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august 14, 2020 - Culture Espaces

'TURNER, PAINTINGS AND WATERCOLOURS. TATE'S COLLECTIONS' at the Musée Jacquemart-André

TURNER, PAINTINGS AND WATERCOLOURS. TATE'S COLLECTIONS

26 May 2020 - 11 January 2021

Musée Jacquemart-André

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.

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.

An exhibition organised in collaboration with the Tate, London.

 

The Institut de France:

Established in 1795, the Institut de France is a non-profit organisation whose mission is to provide five académies (the Académie Française, Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, Académie des Sciences, Académie des Beaux-Arts, and Académie des Sciences Morales et Politiques) with a harmonious framework for the promotion of literature, the sciences, and the arts. A major sponsor, it encourages research and supports creative work through the award of prizes, grants, and subsidies (more than twenty-three million euros are distributed every year via its sheltered foundations). Under the aegis of the President of the Republic, it is also the guardian of a major heritage, beginning with the Palais du Quai de Conti, four libraries, including the Bibliothèque Mazarine, and many houses and collections bequeathed to the Institut since the end of the nineteenth century. They include the Musée Jacquemart-André, the Château de Chantilly, the Abbey of Chaalis, the Château de Langeais, the Manor of Kerazan, and the Villa Kérylos.

 

Practical information:

Musée Jacquemart-André - Institut de France
158 Boulevard Haussmann, 75008 Paris
www.musee-jacquemart-andre.com

Openings : 
10am-6pm
Late opening until 8.30 pm on Mondays