In 2020, the Musée Jacquemart-André will present a retrospective of the oeuvre of Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851). Undoubtedly the greatest representative of the golden age of English watercolours, he experimented with the effects of light and transparency on English landscapes and the Venetian lagoons. Celebrated by his contemporaries, he still has many admirers.
Thanks to exceptional loans from the Tate Britain in London, which houses the largest collection of Turner’s works in the world, the Musée Jacquemart-André will hold an exhibition of sixty watercolours and ten oil paintings, some of which have never been exhibited in France.
Apart from his finished works intended for sale, Turner kept a considerable collection of works for himself, which were kept in his house and studio. With their unique qualities, these sketches, which were more expressive and experimental, were certainly closer to nature than those he painted for the public. In 1856, after the artist’s death, an enormous collection of works was bequeathed to the British nation, comprising many oil paintings, unfinishe studies, and sketches, as well as thousands of works executed on paper: watercolours, drawings, and sketchbooks.
The writer John Ruskin, who was one of the first to study the entire bequest, observed that Turner had executed most of these works for his ‘own pleasure and delight’. Now held in the Tate Britain, the collection highlights the incredible modernity of the great Romantic painter. The exhibition will display part of this private collection, which provides illuminating perspectives about Turner’s mindset, imagination, and private works.
This monograph portrays the young Turner, who came from relatively humble beginnings. First self-taught, he works with an architect, takes courses in perspective and topography, then enters at the Royal Academy school at the age of fourteen. Insatiable traveller, he gradually freed himself from the conventions of the pictorial genre and developed his own technique.
A chronological itinerary enables visitors to discover every phase of his artistic development: from his youthful works—which attest to a certain topographical realism—to his mature works, which were more radical and accomplished, as fascinating experiments with light and colour.
Displayed in this exhibition alongside various finished watercolours and oil paintings to illustrate their influence on Turner’s public pictures, these highly personal works are as fresh and spontaneous as they were when first set them down on paper.
M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Jumièges, c.1832, Gouache and watercolour on paper, 13,9 x 19,1 cm, Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the
Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
Undoubtedly the greatest representative of the golden
age of English watercolours, he experimented with the effects of light and transparency on
English landscapes and the Venetian lagoons. Celebrated by his contemporaries, he still
has many admirers.
Apart from his finished works intended for sale, Turner kept a considerable collection of
works for himself, which were kept in his house and studio. With their unique qualities, these
sketches, which were more expressive and experimental, were certainly closer to nature
than those he painted for the public. In 1856, after the artist’s death, an enormous collection
of works was bequeathed to the British nation, comprising many oil paintings, unfinished
studies, and sketches, as well as thousands of works executed on paper: watercolours,
drawings, and sketchbooks.
The writer John Ruskin, who was one of the first to study the entire bequest, observed that
Turner had executed most of these works for his ‘own pleasure and delight’. Now held in
the Tate Britain, the collection highlights the incredible modernity of the great Romantic
painter.
This monograph portrays the young Turner, who came from relatively humble beginnings.
First self-taught, he works with an architect, takes courses in perspective and topography,
then enters at the Royal Academy school at the age of fourteen. Insatiable traveller, he
gradually freed himself from the conventions of the pictorial genre and developed his own
technique.
A chronological itinerary enables visitors to discover every phase of his artistic development:
from his youthful works—which attest to a certain topographical realism—to his mature
works, which were more radical and accomplished, as fascinating experiments with light
and colour.
Displayed in this exhibition alongside various finished watercolours and oil paintings to
illustrate their influence on Turner’s public pictures, these highly personal works are as fresh
and spontaneous as they were when first set them down on paper.
Curatorship:
David Blayney Brown, Senior Curator of nineteenth-century British art at the Tate Britain in
London.
Pierre Curie, Curator at the Musée Jacquemart-André.
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Venice, the Piazzetta with the Ceremony of the Doge Marrying the Sea, c.1835, oil on canvas, 91,4 x 121,9 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
Although Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851) passed into posterity for his dynamic
oil paintings, attesting to his boldness and artistic sensibility, it is sometimes overlooked
that this incredible colourist first became famous for his watercolours. An insatiable
experimenter, throughout his career he explored every possibility of this medium, which
was in its golden age at that time in England, creating innovative and subtle visual
effects.
More than a medium, watercolour was a veritable field of exploration to which he
devoted himself with great mastery over the years and during his many travels. After
travelling around Great Britain, he set off to explore the Continent. With just a few
brushstrokes he was capable of capturing on paper splendid views of the most beautiful
landscapes in France, Germany, Switzerland, and above all Italy, whose unique light
he depicted better than any other. But it was in Margate, a small British seaside town
he loved dearly, that he painted the skies he considered ‘the loveliest in all Europe’:
he executed many studies in which the sea and the sky were blended together with
infinite coloured variations.
Culturespaces is proud to present at the Musée Jacquemart-André a fabulous selection
of works from Turner’s studio collection, which is now held at the Tate Britain. These
private and experimental works, which, in the words of the writer John Ruskin, were
made for Turner’s ‘own pleasure’, will be displayed alongside several oil paintings. The
dialogue between the watercolours and oil paintings, and between sketches and
finished works, will shed light on the artist’s visionary quest to represent colour and light.
ITINERARY OF THE EXHIBITION
SECTION 1. FROM ARCHITECTURE TO LANDSCAPES: THE EARLY WORKS
Turner’s early landscape and architectural studies advanced rapidly. A student at
the Royal Academy, Turner also developed his talent as a draughtsman by working
under various architects. He soon acquired the habit of making summer tours with his
sketchbooks, in search of subjects to inspire fresh work for Royal Academy exhibitions or
to fulfil commissions.
Venturing further from London year by year, he explored the south and west of England,
Wales, and the increasingly dramatic terrain of the north of Britain, such as the Scottish
Highlands. The British empire extended over the whole globe, but war with France
prevented overseas tours. During this period, there was a patriotic element to British
artist’s depiction of their heritage and landscapes. Turner’s work was much sought
after by collectors, such as the antiquarian Sir Richard Colt Hoare of Stourhead and the
immensely wealthy William Beckford of Fonthill Abbey.
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), View in the Avon Gorge, 1791, Pen and ink and watercolour on paper, 23,1 x 29,4 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
SECTION 2. NATURE AND THE IDEAL: ENGLAND, C.1805-1815
The short peace between England and France (1802-1803), concluded at Amiens, enabled
Turner to discover the grandeur of the Swiss Alps and study works by the Old Masters in
the Louvre. But continental Europe was once more inaccessible until Napoleon’s defeat in
1815, so Turner continued to explore England, notably in connection with commissions for
watercolours that were copied as engravings for Picturesque Views on the Southern Coast
of England and, later, the History of Richmondshire. These projects brought his work to a
wider audience.
Turner decided to open his own London gallery in 1804 for annual one-man exhibitions,
showing works on paper and oil paintings. In the following year, he lived for a while beside
the Thames in the countryside west of London, sailing on the river and sometimes painting
in watercolours directly from nature.
In 1807, he was elected Professor of Perspective at the
Royal Academy, and continued to produce original watercolour compositions.
He also sought to strengthen his standing as a landscape theorist through his ambitious
Liber Studiorum (‘Book of Studies’) prints, published between 1807 and 1819. Based on
watercolour designs, the Liber demonstrated categories of landscape ranging from the
naturalistic to the ideal: ‘Architectural’, ‘Historical’, ‘Marine’, ‘Mountainous’, ‘Pastoral’, and
‘Elevated Pastoral’. An important source of inspiration, the Liber Veritatis, engraved from
the landscape drawings of Claude Lorrain (1600-1682), influenced Turner’s work throughout
his career.
1. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The River Thames near Isleworth: Punt and Barges in the Foreground, 1805, graphite and watercolour on paper,
25,8 x 36,5 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
2. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), View of Richmond Hill and Bridge, exhibited 1808, Oil paint on canvas, 91,4 x 121,9 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
1 2
10 Press kit - Turner, paintings and watercolours.
SECTION 3. TURNER’S DISCOVERY OF EUROPE: 1815-1830
With lasting peace in Europe, Turner travelled in 1817 through Belgium, the Netherlands, and
the German Rhineland. Many Continental tours followed over nearly thirty years, often in
mountainous regions or along major rivers.
Late in his career, in 1819-1820, he spent six months on a ‘Grand Tour’ in Italy, mainly in Rome
studying the classical monuments, art, and antiquities, with visits to Naples and Venice. This
extended time in the south is often considered a key period in Turner’s career, making a
lasting impact on his already increasingly strong treatment of light and colour. In 1828, he
sojourned again in Rome for several months, where he exhibited paintings executed there.
In addition to his Continental tours, Turner continued to explore England. Remaining in
constant demand from print publishers, Turner made drawings for the series ‘Marine Views’
and The Rivers of England and The Ports of England. He explored national life and character
in the major sequence of Picturesque Views in England and Wales (engraved between
1827 and 1838).
1. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Scarborough, vers 1825, Watercolour and graphite on paper, 15,7 x 22,5 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
2. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Venice : San Giorgio Maggiore – Early Morning, 1819, Watercolour on paper, 22,3 x 28,7 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), A Villa. Moon- Light (A Villa on the Night of a Festa di Ballo), for Samuel Rogers’s ‘Italy’, c.1826–1827, Pen and ink,
graphite and watercolour on paper,
24,6 x 30,9 cm, Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
SECTION 4. TURNER’S TRAVELS: 1830-1840
In the 1820s, Turner travelled through France along the Seine River and toured through
Belgium, Luxembourg, and Germany. In the following decade, he continued his European
travels. During this period, he depicted the landscapes, towns, and cities in watercolour and
gouache on the tinted papers he carried in bundles along with conventional sketchbooks.
His Views of the River Loire and Seine were engraved in a smaller format for three travel
books published between 1833 and 1835, entitled Wanderings by the Loire and Wanderings
by the Seine, which were advertised as Turner’s Annual Tour.
Some of these views were executed using initial pencil outlines, presumably drawn from
direct observation. Turner’s watercolours were in fact rarely made outdoors because it took
up too much time: he preferred to add the details and colours afterwards, perhaps in an
inn that evening, or back in London. However, there may be exceptions among the 1836
Alpine views in France, Switzerland, and the Val d’Aosta, as a companion reported him
working in watercolour in the open air.
In 1818, he was for the first time commissioned to illustrate the writings of the poet and
novelist Sir Walter Scott with minutely detailed watercolours for commercial editions. Turner
subsequently illustrated numerous works, including the poems of Samuel Rogers, which were
enhanced by Turner’s vivid imagery.
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Dinant, Bouvignes and Crèvecoeur: Sunset, c.1839, gouache and watercolour on paper, 13,6 x 18,8 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
2. . J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The Vision of Columbus, from Samuel Rogers’s Poems 1835, c.1830–1832, graphite and watercolour on paper,
23,2 x 31 cm, Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
SECTION 5. LIGHT AND COLOUR
Turner’s watercolour practice sometimes involved detailed colour studies on the same scale
as his finished works. Even when working on his compositions, he was reported as saying that
he ‘has no settled process but drives the colours about till he has expressed the ideas in his
mind’. Many of the sheets generally called ‘colour beginnings’, executed from the late
1810s onwards, have survived.
Such freely handled colour studies were counterparts to the detailed sketchbook drawings
which were his key sources. The ‘colour beginnings’ he painted in the studio based on
his drawings enabled him to reintroduce light and colour, combining his incredible visual
memory, imagination, and unmatched technical mastery.
Broad washes of strong colour are often detectable beneath the delicate surface finish of
completed watercolours. There are parallels in Turner’s oil painting practice, as he sometimes
applied a unifying web of detail to a largely unfinished composition during the ‘varnishing
days’ before Royal Academy exhibitions.
To modern viewers, the ‘colour beginnings’ may appear to be complete representations
of mood and atmosphere in their own right. The fact that Turner retained so many suggests
that he too may have derived aesthetic satisfaction from these private experiments.
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), An Idealised Italianate Landscape with Trees above a Lake or Bay, Lit by a Low Sun, c.1828–1829, watercolour on
paper, 31,2 x 43,9 cm,
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The Golden Bough, exhibited 1834, oil paint on canvas, 104,1 x 163,8 cm, Tate, Presented by Robert Vernon 1847,
Photo © Tate
SECTION 6. ARTISTIC SENSIBILITY
Turner often stayed on the estate that belonged to his patron, Lord Egremont, at Petworth
in Sussex, where he relaxed and made intimate watercolour studies of the house and its
inhabitants. These works with their light strokes reflect the extensive expressiveness of the
artist who enjoyed experimenting, both in terms of the choice of motifs and the materials
he used. Also presented in this room are a palette and a pigment cabinet, which belonged
to Turner and which directly attest to his bold use of colour, and, in particular, his frequent
use of primary colours-red, yellow, and blue. His preference for bright colours became more
pronounced in his later works.
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Lake Geneva, with the Dent d’Oche, from above Lausanne ,1841, graphite and watercolour on paper, 23,5 x 33,8 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
SECTION 7. MASTER AND MAGICIAN: THE LATE WORKS
During the last decade of his career, up to the mid 1840s, Turner executed some of his
finest watercolours. Produced during a period in which there was a change in taste and in
his clientele, in terms of class, they were no longer produced for exhibitions or publishers,
but for a small group of collectors and avant-garde admirers. As the pressure of major
engraving commissions decreased, Turner’s output of private works became more prolific.
He rediscovered the pleasure of painting without the need to draw a preparatory drawing.
A third and final trip to Venice in 1840 inspired a whole series of watercolours and several
canvases showing the city at all times of the day and night. The interplay of light and
reflections across the lagoon often dissolves the architectural forms in washes of translucent
colour. A Venetian oil painting prompted one critic to proclaim Turner a ‘magician’, with
‘command over the spirits of Earth, Air, Fire and Water’.
Such elemental combinations were developed on summer tours to the Alps between 1841
and 1844. They evoke the simplified masses of mountains catching the fleeting dawn or
sunset across mirror-like lakes.
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The Artist and his Admirers, 1827, Watercolour and bodycolour on paper, 13,8 x 19 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
18
SECTION 8. HAND AND HEART: THE LAST WORKS
After more than half a century of work and travel, Turner’s health began to decline as he
reached the age of seventy. He made two last brief visits to northern France and the coast
of Normandy in 1845, ‘looking out for storms and shipwrecks’. He produced translucent
studies in which the sea or shore merges into the sky. Very similar to the works he produced
for his own pleasure for many years, they bear no clue as to the date or place of their
execution, but are nonetheless boldly and skilfully executed.
In the last years of his life, Turner was a regular visitor to the English seaside town of Margate,
overlooking the uninterrupted horizon of the Thames as it flowed into the open sea beneath
skies he considered ‘the loveliest in all Europe’. Many studies of the sun and clouds made
there or elsewhere dispense with coastal features entirely, becoming light-filled meditations
on the observer’s relationship with the world beyond.
A similar approach seems to have been adopted for the preparatory work for the oil
paintings that Turner produced during this period, both conceptually and formally. His style
became more expressive, the paint was applied with more impasto, and the figurative
compositions were replaced by canvases that were more suggestive than descriptive,
based on a subtle treatment of light, colour, and atmospheric effects. The creation of
subtle visual effects through the dissolution of form, which is primarily visible in his marine
pictures, is also visible in the last canvases that the artist exhibited to the public at the Royal
Academy in 1850. Turner passed away the following year, leaving behind an exceptionally
rich and diverse collection of works.
1 .J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Venice Quay, Ducal Palace, exhibited 1844, oil on canvas, 62,2 x 92,7 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
2. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Ehrenbreitstein with a Rainbow, 1840, graphite, watercolour and gouache on paper, 14,1 x 19,3 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The Visit to the Tomb, exhibited 1850, oil on canvas, 91,4 x 121,9 cm, Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the
Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
TURNER (1775–1851): KEY DATES
Circa 23 April 1775: Joseph Mallord William Turner is born in London.
1789: He attends the Royal Academy, while working with architects and architectural
draughtsmen, including Thomas Malton, whom he later describes as ‘my real master’.
Before 1794: He attends the evening courses run by Dr Thomas Monro at his ‘Academy’,
where he copies the works of other artists.
As of 1790: He exhibits his watercolours at the Royal Academy, and eventually he submits
his first oil colour— entitled Fishermen at Sea—in 1796.
As of the mid 1790s: Turner adopts a routine that he will follow almost all his life: he
travels in the summer and works in his studio during the winter months, using his outdoor
drawings as the basis for his studio works. He is soon supported and sought after by
collectors such as Richard Colt Hoare, William Beckford of Fonthill Abbey, and the Duke
of Bridgewater.
1799: Elected an associate
member of the Royal Academy
and an Academician in 1802,
he is considered a prodigious
artist destined to become
the foremost painter of his
generation.
1802: During the Peace of
Amiens, Turner travels to the
Swiss Alps, and stays in Pairs,
where is able to study the old
master works in the Louvre.
1804: Turner opens his own gallery, where he exhibits his paper works and smaller and
more intimate paintings than the pictures submitted to the Royal Academy. These
exhibitions attract many collectors, including Walter Fawkes and George Wyndham,
the third Count of Egremont. Turner’s sponsors invite him to their estates at Farnley Hall
in Yorkshire and Petworth in Sussex, sites where the artist can relax and paint his intimate
coloured studies. His watercolours evoke with verve life in the manors and the high
society the painter frequents.
As of 1806: Turner draws up a classification of the history and practice of landscape
painting —from mountains to seascapes, and natural to idealised landscapes—and
demonstrates his mastery of the various categories in a series of original engravings,
the Liber Studiorum (‘Book of Studies’), whose title is inspired by Claude Lorrain’s Liber
Veritatis.
1807: He is appointed Professor of Perspective at the Royal Academy, where he begins
to teach in 1811 after several years of research and preparation. His courses and his
Liber highlight his talent as a teacher and attest, with the works exhibited in his gallery
and elsewhere, to his exceptional vigour and determination to make an impact on the
general public.
1810, 1811, and 1813: Aside from his travels in Sussex, Kent (1810), and the West Country
(1811), the 1813 trip provides Turner with the subject matter for his book, Picturesque
Views on the Southern Coast of England. This is the first major series of topographical
subjects engraved after his watercolours.
These engravings, which provide a wonderful record and representations of
contemporary life, with its industries and leisure activities, are a vivid depiction of England
at the beginning of the nineteenth century.
1815: His gallery welcomes, amongst other famous visitors, the Italian sculptor Antonio
Canova, who considers Turner a great genius.
1817: With lasting peace in Europe, Turner is able to visit Holland and Belgium. During this
period, several exhibitions are held in his honour in the properties of his collectors and at
the Royal Academy.
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Venice : Looking across the Lagoon at Sunset, 1840,
watercolour on paper, 24,4 x 30,4 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
22 Press kit - Turner, paintings and watercolours. TATE’s Collections Press kit - Musée Jacquemart-André 23
1818: He inaugurates a topographic and literary vein when he visits Scotland to illustrate
Walter Scott’s Provincial Antiquities and Picturesque Scenery of Scotland. In the following
years, he continues this approach when he illustrates the poetry of Lord Byron, Samuel
Rogers, Thomas Campbell, and Thomas Moore, as well as certain of John Milton’s poetic
works.
1819: Turner’s first trip to Italy, one of the most important and decisive of his career. He
stays in Venice, Rome, and Naples.
1821–1832: He visits France, where he explores the banks of the Seine and the Loire.
1828: His second trip to Italy. He lives in Rome, where he paints and exhibits new works.
1829: His father passes away in September. This is followed by the loss of his friend Thomas
Lawrence, who had described Turner as ‘indisputably the finest landscape painter in
Europe.’
1833–1835: He goes on long trips to Europe. During this time, he publishes three volumes
of engravings entitled Wanderings by the River Loire and Wanderings by the Seine,
which were generically published under the title of ‘Turner’s Annual Tour’.
1841–1844: Turner’s visit to Switzerland is a fresh source of inspiration. Turner often represents
the country’s scenery in his paintings, reflecting the cosmopolitan and European aspect
if his mature works, as well as his consummate technical mastery.
1843: Ruskin publishes the first volume of his book Modern Painters and places Turner
at the head of these artists. He becomes the standard bearer for a new generation
of admirers of Turner, who praise the modernity of his works. Their enthusiasm for his
watercolours and oils is a renewed source of inspiration for Turner, which is a driving
force until the end of his life.
1845: Turner acts as interim president of the Royal Academy.
1848: For the first time since 1824, Turner presents no work in the Royal Academy. The
same year, he adds a codicil to his will that mentions a ‘bequest’ and proposes a biennial
display of his finished works.
1849–1850: Turner’s health rapidly deteriorates and he exhibits his works for the last time
at the Royal Academy in 1850. He is now living as a recluse, especially during his stays in
Margate, where Mrs Booth, his companion since 1833, looks after him.
19 December 1851: Turner passes away. He is buried on 30 December in the crypt of Saint
Paul’s Cathedral, next to Sir Joshua Reynolds and Sir Thomas Lawrence, in accordance
with his wish to be buried alongside his ‘Brothers in Art’.
J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Sunset, c.1845, watercolour on paper, 24 x 31,5 cm,
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
24 Press kit - Turner, paintings and watercolours.
1. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), View in the Avon Gorge, 1791, Pen and ink and watercolour on paper, 23,1 x 29,4 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
2. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The River Thames near Isleworth: Punt and Barges in the Foreground, 1805, graphite and watercolour on paper, 25,8 x 36,5 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
3. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), View of Richmond Hill and Bridge, exhibited 1808, Oil paint on canvas, 91,4 x 121,9 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
4. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Venice : San Giorgio Maggiore – Early Morning, 1819, Watercolour on paper, 22,3 x 28,7 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
5. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Scarborough, vers 1825, Watercolour and graphite on paper, 15,7 x 22,5 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
6. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), A Villa. Moon- Light (A Villa on the Night of a Festa di Ballo), for Samuel Rogers’s ‘Italy’, c.1826–1827, Pen and ink, graphite and watercolour
on paper,
24,6 x 30,9 cm, Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
7. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The Vision of Columbus, from Samuel Rogers’s Poems 1835, c.1830–1832, graphite and watercolour on paper, 23,2 x 31 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
8. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Jumièges, c.1832, Gouache and watercolour on paper, 13,9 x 19,1 cm, Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856,
Photo © Tate
9. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The Golden Bough, exhibited 1834, oil paint on canvas, 104,1 x 163,8 cm, Tate, Presented by Robert Vernon 1847, Photo © Tate
10. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), An Idealised Italianate Landscape with Trees above a Lake or Bay, Lit by a Low Sun, c.1828–1829, watercolour on paper, 31,2 x 43,9 cm,
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
11. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Durham Cathedral: The Interior, Looking East along the South Aisle, 1797-1798, graphite, watercolour and gouache on paper, 75,8 x
57,9 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
12. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Dinant, Bouvignes and Crèvecoeur: Sunset, c.1839, gouache and watercolour on paper, 13,6 x 18,8 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
13. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The Artist and his Admirers, 1827, Watercolour and bodycolour on paper, 13,8 x 19 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
14. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Venice : Looking across the Lagoon at Sunset, 1840, watercolour on paper, 24,4 x 30,4 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
15. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Venice Quay, Ducal Palace, exhibited 1844, oil on canvas, 62,2 x 92,7 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
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16. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Lake Geneva, with the Dent d’Oche, from above Lausanne ,1841, graphite and watercolour on paper, 23,5 x 33,8 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
17. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Ehrenbreitstein with a Rainbow, 1840, graphite, watercolour and gouache on paper, 14,1 x 19,3 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
18. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Venice, the Piazzetta with the Ceremony of the Doge Marrying the Sea, c.1835, oil on canvas, 91,4 x 121,9 cm
Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
19. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), Sunset, c.1845, watercolour on paper, 24 x 31,5 cm, Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856, Photo © Tate
20. J. M. W. Turner (1775 – 1851), The Visit to the Tomb, exhibited 1850, oil on canvas, 91,4 x 121,9 cm, Tate, Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856,
Photo © Tate
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34 Press kit - Turner, paintings and watercolours. TATE’s Collections Press kit - Musée Jacquemart-André 35
ADDRESS
Musée Jacquemart-André
158 boulevard Haussmann, 75008 Paris
Métro: Lignes 9 et 13, stations Saint-Augustin, Miromesnil or Saint-Philippe-du-Roule
RER: Ligne A, station Charles de Gaulle-Étoile
Bus: Lignes 22, 43, 52, 54, 28, 80, 83, 84, 93
OPENINGS
13 March - 20 July 2020
Everyday from 10 am to 6 pm.
Late openings on Mondays untill 8.30 pm during exhibition.
THE CAFÉ JACQUEMART-ANDRÉ
The café is opened from Monday to Friday from 11.45 am to 5.30 pm (untill 7 pm on
Monday during exhibitions) and from 11 am to 5.30 pm on Sunday for brunch (until 2.30
pm).
RATES
Full rate: €15
Senior rate: €14 (+ de 65 ans)
Reduced rate: €12
Youth rate: €9,5 (7-25 years old)
Offer for families: €43 (2 adults and 2 youngs)
Free under 7
PRESS CONTACT
Damien Laval, Claudine Colin Communication
damien@claudinecolin.com
T. +33(0)1 42 72 60 01 / 06 07 09 66 59
WEB
www.musee-jacquemart-andre.com
#JacquemartAndre
PRACTICAL INFORMATION
THE CATALOGUE
To complement the exhibition, Culturespaces and Fonds Mercator are publishing a 176
-page catalogue that includes the works presented in the exhibition.
On sale for €35 in the musée Jacquemart-André’s cultural gift shop and online:
www.boutique-culturespaces.com.
A SPECIAL EDITION OF CONNAISSANCE DES ARTS
The special edition of Connaissance des Arts provides a very interesting overview of the
exhibition.
On sale in the musée Jacquemart-André’s cultural gift shop and online:
www.boutique-culturespaces.com.
THE JOURNAL DE L’EXPO - BEAUX-ARTS MAGAZINE
The ‘Journal de l’expo’ Beaux Arts magazine presents the works of the exhibition.
On sale in the musée Jacquemart-André’s cultural gift shop.
THE GUIDED TOUR FOR SMARTPHONE AND TABLET
This application, which is available in French and English, enables you to discover the
finest works in the exhibition thanks to around twenty audio commentaries and the
xhibition preview
THE GUIDE AUDIO
An audio guide with a selection of major works is available in two languages (French and
English) at a cost of €3.
THE ACTIVITY BOOK FOR YOUNG CHILDREN
Given freely to each child (7–12 years old) who visits the exhibition, this activity book
provides a guide that enables youngsters to observe, in an entertaining way, the major
works in the exhibition by solving various puzzles.
AROUND THE EXHIBITION
#JacquemartAndre
Avec le
soutien du
PARTNERS
158 bd. Haussmann - 75008 Paris
Ouvert tous les jours, de 10h à 18h
Late openings on Mondays untill 8.30 pm
www.musee-jacquemart-andre.com
#JacquemartAndre
PRESS CONTACT
Claudine Colin Communication
Damien Laval
damien@claudinecolin.com
T. +33(0)1 42 72 60 01