Joseph Mallord William Turner ?The Burning of Rome c.1834-40
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
?The Burning of Rome c.1834–40
D36232
Turner Bequest CCCLXIV 370
Turner Bequest CCCLXIV 370
Pencil, gouache and watercolour on brown wove paper, 216 x 367 mm
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCCLXIV – 370’ bottom right
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCCLXIV – 370’ 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 104, as ‘City on Fire (Colour on Brown)’).
1966
Turner: Imagination and Reality, Museum of Modern Art, New York, March–May [June] 1966 (72, as ‘Rome Burning’, c.1834, reproduced).
1982
J.M.W. Turner Watercolors from the British Museum, Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia, Athens, March–May 1982, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, May–July (75, as ‘Rome Burning’, c.1840, reproduced).
1989
Summer Miscellany: Watercolours from the Turner Bequest, Tate Gallery, London, July–September 1989 (no catalogue, as ‘Classical Scene: a burning City’).
1997
Joseph Mallord William Turner, Bank Austria Kunstforum, Vienna, March–June 1997 (85, as ‘The Burning of Rome’, c.1834–5, reproduced in colour).
1997
J.M.W. Turner 1775–1851: A Tate Gallery Collection Exhibition, Yokohama Museum of Art, June–August 1997, Fukuoka Art Museum, September–October, Nagoya City Art Museum, October–December (76, as ‘The Burning of Rome’, c.1834–5, reproduced in colour).
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 (129, as ‘Rome Burning’, c.1834, reproduced in colour).
2011
William Turner. Maler der Elemente / Turner and the Elements, Bucerius Kunst Forum, Hamburg, June–September 2011, Muzeum Narodowe, Krakow, October–January 2012, Turner Contemporary, Margate, January–May (69, as ‘The Burning of Rome’, c.1834–5, reproduced in colour).
2015
Gevaar & Schoonheid: Turner en de traditie van het sublieme, Museum de Fundatie, Zwolle / Rijksmuseum Twenthe, Enschede, September 2015–January 2016 (no number, as ‘The Burning of Rome’, c.1834–5, reproduced in colour).
References
1830
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.II, p.1206, CCCLXIV 370, as ‘Rome burning’, after c.1830.
1834
Lawrence Gowing, Turner: Imagination and Reality, exhibition catalogue, Museum of Modern Art, New York 1966, reproduced p.31, p.62 no.72, as ‘Rome Burning’, c.1834.
1840
Lindsay Stainton in Stainton and Richard S. Schneiderman, J.M.W. Turner Watercolors from the British Museum, exhibition catalogue, Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia, Athens 1982, p.76 no.75, as ‘Rome Burning, c.1840, reproduced.
1834
Katherine Solender, Dreadful Fire! Burning of the Houses of Parliament, exhibition catalogue, Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio 1984, pp.52–3, fig.44, as ‘Rome Burning’, c.1834.
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.45 no.104, as ‘City on Fire (Colour on Brown)’.
1996
Michael Liversidge and Catherine Edwards, Imagining Rome: British Artists and Rome in the Nineteenth Century, exhibition catalogue, City Museum and Art Gallery, Bristol 1996, fig.17.
1834
David Blayney Brown in Brown, Klaus Albrecht Schröder, Evelyn Benesch and others, Joseph Mallord William Turner, exhibition catalogue, Bank Austria Kunstforum, Vienna 1997, p.281 no.85, as ‘The Burning of Rome’, c.1834–5, reproduced in colour.
1834
David B[layney] Brown in Brown, Yasuhide Shimbata and Hideko Numata, J.M.W. Turner 1775–1851: A Tate Gallery Collection Exhibition, exhibition catalogue, Yokohama Museum of Art 1997, p.139 no. 76, as ‘The Burning of Rome’, c.1834–5, reproduced in colour.
1997
Eric Shanes, Turner’s Watercolour Explorations 1810–1842, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1997, p.98 Appendix I ‘Italy’, as ‘ ‘Sketch for a view of Rome burning?’.
2004
Damien Sausset and Térésa Faucon, L’ABCdaire de Turner, ABCdaires, Paris 2004, reproduced in colour pp.98–9.
1834
Sarah Taft in Ian Warrell (ed.), Franklin Kelly and others, J.M.W. Turner, exhibition catalogue, National Gallery of Art, Washington 2007, pp.179, 181 no.129, as ‘Rome Burning’, c.1834, reproduced in colour p.182.
1834
Nicola Moorby and Ian Warrell (eds.), How to Paint like Turner, London 2010, reproduced in colour p.[72] (detail), as ‘The Burning of Rome’, c.1834–5.
1834
Leo Costello, J.M.W. Turner and the Subject of History, Farnham and Burlington, Vermont 2012, p.98, fig.2.21, as ‘Rome Burning’, c.1834.
This apparently nocturnal scene of an extensive townscape ablaze beyond classical buildings was named ‘Rome burning’ by Finberg,1 and the vivid study has continued to be exhibited and published extensively under this title or close variants. Finberg was presumably thinking of the devastating fire of July 64 AD, during the reign of Emperor Nero, from classical accounts of which arises the well-known saying ‘Nero fiddled while Rome burned’. (Literary references appear for example in Talbot speech in Shakespeare’s Henry VI, ‘and like thee, Nero, | Play on the lute, beholding the towns burn’,2 or a passing allusion to how ‘Nero fiddled to the flames’ in Variety, a poem by William Whitehead (1715–1785) available to Turner in Anderson’s British Poets,3 a thirteen-volume anthology he had owned and studied since about 1798.4)
Following his long stay in the city during his second Italian tour of 1828–9, Turner painted Rome in its ancient and modern aspects in the latter half of the 1830s: see the unfinished Arch of Constantine, Rome of about 1835 (Tate N02066),5 Rome, from Mount Aventine, exhibited in 1836 (private collection),6 Ancient Italy – Ovid Banished from Rome, exhibited in 1838 (private collection),7 and the pairing Ancient Rome: Agrippina Landing with the Ashes of Germanicus. The Triumphal Bridge and Palace of the Caesars Restored (Tate N00523)8 and Modern Rome – Campo Vaccino (J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles),9 shown in 1839. Ovid’s banishment by Augustus occurred in 8 AD and Germanicus died in 19 AD, so it is possible Turner was considering a further subject from this early period of Roman Imperial history. The arrangement here, with columns silhouetted in the elevated foreground, may be compared and contrasted with the peaceful setting of the ruined Forum of Modern Rome.
Lindsay Stainton has regarded Turner’s subject as ‘essentially a fantasy on the theme of fire, a subject which particularly interested him during the late 1830s and early 1840s’, comparing the technique and ‘the dramatic effect of intense light against a night sky’ with Tate D32248 (Turner Bequest CCCXVIII 29), an 1840 gouache of fireworks at Venice,10 among a grouping of nocturnal views of the city on similar brown paper; see also Tate D32229 (Turner Bequest CCCXVIII 10). The sensational, apocalyptic Biblical and classical paintings of John Martin (1789–1854) might have been in Turner’s mind in terms of approaching a dramatic composition, as Stainton and David Blayney Brow have suggested;11 compare Martin’s large painting of The Destruction of Pompei [sic] and Herculaneum at London’s Egyptian Hall in 1822 (Tate N00793).
Turner’s response to the burning of the Houses of Parliament in London in October 1834 (see under Tate D36235; Turner Bequest CCCLXIV 373) may have been an immediate stimulus, as Katherine Solender has suggested: ‘Given the political temper of the time and Turner’s tendency to draw analogies between contemporary and historical events, he may have felt such a picture [of Rome] would effectively allude to the present state of the British nation’12 and the potentially ‘destructive consequences of imperial ambitions’, as Sarah Taft has put it.13 Leo Costello has noted how ‘the great columns of Rome seem like flimsy pieces of board standing out against the deep background washes of crimson, a color which [John] Ruskin liked to note also symbolized large-scale bloodshed for Turner.’14 The artist also produced a series of fluid watercolours now identified as showing another major fire in London a few years later (see the ‘Fire at the Tower of London 1841’ section of this catalogue).
Robert Anderson (ed.), The Works of the British Poets. With Prefaces, Biographical and Critical, London and Edinburgh 1795, vol.XI, p.940.
See Andrew Wilton and Rosalind Mallord Turner, Painting and Poetry: Turner’s ‘Verse Book’ and his Work of 1804–1812, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1990, p.113.
Verso:
Blank; laid down. Inscribed on the white wove backing sheet in pencil ‘15’ at centre, upside down; inscribed in pencil ‘CCCLXIV.370’ bottom centre; stamped in black with Turner Bequest monogram over ‘CCCLXIV – 370’ bottom right.
Matthew Imms
August 2016
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘?The Burning of Rome c.1834–40 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, August 2016, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, March 2017, https://www