Joseph Mallord William Turner The Mer de Glace and Valley of Chamonix 1802
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
The Mer de Glace and Valley of Chamonix 1802
D04880
Turner Bequest LXXIX F
Turner Bequest LXXIX F
Pencil and black chalk on white laid paper prepared with a grey wash, 561 x 726 mm
Stamped in black ‘LXXIX F’ bottom right
Stamped in black ‘LXXIX F’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Exhibition history
1908
National Gallery, London, 1908 (as ‘The Source of the Arveron 1’).
1981
Turner en France: aquarelles, peintures, dessins, gravures, carnets de croquis / Turner in France: Watercolours, Paintings, Drawings, Engravings, Sketchbooks, Centre Culturel du Marais, Paris, October 1981–January 1982 (26).
References
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.I, p.211, LXXIX F, as ‘Source of the Arveiron (1)’.
1910
Charles Lewis Hind, Turner’s Golden Visions, London and Edinburgh 1910 and 1925, p.266.
1975
Andrew Wilton, Turner in the British Museum: Drawings and Watercolours, exhibition catalogue, Department of Prints and Drawings, British Museum, London 1975, p.47, as ‘LXXXIX F’.
1981
Lindsay Stainton, in Maurice Guillaud and others, Turner en France: aquarelles, peintures, dessins, gravures, carnets de croquis / Turner in France: Watercolours, Paintings, Drawings, Engravings, Sketchbooks, exhibition catalogue, Centre Culturel du Marais, Paris 1981, pp.78, 81 reproduced in colour Fig.141, 82.
1990
Peter Bower, Turner’s Papers: A Study of the Manufacture, Selection and Use of his Drawing Papers 1787–1820, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1990, pp.86–7.
Turner’s campaign of drawing the Valley and glaciers of Chamonix in 1802 produced not only a group of studies in his St Gothard and Mont Blanc sketchbook but four more outlines on larger sheets of grey-washed paper he had also brought with him. This and another (D04886; Turner Bequest LXXIX L) address similar views to a drawing from St Gothard and Mont Blanc (Tate D04612; Turner Bequest LXXV 20); all were taken from the track up to the Montenvers and the Mer de Glace, looking down on the left towards the Glacier du Bois and the cave from which springs the fountain of the River Arveyron while the Valley of Chamonix runs far below.
All these drawings must have contributed to the watercolours made for Walter Fawkes; one variously dated c.1809 or 1814 (Taft Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio)1 whose original title Valley of Chamouni has been established by Eric Shanes2 and the larger version (Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut)3 long thought to have been exhibited in 1803 but redated c.1814 by Shanes and associated with a different original title, Mer de Glace, in the Valley of Chamouni, Switzerland.4
It also seems possible that Turner used the general composition and arrangement of the trees in drawings like this and D04886; Turner Bequest LXXIX L as points of reference for his picture The Fall of an Avalanche in the Grisons exhibited in Turner’s Gallery in 1810 (Tate N00489).6 No other drawings have been found relating to the picture, which is largely imaginary in conception, Turner having neither visited the Grisons nor seen an avalanche in 1802. Verse written by him for the picture, describing ‘pine clad forests | and towering glaciers’, sounds like a memory of Chamonix.
Wilton 1979, p.344 no.389, as ‘“Mer de Glace, in the Valley of Chamouni, Switzerland” (Chamonix, looking down the valley)’.
Eric Shanes, ‘Identifying Turner’s Chamonix Water-colours’, The Burlington Magazine, vol.142 no.1172, November 2000, p.694.
Wilton 1979, p.341 no.365, as ‘Glacier and Source of the Arveron, Going up to the Mer de Glace’ and exhibited at the Royal Academy, 1803. For an agnostic view of Shanes’s redating see Gillian Forrester in John Baskett, Jules David Prown, Duncan Robinson and others, Paul Mellon’s Legacy: A Passion for British Art: Masterpieces from the Yale Center for British Art, exhibition catalogue, Yale Center for British Art, New Haven 2007, p.283.
Verso:
Laid down
How to cite
David Blayney Brown, ‘The Mer de Glace and Valley of Chamonix 1802 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, January 2012, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, September 2014, https://www