Joseph Mallord William Turner The Grand Canal, Venice, towards the Rialto, with the Pescaria and Fabbriche Nuove 1840
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
The Grand Canal, Venice, towards the Rialto, with the Pescaria and Fabbriche Nuove 1840
D32178
Turner Bequest CCCXVI 41
Turner Bequest CCCXVI 41
Pencil and watercolour on white wove paper, 221 x 321 mm
Watermark ‘J Whatman | 1834’
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCCXVI 41’ bottom right
Watermark ‘J Whatman | 1834’
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCCXVI 41’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Exhibition history
1869
Third Loan Collection selected from the Turner Bequest, various venues and dates 1869–before 1909 (no catalogue but numbered 93, as ‘Venice (Colour)’).
1933
Four Screens, British Museum, London, June 1933–July 1934 (no catalogue, but frame no.12).
1963
Turner Watercolors from The British Museum: A Loan Exhibition Circulated by the Smithsonian Institution, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, September–October 1963, Museum of Fine Arts of Houston, Texas, November 1963, M.H. de Young Memorial Museum, San Francisco, December 1963–January 1964, Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, January–March 1964, William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art, Kansas City, Missouri, March–April 1964, Brooklyn Museum, New York, May 1964, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, June–July 1964 (65, as ‘Venice, A Canal’, 1840).
1970
Turner: Watercolours Lent by the British Museum, Musée Provisoire d’Art Moderne, Brussels, November 1970–January 1971 (81, as ‘Un canal, Venise’).
1971
10th Anniversary Exhibition 1961–1971: Turner: Major Loan Collection: Theme – Water: Lakes, Streams, Rivers & Seas: Late Watercolours by Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum: Also Other Artists Sharing a Common Theme, Arts Centre, Folkestone, December 1971–January 1972 (11, as ‘Venice’).
1975
Turner in the British Museum: Drawings and Watercolours, Department of Prints and Drawings, British Museum, London, May 1975–February 1976 (252, as ‘Venice: View on a canal’, 1840, reproduced).
References
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.II, p.1021, CCCXVI 41, as ‘Venice. 3rd Loan Collection, No.93’.
1930
A.J. Finberg, In Venice with Turner, London 1930, p.174, as ‘Venice’, 1835 or 1840.
1963
Edward Croft-Murray, Turner Watercolors from The British Museum: A Loan Exhibition Circulated by the Smithsonian Institution, exhibition catalogue, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC 1963, p.21 no.65, as ‘Venice, A Canal’, 1840.
1970
Luke Herrmann, Turner: Watercolours Lent by the British Museum, exhibition catalogue, Musée Provisoire d’Art Moderne, Brussels 1970, p.[24] no.81, as ‘Un canal, Venise’.
1971
John Eveleigh, 10th Anniversary Exhibition 1961–1971: Turner: Major Loan Collection: Theme – Water: Lakes, Streams, Rivers & Seas: Late Watercolours by Courtesy of the Trustees of the British Museum: Also Other Artists Sharing a Common Theme, exhibition catalogue, Arts Centre, Folkestone 1971, no.11, as ‘Venice’.
1975
Andrew Wilton, Turner in the British Museum: Drawings and Watercolours, exhibition catalogue, Department of Prints and Drawings, British Museum, London 1975, pp.146–7 no.252, as ‘Venice: View on a canal’, 1840, reproduced.
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.47 no.93, as ‘Venice (Colour)’.
1995
Ian Warrell, Through Switzerland with Turner: Ruskin’s First Selection from the Turner Bequest, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1995, p.105 under no.60.
2003
Ian Warrell in Warrell, David Laven, Jan Morris and Cecilia Powell, Turner and Venice, exhibition catalogue, Tate Britain, London 2003, pp.150, 258, fig.154 (colour), as ‘The Grand Canal looking towards the Pescaria and the Fabbriche Nuove’, 1840.
The prospect is south-eastwards along the Grand Canal, with the Fondaco dei Tedeschi pale in the distance, on the sharp right-hand bend leading immediately to the Rialto Bridge. Beyond the Fondamenta della Riva dell’Ogio in the right foreground is the Campo della Pescaria (Fish Market), where the early twentieth-century Pescaria building now stands. The north end of the Fabbriche Nuove is at the centre; on the skyline to its right are the campanili of San Bartolomeo (now obscured by the Pescaria), the more distant San Marco (St Mark’s), and the darker San Giovanni Elemosinario.
The treatment of the east side of the canal is somewhat condensed and perfunctory, such that Andrew Wilton felt the pencil work ‘which suggests buildings, may have been on the paper before Turner began the drawing; it does not seem to be related to the subject’.1 However, the view seems all of a piece, articulated by a blue-striped mooring pole, and perhaps with loose indications of the balconies of the Palazzo Fontana Rezzonico or the Palazzo Giusti beyond Turner’s vantage point. The view is effectively the same as in a pencil study in the 1819 Milan to Venice sketchbook (Tate D14461; Turner Bequest CLXXV 76a); others show the same reach in the 1833 Venice sketchbook (Tate D32041, D32072, D32082; Turner Bequest CCCXIV 59, 77a, 82a), There is also a contemporary pencil sketch in the Venice; Passau to Würzburg book (Tate D31303; Turner Bequest CCCX 14).2
Ian Warrell has linked this view with another colour study from this sketchbook, looking north-westwards away from the Rialto from about the same position to form a ‘panoramic survey’ (Tate D32132; Turner Bequest CCCXV 19); they share ‘pallid greys and greens, which lend an insubstantiality to the architecture’, suggesting that Turner worked on them ‘concurrently, maximising his time by alternating between them to allow his washes to dry.’3
Warrell has that about half the views associated with this sketchbook depict the ‘long canyon of palaces’ winding north and south of the Rialto Bridge along the ‘central part’ of the Grand Canal: D32117–D32119, D32123, D32131, D32132, D32134–D32137 (Turner Bequest CCCXV 1, 2, 3, 7, 15, 16, 18, 19, 20, 21).4 See also D32121, D32122 and D32124 (CCCXV 5, 6, 8), showing scenes near its north-west and south-east ends; the present page is another central subject now also linked to the book. For sites beyond the Grand Canal, see the sketchbook’s Introduction.
Technical notes:
Pencil work is restricted to the left foreground only. The sheet is very yellowed, and the colours commensurately muted from prolonged early display in the Third Loan Collection, except at the edges and a wider band at the left-hand side which were formerly protected by a mount.
In 1995 Ian Warrell proposed that this sheet belonged as part of the present sketchbook on technical and stylistic grounds,1 and incorporated it as such by 2003, accounting for the discrepancy on one between the tallies in John Ruskin’s original endorsement and section CCCXV of Finberg’s 1909 Inventory;2 see the sketchbook’s Introduction for full details.
Verso:
Inscribed in pencil ‘No 12’ top left, upside down; stamped in black ‘CCCXVI–41’ over Turner Bequest monogram bottom centre; inscribed in pencil ‘D32178’ bottom left.
Although not accessioned with a Tate ‘D’ number, this side includes a loose pencil sketch of a cargo boat with a single mast towards the bottom right, and what could variously be a mullioned window, a light or the top of a campanile ‘drawn’ as a rough grid of vertical and horizontal strokes in watercolour above it towards the centre right. It is unclear whether these elements were intended as pictorially related.
Matthew Imms
September 2018
How to cite
Matthew Imms, ‘The Grand Canal, Venice, towards the Rialto, with the Pescaria and Fabbriche Nuove 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