Joseph Mallord William Turner A Woodland Road in Caley Park, Otley Chevin 1818
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Folio 7 Verso:
A Woodland Road in Caley Park, Otley Chevin 1818
D12006
Turner Bequest CLIII 7a
Turner Bequest CLIII 7a
Pencil on white wove paper, 111 x 185 mm
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.434, CLIII 7a, as ‘The deer park, Otley Chevin’.
1979
Andrew Wilton, The Life and Work of J.M.W. Turner, Fribourg 1979, p.371, no.616.
1980
David Hill, Stanley Warburton, Mary Tussey and others, Turner in Yorkshire, exhibition catalogue, York City Art Gallery 1980, p.46, no.66.
2005
Greg Smith, ‘Turning his back to the Scene’, in Michael Broughton, William Clarke, Joanna Selbourne and others, The Spooner Collection of British Watercolours at the Courtauld Institute Gallery, exhibition catalogue, Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical Gardens, San Marino 2005, pp.28–9 (and note 1).
2009
David Hill, Turner and Leeds: Image of Industry, Leeds 2009, p.75.
This is the left part of a double-page spread continued to the right on D12007; Turner Bequest CLIII 8 opposite, and further right on D12008; Turner Bequest CLIII 9, following, recording a view along a woodland road running across a rocky ravine. The main spread served as the basis of a finished watercolour, West Gates to Caley Park, Otley Chevin (Bradford City Art Galleries),1 painted for Walter Fawkes of Farnley Hall about 1818. The watercolour is cited as ‘24 Park Gate’ in the list of watercolours in hand (or intended) on another page of this sketchbook (D12013; Turner Bequest CLIII 11a).
Andrew Wilton has identified D12006–D12007as the basis of the watercolour called Caley Crags, with Deer (private collection)2 painted contemporaneously for Walter Fawkes but this is in fact based on a previous sketch in this sketchbook (D12003–D12004, D12005; Turner Bequest CLIII 5a–6, 7). For his part, Greg Smith has mistakenly associated it with another watercolour, The Woodwalk, Farnley Hall (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge),3 which is in fact is based on a sketch in the Hastings sketchbook (Tate D10344; Turner Bequest CXXXIX 2) possibly made on the same visit to Farnley in 1818 as the present sketches.
David Hill
June 2009
How to cite
David Hill, ‘A Woodland Road in Caley Park, Otley Chevin 1818 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, June 2009, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, September 2014, https://www