Landscape: Noon (The Haywain)
One of the most famous paintings in the world
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Today Constable is ranked alongside his contemporary
Turner(1775- 1851) as one of the greatest English landscape painters
and had a strong influence on the Impressionist movement. Constable's
innovative approach to "truthful nature", his emphasis
on making the landscape come alive, creative expansive use of
colour and brushstrokes all brought a fresh appreciation to the
art of landscape painting. His career was marked by slow, painstaking
progress, both to master his art and to achieve recognition and
success; at least in his own country. Part of his slow acceptance
can be attributed to the fact that landscape painting was generally
considered by the art establishment of the time as inferior to
portrait or historical paintings. In 1824 he sold The Haywain
and View on the Stour near Dedham to a French dealer who
exhibited them at the Paris Salon, which created a flurry of excited
activity, the King of France awarding him a gold medal for his
Haywain that same year. In 1829 he was finally elected
a full member of the Royal Academy. He sold only 20 paintings
in his lifetime, leaving the bulk of his work to his daughter
Isabel. In 1888 Isabel donated them to the Victoria and Albert
Museum, who now have the finest collection of his work.
The Stour, dated 27 Sept 1810
Painted outdoors at sunset, vicinity of Flatford Lock.
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Born in East Bergholt, Suffolk, Constable had a happy carefree
childhood, 4th child and 2nd son to Ann and Golding Constable's
3 sons and 3 daughters. His father was a wealthy corn merchant
who owned mills at Dedham and Flatford along the banks of the
River Stour. Constable had a deep love for nature and the countryside
and all his life painted what he loved and was familiar with.
The region around the Stour valley in his native Sussex is known
today as 'Constable Country'. In 1819 Constable and his wife moved
to Hampstead, which then became the main focus of his later work.
More than any other artist before him, Constable strove to reveal
"a pure and unaffected representation" of the countryside
around him. He was fascinated by the effects of light, wind and
rain on the landscape and often painted the same scene more than
once. He would frequently pin a canvas to the inside lid of his
paint-box and paint directly onto his portable easel, such as
his The Stour of 1810.
Some of his more famous early works are Dedham Vale: Morning
(1811, Elton Hall, Huntingdonshire); Boatbuilding near Flatford
Mill (1814-1815, Victoria and Albert Museum, London); The
Stour Valley and Dedham Village (1815, Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston); Flatford Mill on the River Stour (1817, Tate Gallery,
London); 'A Church Porch' (The Church Porch, East Bergholt)
(1809), Landscape: Boys Fishing (1813), Wivenhoe Park
(1816), and Weymouth Bay (1816). Flatford Mill was
his last work of this period which he created "en plein-air".
Maria Bicknell
Constable painted this portrait 3 months before their marriage
in 1816
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In 1809 Constable met and fell in love with Maria Bicknell, granddaughter
of the rector of East Bergholt. He was 33, still a relatively
unknown and struggling artist, who despite a modest allowance
from his father could ill-afford to keep a wife and family. She
was 21, from a wealthy family all strongly disapproving of their
relationship, particularly her grandfather, who threatened her
with disinheritance should she marry him. For seven years they
remained loyal to each other and were on the verge of eloping
when John's father's death in 1816 left him financially secure,
and they could at last marry. Even then, none of her family attended
the wedding. Their marriage was very happy but sadly short-lived,
Maria passing on from tuberculosis in 1828, at the age of 40,
and leaving Constable with 7 young children. He adored his children
but his wife's death plunged him into depression and a melancholy
he never really recovered from.
His marriage sparked a new creative energy in Constable, and
he began work on his "six-footers', a series of large canvases
on river subjects (except for The Haywain), which became
some of his most famous and best-loved work. His first in this
series, The White Horse was exhibited at the Academy in
1819. This time his work was "too large to remain unnoticed"
and he began at last to achieve critical acclaim. Others
in this series were Landscape: Noon (The Hay-Wain) (1821),
The Lock (A Boat Passing a Lock) (1824), The Leaping
Horse (1824-1825), and View on the Stour near Dedham
(1822). Other major works from this period were Hampstead Heath
(c.1820), Salisbury Cathedral, from the Bishop's Grounds
(1823), A Mill at Gillingham in Dorset (Parham's Mill)
(1826), The Vale of Dedham (1828), The Valley Farm (1835),
Old Sarum (1829 - watercolour), Salisbury Cathedral
from the Meadows (1831). He died in March, 1837 working on
his last picture Arundel Mill and Castle (1837).
Salisbury Cathedral from the
Bishop's Grounds
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Salisbury Cathedral from the
Meadows
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The National Gallery of Australia's John Constable exhibition:
Impressions of Land, Sea and Sky (3 March 12 June 2006)
shows "Constables brilliant depiction of nature, how
he animated the landscape, created a sense of air and made nature
come alive.... in expanding the range of colours used and in a
greater freedom of handling of paint, his art became the benchmark
for landscape painters in Europe during the nineteenth century".
ArtKnowledgeNews.com
The NGA has put together a good online collection of about 100
paintings, drawing and sketches with informative and very interesting
notes on individual paintings. Link
to NGA exhibition of Constable
Tate Britain exhibition: Constable: The Great Landscapes
1 June 28 August 2006
This major exhibition offers the first opportunity to view John
Constable's seminal six-foot exhibition canvases together. The
'six-footers' are among the best-known images in British art and
comprise the famous series of views on the river Stour, which
includes The Hay Wain 18201, as well as more expressive
later works such as Hadleigh Castle 1829 and Salisbury
Cathedral from the Meadows 1831. For more information, view
Tate
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