Turner and Constable : sketching from nature : works from the Tate collection

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Turner and Constable : sketching from nature : works from the Tate collection

Michael Rosenthal with Anne Lyles ; edited by Steven Parissien

Tate, 2013

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Exhibition catalogue

"On the occasion of the exhibition, Turner and Constable : sketching from nature : works from the Tate collection. Compton Verney, 13 July-22 September 2013, Turner Contemporary, Margate, 8 October 2013-15 January 2014, Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle, 1 March-20 June 2014."--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references (p. 113-114) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Accompanying a major UK touring exhibition which includes approximately 60 works by Turner, Constable and their contemporaries from the Tate collection, this richly illustrated book explores the development, variety and innovation of the landscape oil sketch in British art, from its appearance in the 1770s; through to its flourishing during the first two decades of the nineteenth century; and its effective disappearance, save for Constable's persistence, during the 1820s. with an insight into the different modes artists of this period used for oil sketching, Michael Rosenthal and Anne Lyles show how each practitioner approached similar subjects - at a time when oil sketching outdoors was still comparatively unusual. The result is an introductory study into the techniques of sketching, and the often surprising connections that can be drawn between the artists involved. These stimulating comparisons prompt questions about the importance of oil sketching in this period and how finished works were planned, evolved and executed. Featuring works by Turner and Constable alongside artists such as George Stubbs, John Linnell, William Henry Hunt, John Sell Cotman, John Crome, Francis Danby, Thomas Jones, George Robert Lewis and Augustus Wall Callcott, this timely study re-investigates many beautiful and revealing sketches which, brought together here, showcase a direct naturalism of a kind unprecedented in the history of British art.

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