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Joseph Mallord William Turner  1775-1851

Joseph Mallord William Turner Frosty Morning exhibited 1813
Frosty Morning  exhibited 1813

Oil on canvas
support: 1137 x 1746 mm frame: 1385 x 2007 x 114 mm
painting

Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856

N00492

This austere winter landscape was one of the most personal of Turner's exhibited pictures. It records a scene he witnessed while travelling in Yorkshire, and is said to include his eldest daughter, Evelina (in blue), and his 'crop-eared bay' horse (pulling the cart).

Turner was particularly fond of this painting, which he preferred not to sell. It was also admired by contemporary and later critics. The Spectator saw in it 'the true tone of nature… imitated to perfection'. Years after Turner's death, Claude Monet saw it and declared it had been painted with 'wide-open eyes'.

 (From the display caption September 2004)