Turner and Constable: Poetry and Truth, Fire and Rain
Turner, Snow Storm - Steam - Boat off a Harbour’s Mouth
I recently enjoyed an exhibition of the work of the English landscape painters JMW Turner and John Constable. (‘Rivals and Originals’ is at Tate Britain, London until 12 April.)
'It is only when we are no longer fearful that we begin to create.’
JMW Turner
These two profoundly talented artists were born just a year apart - Turner in 1775, Constable in 1776. Together they transformed landscape painting from a minor genre into a major art form. The juxtaposition of their narratives and output helps to illuminate the differences between them, and to clarify their extraordinary individual strengths.
'I never saw an ugly thing in my life: for let the form of an object be what it may - light, shade, and perspective will always make it beautiful.’
John Constable
Turner was a working-class Londoner, the son of a Covent Garden barber. Encouraged by his father to pursue an artistic career, he funded his studies during his teenage years by working as an architectural draughtsman’s assistant and a watercolour copyist.
'I have no secret but hard work. This is a secret that many never learn, and they don't succeed because they don't learn it.’
JMW Turner
Turner, Rain Steam and Speed -The Great Western Railway
Constable, the son of a wealthy Suffolk corn merchant, was a country gentleman unencumbered by financial worries. But he had to navigate his parents’ disapproval of his artistic path. When, as a 16-year-old, he carved a small windmill into the timbers of a mill owned by his father, it was perhaps an indication of his determination.
'Still I should paint my own places best; painting is with me but another word for feeling.’
John Constable
Turner’s talent was appreciated early. Enrolled in the Royal Academy at 14, he was one of the youngest artists to be elected an Associate Member, and became a full Academician in 1802. Constable, by contrast, struggled to achieve recognition, and was only admitted as a full Member 27 years after Turner.
Constable, who sketched in oils outdoors, developed a style of fast, broad brushstrokes that was free and loose - an approach that some criticised for being ‘crude.’ He primarily painted his native Stour Valley: romantic, naturalistic landscapes that captured the light and weather conditions at different times of day; depictions of honest country folk working in harmony with nature and God.
‘I live wholly in the feilds (sic) and see nobody but the harvest men.’
John Constable
Constable, The White Horse
Turner, sketching in pencil, travelled across Britain and Europe in search of subjects. His intense, atmospheric work, blending imagination with observation, explored light, colour and motion; mythical and biblical scenes; violent storms, shipwrecks and misty mountainsides; the impact of new technology; man in awe of nature’s fearsome power.
'Indistinctness is my forte.'
JMW Turner
I was particularly taken with Turner’s workspace. Potential purchasers were welcomed into a viewing gallery, and the artist would spy on them through a peephole before deciding whether to meet them. His studio was filled with sketchbooks and stacks of paper, pigment in jars, paintings in progress; sheets that had been drenched in colour hanging on lines to dry. His housekeeper’s seven Manx cats roamed around, leaving paw prints on the back of his drawings. This was an intimate, unruly, private space, where he could experiment and let his imagination run free.
Constable, Cloud Study
Back in my days in the Ad Agency, there was a good deal of debate about giving account people greater access to the creative department. Some argued for integrated brand teams: letting daylight into the process, introducing more collaborative cohesion and efficiency. Over time I arrived at the view that this was misguided. Creative people need a studio of their own.
During their lifetimes, critics often compared the two great artists with each other. Turner was thought to offer poetry, while Constable presented truth; Turner was fire to Constable’s rain. Inevitably an exhibition like this begs the question: which artist do you prefer?
When I was younger, I leaned towards Turner’s passion and raw emotion: his thrilling depiction of a train forging its path through the summer rain; the House of Commons all ablaze; a steamboat tossed in the heart of a snowstorm. But as I’ve aged, I’ve drawn closer to Constable’s evocation of balance and harmony: his endlessly fascinating studies of cloud formations (what he called ‘skying’); his magnificent ‘six-footers’ of rural tranquillity, designed to ‘solicit attention.’
The truth is that our tastes fluctuate, not just with age, but with our ever-changing moods. I can’t choose. They are both formidable, revolutionary artists.
'Daylight turns to moonlight and I'm at my best.
Praising the way it all works, and gazing upon the rest,
The cool before the warm, the calm after the storm.
The cool before the warm, the calm after the storm
I wish to stay forever, letting this be my food.
Oh, but I'm caught up in a whirlwind,
And my ever changing moods.’
The Style Council, 'My Ever Changing Moods’ (P Weller)
No. 554