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after Joseph Mallord William Turner  1775-1851

Joseph Mallord William Turner St Mark's Place, Venice: Juliet and her Nurse, engraved by George Hollis 1842
St Mark's Place, Venice: Juliet and her Nurse, engraved by George Hollis  1842

Line-engraving on paper
image: 423 x 564 mm
on paper, print

Purchased 1988

T05188
Rawlinson number: 654
This large plate reproduces one of the most important and influential canvases of Turner's later career. Exhibited at the Royal Academy early in 1836, 'Juliet and her Nurse' became the subject of a vicious attack by the Reverend John Eagles in an article published in 'Blackwood's Magazine' later in the year. Eagles wrote that the picture was 'a strange jumble', but one of his chief complaints was that Turner should have chosen to set this scene from 'Romeo and Juliet' in Venice rather than Verona. No doubt Turner's decision to place Shakespeare's famous heroine in Venice was influenced by the romantic atmosphere of the city; in the foreground she is seen musing on her new-found love.
 (From the display caption August 2004)