Joseph Mallord William Turner Heavy Clouds over a Landscape c.1820-40
Heavy Clouds over a Landscape c.1820–40
D25453
Turner Bequest CCLXIII 330
Turner Bequest CCLXIII 330
Watercolour on white wove paper, 240 x 345 mm
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIII – 330’ bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCLXIII – 330’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Exhibition history
1869
Second Loan Collection selected from the Turner Bequest, various venues and dates 1869–before 1909 (no catalogue but numbered 92, as ‘Study of Sky’).
2011
Watercolour, Tate Britain, London, February–August 2011 (no number, as ‘Study of Sky’, c.1820–30).
References
1820
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.II, p.840, CCLXIII 330, as ‘Study of sky’, c.1820–30.
1991
Ian Warrell, ‘R.N. Wornum and the First Three Loan Collections: A History of the Early Display of the Turner Bequest outside London’, Turner Studies, vol.11, no.1, Summer 1991, p.44 no.92, as ‘Study of Sky’.
1997
Eric Shanes, Turner’s Watercolour Explorations 1810–1842, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1997, p.102, Appendix I, under ‘Sky Sketches’.
Technique and condition
This sketch on white wove paper has dramatically altered in appearance, owing to over-exposure to light while it was covered with a window mount that was placed skew. This may have been done to make the hastily-sketched horizon appear level. From Turner’s viewpoint, a level horizon would not have been vital for a rapid colour study such as this.
Originally, the sketch illustrated the contrast between a purplish grey cloudy sky, and a brownish green foreground landscape. Turner often used ‘optical’ or mixed greys and greens. All his contemporaries did the same for greens, for the good reason that there were no useful, strongly coloured green pigments to use directly, until the early to mid-nineteenth century. Artists mostly used indigo for the blue component, and any of the earth colours to mix in: brown ochre, raw or burnt sienna, raw or burnt umber. All these earth colours are familiar today, and still feature in watercolour boxes. For grass greens they mixed indigo with yellow ochre, or a yellow lake, Indian yellow or gamboge. The last three faded even more readily than indigo does, which is why many landscape areas in watercolour tend to look bluish, having lost some of the yellow. Indigo was commonly used for the sky as well, mixed with Indian red or in Turner's case the brighter red vermilion, and darkened with black. For really intense landscapes or skies, Turner substituted Prussian blue for the indigo. Such mixing gave many more gradations of colour than simply thinning down a black wash to give a neutral grey. And most artists who had mastered such methods continued to use them all their lives, even when green pigments became available.
The colour alteration here is extreme. It is a combination of blue lost from the indigo and vermilion red mixture used for the grey sky, the same blue lost from the indigo and brown ochre mixtures used for the foreground landscape, and the white paper having yellowed severely where it was exposed to light. It is still possible to see some of the intended effects in the sky: greyer and darker clouds to the left side, which had black mixed in as well. On the right, there was less red used generally, and more local variation, so the clouds were more bluish purple on this side, and paler towards the horizon. The vermilion has survived well. There seems to have been less shading in the landscape, to judge by what has survived round the edges. If both components of the mixture have faded it is naturally impossible to work out what may have been the intended appearance: here it takes some effort, but it is possible.
The identification of vermilion was confirmed by removed a tiny sample the size of a pin-point, and placing it 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: in this case it was mercury, an element found in vermilion alone, amongst the pigments available during Turner’s lifetime. The same method was used to check whether the blue material was iron-containing Prussian blue, in a sample which would be intense enough, though tiny, to yield a positive result. Since it did not, the inference can be made that the blue is indigo, which does not contain any elements heavy enough for recognition by this method of analysis.
Turner’s fingerprints can be seen readily in the paint used for the water. He frequently moved around paint with his fingers, as well as using a brush, in both oil and watercolour media.
Joyce Townsend
March 2011
How to cite
Joyce Townsend, 'Technique and Condition', March 2011, in Matthew Imms, ‘Heavy Clouds over a Landscape c.1820–40’, catalogue entry, March 2016, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, November 2016, https://wwwThis study of heavy cloud rolling over a dark, featureless landscape may have originally shared something of the dramatic effect of Tate D25460 (Turner Bequest CCLXIII 337), which is in much better condition; the present work is badly faded as discussed in the technical notes below. Compare also the lowering sky in the ‘Little Liber’ colour study Paestum, of about 1823–6 (Tate D36070; Turner Bequest CCCLXIV 224).
Technical notes:
The freshness and intensity of the cool, dark blue-grey colours round the edges, formerly protected by a mount (fitted slightly askew to compensate for Turner’s not quite level horizon), are in stark contrast with the irreparable severe fading to browns and pinks at the centre from years of light exposure during the prolonged touring of the Turner Bequest’s Second Loan Collection; Finberg’s only comment in 1909 was a laconic ‘Blue faded’.1 Eric Shanes has suggested that further damage may have been sustained in the 1928 Tate Gallery flood.2
In 2011 the work was shown in somewhat more controlled conditions in the ‘Watercolour + Colour: Exploring the medium’ section of Tate Britain’s Watercolour exhibition as a prime example of the dangers inherent in the conservation and display of works on paper.
Verso:
Blank; there is some scattered brown staining.
Matthew Imms
March 2016
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘Heavy Clouds over a Landscape c.1820–40’, catalogue entry, March 2016, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, November 2016, https://www