William Turner watercolour of Venice 

William Turner Artist painter of light

Search or browse art and poster by merchant, category or brand

 

John Constable at National Gallery of Art Washington DC

Wivenhoe Park, Essex, 1816

Wivenhoe Park, Essex, 1816
oil on canvas, 56 x 101 cm 

This picture, exhibited at Britain's Royal Academy in 1817, demonstrates Constable's wish to be "a natural painter" because it was created almost entirely out-of-doors. During August and September 1816, the artist documented this country estate of old family friends and recorded his progress in letters to his fiancée. (The commission financed their wedding.)

Centered in the panoramic design, the red brick manor house stands out by reason of its warm colour in an otherwise cool scheme of blues, greens, and grays. Constable wrote about the "great difficulty" of incorporating the thatch-roofed deer barn. To add this requested motif, he cleverly sewed about an inch of extra fabric to the canvas at the far right. Then, in order to restore the composition's symmetrical balance, he stitched a similar strip to the left side, where he showed the owners' daughter, Mary Rebow, driving a donkey cart. This view is still recognizable today. Constable blog

Search

In association with
Amazon UK