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after him, but Constable started painting at an early age, and convinced his
father to let him follow art as a career.He married Maria Bicknell in 1816, and
they had seven children. She died in 1829 of tuberculosis.
His paintings are treasures of British art, but in his lifetime his work
was appreciated more in France. Constable's most famous painting,
The Hay
Wain
(now in the National Gallery in London), was first shown at the Paris
Salon in 1824. He had to wait until he was 52 years old before the Royal
Academy voted that he should be a member.
Constable was influenced by the French painter Claude Lorrain. His
most famous paintings are landscapes showing the countryside around
Dedham and Flatford, where his father's mills were.
Constable's
idea was to use nature itself, rather than imagination. He told
Leslie, "When I sit down to make a sketch from nature, the first thing I try to
do is to forget that I have ever seen a picture".
Although Constable produced paintings throughout his life for the
market of patrons and R.A. exhibitions, on-the-spot studies were essential. He
never just followed a formula. "The world is wide", he wrote, "no two days
are alike, nor even two hours; neither were there ever two leaves of a tree
alike since
the creation of all the world; and the genuine productions of art,
like those of nature, are all distinct from each other".
Constable painted many full-scale preliminary sketches of his
landscapes in order to test the composition in advance of finished pictures.
These large sketches, with their free and vigorous brushwork, were
revolutionary at the time. The sketches for
The Leaping Horse
and
The Hay
Wain
study convey a vigour missing from his finished oil paintings of the
same subjects. Compare the composition of this
preliminary study with the
finished painting:
The Hay Wain
final. Possibly more than any other aspect of
Constable's work, the oil sketches reveal him to be an avant-garde painter,
one who showed that landscape painting could be taken in a totally new
direction.
Constable's watercolours were also remarkably free for their time. The
almost mystical
Stonehenge
, 1835, with its double rainbow, is often
considered to be one of the greatest watercolours ever painted.
[2]
When he
exhibited it in 1836, Constable appended a text to the title: "The mysterious
monument of Stonehenge, standing remote on a bare and boundless heath, as
much unconnected with the events of past ages as it is with the uses of the
present, carries you back beyond all historical records into the obscurity of a
totally unknown period".
In addition
to the full-scale oil sketches, Constable completed
numerous studies of landscapes and clouds, to become more scientific in his
recording of atmospheric conditions.
The Chain Pier
, 1827, for example,
prompted a critic to write: "the atmosphere possesses a characteristic
humidity about it, that almost imparts the wish for an umbrella".
The sketches were the first ever done in oils directly from the subject in
the open air. To convey the effects of light and movement, Constable used
broken brushstrokes,
often in small touches, which he worked over lighter
passages. This gave an impression of sparkling light over the landscape. One
of the most expressionistic and powerful of all his studies is
Seascape Study
with Rain Cloud
, painted in around 1824 at Brighton, which captures with
slashing dark brushstrokes an exploding shower at sea.
Constable also
became interested in painting rainbow effects, for example in
Salisbury
Cathedral from the Meadows
, 1831, and in
Cottage at East Bergholt
, 1833.
To the sky studies he added notes, often on the back of the sketches, of
the prevailing weather conditions, direction of light, and time of day,
believing that the sky was "the key note, the standard of scale, and the chief
organ of sentiment" in a landscape painting.
In this habit he is known to have
been influenced by the pioneering work of the meteorologist Luke Howard on
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the classification of clouds.
"I have done a good deal of skying", Constable
wrote to Fisher on 23 October 1821.
Constable once wrote in a letter to Leslie, "My limited and abstracted art is to
be found under every hedge, and in every lane, and therefore nobody thinks it
worth picking up".
He could never have imagined how influential his honest
techniques would turn out to be. Constable's art inspired not only
contemporaries like Géricault and Delacroix, but the Barbizon School, and the
French impressionists of the late nineteenth century.
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