Joseph Mallord William Turner Inscription by Turner: A Draft of Poetry ?1840
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Inscription by Turner: A Draft of Poetry ?1840
D40157
Pencil on white wove paper, 244 x 304 mm
Watermark ‘C Ansell | 1828’
Inscribed by Turner in pencil with lines of poetry towards top (see main catalogue entry)
Inscribed in pencil ‘52’ top left, ‘6’ top centre, and ‘N.G. 70’ bottom centre
Stamped in black ‘CCCXVI – 25’ over Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom centre
Watermark ‘C Ansell | 1828’
Inscribed by Turner in pencil with lines of poetry towards top (see main catalogue entry)
Inscribed in pencil ‘52’ top left, ‘6’ top centre, and ‘N.G. 70’ bottom centre
Stamped in black ‘CCCXVI – 25’ over Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom centre
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
References
1985
Lindsay Stainton, Turner’s Venice, London 1985, p.63 under no.83.
1995
Ian Warrell, Through Switzerland with Turner: Ruskin’s First Selection from the Turner Bequest, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1995, p.115 under no.70 as ‘Inscribed with three line of partly intelligible poetry about the sunset’, p.116.
1997
James Hamilton, Turner: A Life, London 1997, p.287.
2003
Ian Warrell in Warrell, David Laven, Jan Morris and others, Turner and Venice, exhibition catalogue, Tate Britain, London 2003, p.236.
2004
Sarah Taft in Katharine Lochnan, Luce Abélès, John House and others, TurnerWhistlerMonet, exhibition catalogue, Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto 2004, p.216 no.91, as ‘Venice: Looking across the Lagoon at Sunset’, 1840, reproduced in colour.
The watercolour on the recto, Tate D32162 (Turner Bequest CCCXVI 25), is generally agreed to be a sunset view of the Lagoon near Venice, associated with Turner’s 1840 visit. This reading of the time of day depicted would seem to be confirmed by the lines confidently but often illegibly inscribed in pencil above the centre of this side (not recorded in Finberg’s 1909 Inventory1):
Thy [?endless spires and towers] gleam the last of the [...] ray
And yet the Queen of [?Eve] . . [...] and [?proud ...]
[...] in the long [...]
And yet the Queen of [?Eve] . . [...] and [?proud ...]
[...] in the long [...]
This reading is necessarily very tentative, even in terms of the unqualified words. Lindsay Stainton has suggested it may be a quotation, ‘which seems to refer to the setting sun’;2 James Hamilton suggested that if we ‘read in the first line the words “... gleam the last of the [..?..] ray” we are perhaps witnessing Turner’s final farewell to the crumbling city’, perhaps influenced by John Ruskin’s one-time title for the recto, ‘Farewell to Venice’. Similarly, Ian Warrell, having first noted the lines as being simply ‘about the sunset’,3 subsequently deciphered references to ‘towers illuminated by the last gleams of a setting sun, presumably musing on the fate of Venice’.4
Technical notes:
See under the recto (D32162) for the relationship of this sheet to numerous others used for Venetian subjects around 1840.
Matthew Imms
September 2018
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘Inscription by Turner: A Draft of Poetry ?1840 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, September 2018, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2019, https://www