy Presidents, Benjamin West and Sir Joshua Reynolds, and close to where Turner himself would finally be laid to rest over twenty years later. The painter, William Etty described the affecting atmosphere of the occasion:
The only fine day we have had for a long time was that day. When the melancholy pageant had entered the great western door and was half-way up the body of the church, the solemn sound of the organ and anthem swelled on the ear and vibrated to every heart. It was deeply touching ... The organ echoed through the aisles. The sinking sun shed his parting beams through the west window; and we left him alone. – Hail! and farewell!13
Turner’s watercolour depicts the entrance of Lawrence’s coffin into the Great West Door of St Paul’s, followed by a line of mourners walking in pairs. The large black vehicle on the far left-hand side is the horse-drawn hearse topped with feathers and attended by pages, whilst entering from the left of the composition and circling round the statue of Queen Anne on the right in order to drop their inhabitants at the bottom of the steps are some of the numerous carriages which followed the coffin from Somerset House to St Paul’s. The unfolding drama of the parade is watched by groups of people lining the steps and the streets in front of the cathedral, and the crowds are held in place by several black-clad Marshalmen, responsible for law enforcement during this period. Also in attendance are at least two funeral mutes, men wearing hats and sashes and bearing staffs draped in black cloth who were hired to enhance the gravity and dignity of the occasion. One is standing near the central foreground, partially hidden behind another figure in a grey/green coat, whilst a second can be seen beside an empty carriage on the left-hand side of the cathedral steps. Beams of wintry afternoon sunshine stream in from the right-hand side, casting long shadows across the ground and adding to the sombre, melancholy mood of the scene.
Finberg catalogued a miscellaneous pencil sketch on cardboard as Outside St Paul’s: Sir T. Lawrence’s Funeral (see Tate D34940; Turner Bequest CCCXLIV 440), thereby connecting it with the watercolour.14 The study shows a number of figures, some of whom are holding spears or staffs, grouped around the base of a statue. Finberg assumed this to be the sculpture of Queen Anne by Francis Bird which had stood outside St Paul’s Cathedral since 1712 and which appears on the right-hand side of his watercolour.15 However, the statue depicted here is missing the four female representations of England, Ireland, France and the North American colonies grouped around the base in the painting, and furthermore the railings encircling the plinth are too high. It is therefore unlikely that the sketch can be related either to Turner’s watercolour or to the artist’s observations of the funeral.
The visual details of Turner’s painting are confirmed in part by a written account of the ‘last sad ceremonies paid yesterday to departed talent’ which the artist included in a letter to his friend, George Jones, currently residing in Rome. Weighed down by his recent series of losses, and with the memory of the day fresh in his mind, Turner wrote:
Alas! only two short months Sir Thomas followed the coffin of [George] Dawe to the same place. We then were his pall bearers. Who will do the like for me, or when, God only knows how soon. My poor father’s death proved a heavy blow upon me, and has been followed by others of the same dark kind. However, it is something to feel that gifted talent can be acknowledged by the many who yesterday waded up to their knees in snow and muck to see the funeral pomp swelled up by carriages of the great, without the persons themselves.16
As described in the letter, a covering of snow lies on the ground in front of St Paul’s and the assembled spectators are braced against the cold. Some, like the figures in the bottom right-hand corner are huddled together, whilst others like the trio of women standing nearby have their hands tucked inside large winter muffs. Despite Turner’s assertion that he was a pall-bearer, he was not in fact one of the eight official participants listed by the Times (the Earl of Aberdeen, Earl Gower, Earl Clanwilliam, and the politicians Robert Peel, George Agar Ellis, Sir George Murray, John Wilson Croker and Richard Hart Davis).17 The order of the cortege stipulated that Academicians followed behind the chief mourners, at some distance from the hearse. In any case, if Turner had been a pall-bearer he would never have witnessed the coffin being carried into the cathedral from the distant vantage point depicted in his watercolour. His claim, however, perhaps relates to the time spent by the body at Somerset House, when it is conceivable that some of the Academicians would have borne the coffin to and from the room where it was placed overnight.
Another interesting point from Turner’s written account of the funeral is the fact that many of the eighty or so carriages belonging to the nobility and gentry were actually unoccupied, and were sent by their owners as a gesture of respect to add to the grandeur of the occasion.18 Although this was common practice in the nineteenth century, where only the immediate family of the deceased generally attended the funeral, Turner’s letter suggests that he disapproved of the tokenistic nature of this ritual. Amongst the empty carriages was one belonging to the current Prime Minister, the Duke of Wellington, and Eric Shanes has suggested that Turner has retrospectively rectified his absence by inserting him within the picture.19 Wellington is represented by the man in the foreground wearing a red coat and feathered bicorn hat who seems to be the main focus of the crowd’s attention. This figure, who has his back to the viewer, is wearing the full-dress uniform of a field marshal in the British army with a black mourning band on his left arm.20 His presence is reminiscent of a famous portrait by Lawrence, Arthur Wellesley, 1st Duke of Wellington (1769–1852), 1814–15 (Royal Collection), which depicted the duke in the same attire standing with his back to St Paul’s and which Turner would have seen exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1815.21 Here, however, he has imagined the sitter turned in the opposite direction towards the cathedral as a tacit salute to his former portraitist.22
The red-coated figure plays an important role within the composition of the picture. Amidst the subdued tones of the rest of the scene the splash of bright colour provides an arresting detail which serves to draw the eye of the viewer down to the left-hand foreground. Here the artist has placed an inscription at the edge of the picture plane which reads ‘Funeral of Sir Thos Lawrence, PRA | Janr 21 1830 | SKETCH from MEMORY | IMWT’. The use of the term ‘sketch’ is interesting in relation to a finished work which was subsequently exhibited. Cecilia Powell has stipulated that Turner intended to explain and excuse the haste in which the watercolour was completed, and to justify the picture’s relative lack of finish, particularly evident in the backdrop of the architecture.23 Shanes, meanwhile, has argued that the artist also intended to stress the emotional immediacy of his view.24 A subtle mythical atmosphere is created by the spectral shadow cast across the sarcophagus-like structure bearing the inscription. The silhouette appears to indicate a man holding a spear, although no physical source for the shadow is apparent to the viewer. It is perhaps intended as a symbolic motif, representing a ghostly tribute to the dead man.
Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence was the only watercolour of its kind ever exhibited by Turner at the Royal Academy, and, in fact, was the last work in this medium that he showed there. Clearly intended as a homage to his late friend and colleague, Andrew Wilton has suggested that it illustrates Turner’s deep-seated affection, not only for Lawrence, but for the Academy as a whole.25 However, in the context of Turner’s wider oeuvre it can also be viewed as one of a number of pictures concerned with death, reputation and memory including Pope’s Villa at Twickenham, exhibited 1808 (private collection),26 Thomson’s Aeolian Harp, exhibited 1809 (Manchester City Galleries),27 and The Hero of a Hundred Fights, 1800–10, reworked and exhibited 1847 (Tate, N00551).28 Nicholas Alfrey, for example, has described the watercolour as setting a subject precedent for Turner’s later oil, Peace – Burial at Sea, exhibited 1842 (Tate, N00528), a painting which depicts the interment at sea of fellow artist, David Wilkie (1785–1841).29 Alfrey has argued that the ‘blocked, halting rhythms’ of the watercolour introduce an unsettling feeling of uncertainty, highlighting the gap between the outward ritualistic display of public grief and the authentic sense of loss felt by Turner himself.30 Similarly Peace – Burial at Sea was conceived as a pendant to another painting, War. The Exile and the Rock Limpet, exhibited 1842 (Tate, N00529) which featured as its subject, Napoleon Bonaparte, whose ashes had recently received state burial at Les Invalides in Paris.31 The pair was intended as an ironic juxtaposition, with the anonymous final resting place of the peace-loving artist contrasted with the former, but ultimately temporary, state of exile endured by the war-mongering Napoleon.32
The deaths of his father in 1829 and Lawrence in 1830 appear to have prompted Turner to think about his own mortality and legacy. In his previously quoted letter to George Jones he mournfully commented ‘Who will do the like for me, or when, God only knows how soon.’33 In the same piece of correspondence he also touched upon Lawrence’s financial difficulties and the circumstances surrounding his will, writing to Jones:
Entre nous, much could be written on this subject; much has been in the papers daily of anecdotes, sayings, and doings, contradictory and complex, and nothing certain, excepting that a great mass of property in the unfinished pictures will cover more than demands. The portraits of the potentates are to be exhibited, which will of course produce a large sum. The drawings of the old masters are to be offered to his Majesty in mass, then to the British Museum. Thomas Campbell is to write Sir Thomas’s life at the request of the family, and a portrait of himself, painted lately and engraved, for which great biddings have been already made.34
The cost of Lawrence’s funeral came to £1,000, a huge sum of money which should have been borne by the estate. However, despite his success as an artist, Lawrence was found to be insolvent at his death. A small part of the funeral expenses (£150) was paid by the Academy,35 whilst the rest was met following negotiations with his various creditors.36 Lawrence had hoped that his collection of old master drawings would be purchased for the nation in order to advance the study and appreciation of art in Britain. However, public funds for the realisation of this dream were never to materialise and the works were eventually dispersed amongst private collectors.37 This failure to honour the terms of Lawrence’s will provided a cautionary tale to Turner and probably led to the revision of his own will in 1831 and 1832. In new documents and codicils Turner formally set out his intention to bequeath selected pictures to the nation and to establish both a special gallery to house his works and a charity for poor and decayed male artists. By using his own estate to finance these schemes he hoped to avoid the fate which had befallen Lawrence’s collection. Eventually, after further revisions, Turner’s works did indeed enter the national collection as the ‘Turner Bequest’, although his other wishes were only partially met or ultimately unfulfilled.38
Lawrence commissioned the watercolour, Abergavenny Bridge, 1799 (Victoria and Albert Museum), see Wilton 1979, no.252; and owned the oil painting, Newark Abbey, ?exhibited 1807 (Yale Center for British Art); see Martin Butlin and Evelyn Joll, The Paintings of J.M.W. Turner, revised ed., New Haven and London 1984, no.65.
The Battle of Trafalgar, 21 October 1805, 1823–4 (National Maritime Museum), commissioned by George IV. See Martin Butlin and Evelyn Joll, The Paintings of J.M.W. Turner, revised ed., New Haven and London 1984, no.252.
Quoted in Cecilia Powell, Turner in the South: Rome, Naples, Florence, New Haven and London 1987, p.19.
See Hardy George, ‘Turner, Lawrence, Canova and Venetian art: Three previously unpublished letters’, Apollo, October 1996, pp.25–32.
Douglas Goldring, Regency Portrait Painter: The Life of Sir Thomas Lawrence, P.R.A., London 1951, p.332; and 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.320.
Walter Thornbury, The Life of J.M.W. Turner, R.A. Founded on Letters and Papers Furnished by his Friends and Fellow-Academicians, London 1862, vol.I, pp.177–8.
By 1830 the work has sustained considerable damage and due to its dilapidated state it was eventually replaced in 1886 by a replica version.
A full list of these carriages appears in the ‘Sir Thomas Lawrence’, The Times, 23 January 1830, p.2.
For a full account of the working relationship between Lawrence and Wellington see Susan Jenkins, ‘Sir Thomas Lawrence and the Duke of Wellington: A portraitist and his sitter’, British Art Journal, summer 2007, vol.VIII, no.1, pp.63–7.
A bill from E.N. Thornton & Son for £152 9s exists in the Archive of the Royal Academy of Arts, RAA/SEC/1/71.
See Goldring 1951, p.332, and James Fenton, School of Genius: A History of the Royal Academy of Arts, London 2006, p.187.
Verso:
Blank
Inscribed by unknown hands in pencil ‘551’ top centre, ‘CCLXIII – 344 (551)’ and ‘L.3. (a)’ bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIII 344’ bottom centre left
Inscribed by unknown hands in pencil ‘551’ top centre, ‘CCLXIII – 344 (
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIII 344’ bottom centre left
Technical notes:
Nicola Moorby
May 2011
How to cite
Nicola Moorby, ‘Funeral of Sir Thomas Lawrence: A Sketch from Memory exhibited 1830 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, May 2011, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://www