Today, The Art Fund, the UK’s leading art
charity, and Tate, are launching a public appeal to help save
Turner’s The Blue Rigi for the nation. £2.45 million needs to be
raised by 20 March towards a total price of £4.95 million to
prevent the work entering a private collection abroad. The
charity also announced it was pledging £500,000, one of The Art
Fund’s largest ever grants, towards the fundraising campaign.
Members of the public will be able to pledge
their support online by ‘buying a brushstroke’ from The Blue
Rigi, by visiting a special website created for online donations
at www.artfund.org/savebluerigi. To launch the campaign several
leading artists have bought brushstrokes to support the appeal
including David Hockney, Peter Blake, Michael Craig-Martin,
Martin Creed, Jeremy Deller, Peter Doig, Antony Gormley, Howard
Hodgkin, Anish Kapoor, Fiona Rae, Bridget Riley, Mark Wallinger
and Rachel Whiteread. Each online brushstroke costs £5 and the
aim is to have raised £300,000 when the image is complete.
The Blue Rigi was sold at auction on 5 June
2006 for the record price of £5.8 million making it the most
expensive British watercolour ever sold. A temporary export bar
has been placed on the painting until 20 March 2007 by the
Culture Minister, David Lammy.
David Barrie, Director of The Art Fund, said:
‘The Blue Rigi represents the very pinnacle of Turner’s
achievement in watercolour – the medium which he revolutionised
and of which he was perhaps the supreme master. There is very
little chance of Tate ever acquiring another Turner watercolour
of this stature again. It would be a huge shame if we didn’t do
everything we could to secure it for public enjoyment for
generations to come.’
In December last year Tate announced it was
allocating £2 million of its own funds towards
The Blue Rigi and that it was bringing
together, for the first time ever, the three Rigi paintings in
an exhibition opening at Tate Britain on 22 January 2007. Tate
has also made a funding application to the National Heritage
Memorial Fund.
Nicholas Serota, Director, Tate, said: ‘I am
delighted that The Art Fund recognises the importance of saving
Turner’s The Blue Rigi from going abroad by awarding Tate one of
the largest grants in its history. With Tate’s commitment of £2
million – the highest sum ever allocated from Tate funds towards
an acquisition – we are now halfway towards our goal. We are in
a race against time to raise the remaining funds. I hope by
launching this public appeal with The Art Fund we will ignite
the public’s support in saving this truly exceptional
watercolour by one of Britain’s greatest painters.’
Turner’s late Swiss watercolours have remained
one of the most highly regarded aspects of his output. Within
this grouping the three views of Mount Rigi are seen as
especially important. Each Rigi painting captures the mountain
at a different time of day and is characterised by a defining
colour or tone: Dark, Blue or Red. The Red Rigi has been in the
National Gallery of Melbourne since 1947, but the The Blue Rigi
and The Dark Rigi have been, until this year, in private
collections.
The Blue Rigi , which is in exceptional
condition, would be the only finished watercolour from the Swiss
series of the 1840s to enter the Tate Collection. Painted in
1842, The Blue Rigi is regarded as amongst the finest
achievements not only of Turner, but the watercolour medium as a
whole. John Ruskin, the pre-eminent art critic of the time,
wrote of the Rigi paintings that ‘Turner had never made any
drawings like these before, and never made any like them again…
He is not showing his hand in these, but his heart.’ Turner
captures the mountain just before dawn when the rising sun
begins to chase away the cool darkness of night. The Turner
Bequest at Tate includes a tonal study for The Blue Rigi
providing a unique context for the understanding and enjoyment
of this masterpiece. The bequest also contains atmospheric
colour impressions of the Rigi dating from Turner’s final visits
to Lucerne in the 1840s, including those in the ‘Lucerne’
sketchbook of 1844 – some of which will be on show as part of
Tate’s exhibition.
ENDS
Press enquiries:
Sarah Harrison/Tanera Bryden, The Art Fund. T:
020 7225 4820/4822
Helen Beeckmans/Louise Butler, Tate. T: 020
7887 8730/8732
Notes to editors:• The
Art Fund has given grants towards 30 works by Turner since 1903.
176 works by Turner have been distributed as gifts and bequests
in the same period.
• The Art Fund is the UK’s leading independent
art charity. It offers grants to help UK museums and galleries
enrich their collections and campaigns widely on behalf of
museums and their visitors. It has 80,000 members.
• Since its foundation in 1903, The Art Fund
has helped UK public collections acquire over 850,000 works of
art, ranging from Bronze Age treasures to contemporary works of
art
• In 2006 The Art Fund offered over £5 million
to museums and galleries
• In 2006 The Art Fund unveiled one of the
most significant projects in its history – a permanent
‘Skyspace’ at Yorkshire Sculpture Park by the American artist
James Turrell
• In November 2006 The Art Fund published the
findings from its groundbreaking research comparing the
collecting ability of four UK national museums with their
international counterparts. The research found that UK museums
have a tiny fraction of the spending power of major museums
abroad. An Art Fund survey undertaken earlier in the year found
that 70% of UK museums now acquire new works of art mainly or
solely by gift. The findings of both surveys are available
online at www.artfund.org/policyandcampaigns <http://www.artfund.org/policyandcampaigns>
• Independent of government, The Art Fund is
uniquely placed to campaign on behalf of public collections
across the UK. In was at the forefront of the campaign for free
admission in 2001 and the campaign to save the Macclesfield
Psalter on 2005
• Visit the charity’s website at
www.artfund.org <http://www.artfund.org/> .
• Visit Tate’s website at www.tate.org.uk
<http://www.tate.org.uk/>
• JMW Turner: Three Rigis is at Tate Britain
from 22 January to 20 March 2007