Joseph Mallord William Turner Stangate Creek, on the River Medway c.1823-4
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Stangate Creek, on the River Medway c.1823–4
D18134
Turner Bequest CCVIII A
Turner Bequest CCVIII A
Watercolour on white wove watercolour paper, 162 x 240 mm
Watermark J Wh[atman] | Turke[y Mill]
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram bottom left
Watermark J Wh[atman] | Turke[y Mill]
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram bottom left
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Exhibition history
1904
National Gallery, London, various dates to at least 1904 (161).
1972
J.M.W. Turner: Gemälde Aquarelle, Nationalgalerie Staatliche Museen Preußischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin, September–November 1972 (63).
1973
Turner {1775/1851}: desenhos, aguarelas e óleos/ Drawings, Watercolours and Oil Paintings, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon, June–July 1973 (23, reproduced).
1974
Turner 1775–1851, Royal Academy, London, November 1974–March 1975 (B97d).
1978
Turner 1775–1851, Haags Gemeentemuseum, The Hague, December 1978–February 1979 (32, reproduced as Stangate Creek aan de Medway Rivier).
1979
Oleos y acuarelas de Joseph Mallord William Turner, Museo de Bellas Artes, Caracas, Venezuela, October[–?November] 1979 (BM 30).
1979
Exposicion del gran pintor ingles, William Turner: Oleos y acuarelas: Collecciones de la Tate Gallery, British Museum y otros museos ingleses, Museo de Arte Moderno, Mexico City, August–September 1979 (BM 30).
1980
Turner at the Bankside Gallery: Drawings & Water-colours of British River Scenes from the British Museum, Bankside Gallery, London, November–December 1980 (62).
1989
[?] Turner & the Coast of Kent, Canterbury Festival, Canterbury City Museums, October 1989 (no catalogue entries or list of works).
1991
Turner: The Fourth Decade: Watercolours 1820–1830, Tate Gallery, London, January–May 1991 (13).
1992
Turner as Professor: The Artist and Linear Perspective, Tate Gallery, London, October 1992–January 1993 (83).
1995
Sketching the Sky: Watercolours from the Turner Bequest, Tate Gallery, London, September 1995–February 1996 (no catalogue numbers, p.2).
2007
J.M.W. Turner, National Gallery of Art, Washington, October 2007–January 2008, Dallas Museum of Art, February–May 2008, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, June–September 2008 (68, reproduced in colour).
References
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.615, no.161, as ‘The Medway. Stangate Creek’.
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.II, p.629, CCVIII A, as ‘Stangate Creek, on the River Medway’.
1990
Eric Shanes, Turner’s England 1810–38, London 1990, p.115 no.90 colour.
1991
Ian Warrell, Turner: The Fourth Decade: Watercolours 1820–1830, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1991, p.32, no.13 reproduced.
2003
Barry Venning, Turner, Art & Ideas, London 2003, p.172–3, pl.101.
Forming part of the Medway estuary in Kent, Stangate Creek facilitated the ‘convenient intercourse of commerce between neighbouring towns’, the author Barbara Hofland (1770–1844) writes.1 It is this enactment of composed and mutually beneficial commercial ‘intercourse’ which we find represented by Turner in this drawing.
The moored vessels depicted in the distance on the left are hulks: ships utilised for examining imported goods and quarantining potentially disease-bearing cargo and crew coming into Britain via the North Sea and English Channel. To their right, hazy in the middle distance, are decommissioned navy ships anchored near the top of the creek. In the foreground, rendered with precision in more saturated pigments, is a topsail barge, laden with barrels. A Bermuda sloop can be seen advancing behind it. Immediately in front of these vessels is a sailboat being navigated by two oarsmen. The group of logs, perhaps indicating a local woodworking industry, is probably their cargo. Floating on the placid surface of the Creek, their diagonal trajectory directs the eye towards the wide radiant sky and reflected glow of the sun on the water. Though not included in the original watercolour design, Turner replaced the bobbing logs with a buoy before the drawing was engraved.
The scene has a little of the compositional and atmospheric quality of Turner’s 1818 oil painting Dort, or Dortrecht, the Dort Packet-Boat from Rotterdam Becalmed (Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut).2 In both works Turner recalls the handling of light and aerial perspective of the seventeenth-century Dutch landscapist Aelbert Cuyp.
According to Shanes, the watercolour drawing ‘is a dawn scene’, because ‘the hulks were stationed by Chetney Hill at the south-east of Stangate Creek, which runs along a north-south axis’, the view therefore being taken ‘in the direction of the rising sun’.3 The intervals between the moored vessels and those in languorous transit create a sense, the art historian Barry Venning writes, ‘that they maintain a permanent...vigil’, bathed in an elegiac light.4 Through Turner’s flattering lens this scene of workaday life becomes idyllic and eternal, possessing a ‘tranquil majesty’ as Hofland writes.5
The Medway is featured in a further Rivers of England subject: Rochester, on the River Medway (Tate D18156, Turner Bequest CCVIII W).
This drawing was engraved by Thomas Lupton and published in 1827 (Tate impressions T04817–T04818).
Mrs [Barbara] Hofland, River Scenery, by Turner and Girtin, with Descriptions by Mrs. Hofland. Engraved by Eminent Engravers, from Drawings by J.M.W. Turner, R.A. and the Late Thomas Girtin, London 1827, pp.3–4, pl.1.
Technical notes:
The back of the sheet has been painted with very dilute watercolour wash in blue and pale taupe. In some areas the brushstrokes have not saturated the sheet with wash, leaving traces of unpainted paper.
Verso:
Stamped in black with Turner Bequest monogram at centre and with ‘CCVIII A’ at centre towards top; inscribed in pencil ‘A’ at centre and with ‘22’ at centre towards left.
Alice Rylance-Watson
March 2013
How to cite
Alice Rylance-Watson, ‘Stangate Creek, on the River Medway c.1823–4 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, March 2013, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, August 2014, https://www