J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours

ISBN 978-1-84976-386-8

Joseph Mallord William Turner Venice across the Bacino from around San Biagio, towards Sunset, with Santa Maria della Salute and the Campanile of San Marco (St Mark's) in the Distance 1840

Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Venice across the Bacino from around San Biagio, towards Sunset, with Santa Maria della Salute and the Campanile of San Marco (St Mark’s) in the Distance 1840
D32158
Turner Bequest CCCXVI 21
Watercolour on white wove paper, 244 x 304 mm
Watermark ‘C Ansell | 1828’
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram towards bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CCCXVI 21’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
Finberg later annotated his 1909 Inventory entry (‘Riva degli Schiavone, from near the Public Gardens’), crossing out ‘Public Gardens’ in favour of ‘San Biagio’,1 as did the Turner scholar C.F. Bell in his own copy.2 The view is west from the Canale di San Marco towards the Bacino, along the slow curve of the Riva degli Schiavoni waterfront. Compare Tate D32157 (Turner Bequest CCCXVI 20), a similar subject, perhaps from a little further west. The domes of Santa Maria della Salute are shown on the left, silhouetted but almost lost in the glare of the sun setting over the entrance to the Grand Canal. The next feature appears to be a ghostly secondary version of the campanile of San Marco (St Mark’s), seemingly too prominent to represent one of the other towers beyond it; the domes of the Basilica are outlined towards the centre, to the right of the more clearly defined version.
Across the area of darker clouds at the centre right is a faint network of brown lines, possibly washed out, evoking the profile of a tall building towards the foreground but superseded by the forceful outlines of waterfront structures, suggesting Turner was developing the composition even as he worked, introducing striped awnings and groups of figures in the foreground. Ian Warrell noted that the ‘pen work in this study [see the technical notes below] seems only partly finished; the transition between foreground and distance is too sudden, interrupting the recessions suggested in the washes.’ He gave contemporary watercolour Venice: The Riva degli Schiavoni (Ashmolean Museum)3 as a more harmonious ‘example of the way Turner could provide greater detail by using a network of pen lines, while still preserving a unified design’.4 In this case, Turner’s quest for ‘greater substance, through the addition of coloured outlines, seems to work against the subtle effect he sought to recreate, which perhaps explains why in this instance he took his draughtsmanship no further’.5
Despite these provisional aspects, in 1857 John Ruskin. describing the viewpoint as ‘the Fondamenta Ca’ di Dio’ (just west of the Riva San Biagio and its church), observed:
This sketch is very beautiful, and to be noted especially for the way the two gleams of light on the water are left [towards the bottom left], portions of an under colour, which is prepared to receive the cool darker tint above, and to shine through it waveringly, while these fragments of it are left in luminous opposition.
It is to the painter’s decisive use of these preparatory tints, and his perfect knowledge of the result which the superimposed tint is to produce, that his colouring owes a great part of its effect.6
Warrell developed this point: ‘The design was conceived around the narrowing funnel of light on the left, which he intensified with several flashes of bright, unpainted white paper to suggest the flicker of momentary pools of light on the undulating water.’7 He has described the present study as among those likely derived from Canaletto’s panoramic Bacino compositions,8 and noted Ruskin’s grouping of ‘a series of views along the rambling Riva degli Schiavoni, which suggests that Turner explored its length by foot, as well as from the water’: Tate D32120 (Turner Bequest CCCXV 4) from the contemporary Grand Canal and Giudecca sketchbook, and D32157–D32160 (CCCXVI 20–23) in the present grouping,9 to which Warrell added D32167 and D32168 (CCCXVI 30, 31),10 linked by ‘the brilliant sunshine refracted by the surface of the Bacino’,11 noting that the canopy in the present work has a counterpart in D32159.12 Compare a vigorous pencil sketch of a similar waterfront view, including an awning, in the contemporary Venice and Botzen D31844 (CCCXIII 28).
Turner’s note ‘Beppo Club’ on the verso is one of three similar inscriptions on the backs of 1840 Venice sheets (see also under Tate D32173, D40176; Turner Bequest CCCXVI 36, 37 verso). Ian Warrell has related them to Lord Byron’s 1818 poem Beppo: An Italian Story, a ‘playful evocation of the licentiousness of the Venetian carnival’,13 and suggested that in this case ‘it may well be possible to detect [such] behaviour ... in the pair of figures seated beneath the awning’14 towards the bottom right.
1
Undated MS note by Finberg (died 1939) in interleaved copy of Finberg 1909, Prints and Drawings Room, Tate Britain, II, p.1019.
2
Undated MS note by Bell (died 1966) in copy of Finberg 1909, Prints and Drawings Room, Tate Britain, II, p.1019.
3
Andrew Wilton, J.M.W. Turner: His Life and Work, Fribourg 1979, p.464 no.1364, reproduced.
4
Warrell 1995, p.101.
5
Warrell 2003, p.227.
6
Cook and Wedderburn 1904, p.211.
7
Warrell 2003, p.227.
8
See ibid., p.47.
9
Warrell 1995, p.100.
10
See Warrell 2003, pp.227, 265 note 36.
11
Ibid., p.227.
12
Ibid., p.230.
13
Ibid., p.24; see also p.138, and Leo Costello, J.M.W. Turner and the Subject of History, Farnham and Burlington 2012, pp.175–6; for Byron in general, see David Blayney Brown, Turner and Byron, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1992.
14
Warrell 2003, p.230.
Technical notes:
This is one of numerous 1840 Venice works Ian Warrell has noted as on sheets of ‘white paper produced [under the name] Charles Ansell,1 each measuring around 24 x 30 cm, several watermarked with the date “1828”’:2 Tate D32138–D32139, D32141–D32143, D32145–D32147, D32154–D32163, D32167–D32168, D32170–D32177, D35980, D36190 (Turner Bequest CCCXVI 1, 2, 4–6, 8–10, 17–26, 30, 31, 33–40, CCCLXIV 137, 332). Warrell has also observed that The Doge’s Palace and Piazzetta, Venice (National Gallery of Ireland, Dublin)3 and Venice: The New Moon (currently untraced)4 ‘may belong to this group’.5
1
Albeit Peter Bower, Turner’s Later Papers: A Study of the Manufacture, Selection and Use of his Drawing Papers 1820–1851, exhibition catalogue, Tate Gallery, London 1999, p.81, notes that the Muggeridge family had taken over after 1820, still using the ‘C Ansell’ watermark.
2
‘Appendix: The papers used for Turner’s Venetian Watercolours’ (1840, section 2) in Warrell 2003, p.259.
3
Wilton 1979, p.463 no.1356, reproduced.
4
Ibid., p.464 no.1365.
5
Warrell 2003, p.259.
Verso:
Blank; inscribed by Turner in pencil ‘Beppo Club’ top right (see discussion above); inscribed in pencil ‘57’ top left, ‘B’ and ‘18’ towards bottom left, upside down, and ‘A’ bottom left; stamped in black ‘CCCXV – 21’ over Turner Bequest monogram below centre, inscribed in pencil ‘CCCXVI.21’ between the two elements.

Matthew Imms
July 2018

How to cite

Matthew Imms, ‘Venice across the Bacino from around San Biagio, towards Sunset, with Santa Maria della Salute and the Campanile of San Marco (St Mark’s) in the Distance 1840 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, July 2018, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2019, https://www.tate.org.uk/art/research-publications/jmw-turner/joseph-mallord-william-turner-venice-across-the-bacino-from-around-san-biagio-towards-r1196993, accessed 21 November 2024.