Joseph Mallord William Turner Studies of Sculptural Fragments from the Vatican Museums, Including Ten Dancing Figures from a Four-Sided Altar, and an Altar to Artemis 1819
Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Folio 34 Recto:
Studies of Sculptural Fragments from the Vatican Museums, Including Ten Dancing Figures from a Four-Sided Altar, and an Altar to Artemis 1819
D15168
Turner Bequest CLXXX 33
Turner Bequest CLXXX 33
Pencil on white wove paper, 161 x 101 mm
Inscribed by John Ruskin in red ink ‘33’ bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CLXXX 33’ bottom right
Stamped in black ‘CLXXX 33’ bottom right
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
References
1909
A.J. Finberg, A Complete Inventory of the Drawings of the Turner Bequest, London 1909, vol.I, p.532, as ‘Various figures from the antique’.
1984
Cecilia Powell, ‘Turner on Classic Ground: His Visits to Central and Southern Italy and Related Paintings and Drawings’, unpublished Ph.D thesis, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London 1984, pp.145, 415, 476 note 8, as ‘(a)-(j) Ten dancing figures from a four-sided altar (A, I, pl.45, 182) (k) Altar to Artemis (A, I, pl.41, 123A)’.
1987
Cecilia Powell, Turner in the South: Rome, Naples, Florence, New Haven and London 1987, pp.51 note 6, 59 note 42.
During his 1819 stay in Rome, one of Turner’s most extensive sketching campaigns was the large number of pencil studies made from the sculpture collections of the Vatican Museums (for a general discussion, see the introduction to the sketchbook). This page contains sketches of three objects found in the Museo Chiaramonti. The studies are numbered from top left to bottom right:
a.
Cecilia Powell has identified the ten sketches at the top of the page as those of dancing female figures adorning a four-sided altar in the Museo Chiaramonti.1 Turner seems to have been able to walk right around the object to record the decorations on all four sides, although a photograph from 1903 shows it in a position which would have made this impossible.2
b.
Powell has identified the sketch in the bottom left-hand corner as part of an altar to Artemis in the Museo Chiaramonti.3
c.
The sketch in the bottom right-hand corner depicts a fragment of relief depicting the torso of a woman holding a staff, found in the Museo Chiaramonti.4
Cecilia Powell has identified the ten sketches at the top of the page as those of dancing female figures adorning a four-sided altar in the Museo Chiaramonti.1 Turner seems to have been able to walk right around the object to record the decorations on all four sides, although a photograph from 1903 shows it in a position which would have made this impossible.2
b.
Powell has identified the sketch in the bottom left-hand corner as part of an altar to Artemis in the Museo Chiaramonti.3
c.
The sketch in the bottom right-hand corner depicts a fragment of relief depicting the torso of a woman holding a staff, found in the Museo Chiaramonti.4
Cecilia Powell has suggested that sketches of female sculpture such as the dancing women on this page may have provided inspiration for the foreground figures in Turner’s later oil painting,5 Phyrne Going to the Public Baths as Venus – Demosthenese Taunted by Aeschines exhibited 1838 (Tate, N00522).6
Nicola Moorby
November 2009
Powell 1984, p.415; see Walther Amelung, Die Sculpturen des Vaticanischen Museums, Berlin 1903–8, vol.I, ‘Museo Chiaramonti I’, no.182, pp.436–9, reproduced pl.45, bottom left.
How to cite
Nicola Moorby, ‘Studies of Sculptural Fragments from the Vatican Museums, Including Ten Dancing Figures from a Four-Sided Altar, and an Altar to Artemis 1819 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, November 2009, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2012, https://www