J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours

ISBN 978-1-84976-386-8

Joseph Mallord William Turner Figures in the Piazza San Marco (St Mark's Square), Venice, with the Piazzetta Beyond 1840

Joseph Mallord William Turner 1775–1851
Figures in the Piazza San Marco (St Mark’s Square), Venice, with the Piazzetta Beyond 1840
D32195
Turner Bequest CCCXVII 13d
Pencil and gouache on buff-grey wove paper, 230 x 301 mm
Partial watermark ‘W’
Blind-stamped with Turner Bequest monogram towards top centre
Inscribed in red ink ‘(d (13’ top left, upside down
Stamped in black ‘CCCXVII – 13’ top left upside down
Accepted by the nation as part of the Turner Bequest 1856
This rather schematic drawing includes a loosely indicated crowd gathered in the Piazza San Marco (St Mark’s Square), with the Piazzetta beyond to the south, ending with the two columns on the Molo waterfront, represented by two inconspicuous vertical strokes. The three at the centre likely indicate corners of the campanile, seen more clearly in Tate D32192–D32193 (Turner Bequest CCCXVII 13a, b), elsewhere on the present sheet.
Compare Tate D32250, D32256 and D32258 (Turner Bequest CCCXIX 2, 8, 10), contemporary Piazza night scenes on brown paper, including what may be the same illuminated booth as shown less conspicuously near the centre here; see also D32192, the opposite quarter here.
Technical notes:
This is one of four slight subjects on the recto of a sheet folded vertically and horizontally; see also Tate D32192, D32193 and D32194 (Turner Bequest CCCXVII 13a, b, c), and compare Tate D32196–D32199 (Turner Bequest CCCXVII 14a–d). The dimensions given are as recorded by Tate conservators, representing the overall sheet, and those of the present portion are approximately half those given in each direction.
Slight irregularities along the overall top edge of CCCXVII 13 (the half comprising D32192–D32193) match those at the bottom edge of the verso of CCCXVII 14 (D32198–D32199), showing that they once formed a continuous sheet. In discussing the papers used in Venice in 1840, Ian Warrell has described this as ‘Lightweight buff grey-paper from an unknown source, possibly English, with the watermark: “W”’.1
Among the Venetian sheets in paper conservator Peter Bower’s 1999 survey of Turner’s later papers,2 Tate D32233 (Turner Bequest CCCXVIII 14) was exhibited3 and reproduced, but there is a seemingly inadvertent mismatch.4 The detailed description and discussion of the sheet appear to apply to CCCXVII 14, and Bower also refers to ‘CCCXVIII 13’,5 meaning the present sheet. Bower noted: ‘Lightweight buff-grey wove | Watermark: W | Unknown maker’. He went on: ‘This quarter sheet is part of a well-formed lightweight buff wove sheet that also includes CCCXVIII 13’ (i.e. CCCXVII 13), torn down from a ‘full sheet size of approximately 17 ¾ x 22 ¾’ (inches; 450 x 578 mm), which ‘only matches one English paper size, Extra Large Post’, generally used for ‘white writing paper rather than coloured papers’; he suggested the German ‘Gross Median’ format of 460 x 590 mm as another possibility. Bower noted Tate D40202 (Turner Bequest LXXIV C), ‘erroneously catalogued as part of the [1802] Grenoble sketchbook’, but likely a Swiss 1840s sketch, as a ‘part sheet of this same paper ... also watermarked W in an outline capital’.6 Compare the watermark on the present section of CCCXVII 13.
1
‘Appendix: The papers used for Turner’s Venetian Watercolours’ (1840, section 5) in Warrell 2003, p.259.
2
See Bower 1999, p.112.
3
According to Tate Registrars’ files.
4
See Warrell 2003, p.259.
5
Bower 1999, p.112.
6
Ibid.
Verso:
Blank

Matthew Imms
September 2018

How to cite

Matthew Imms, ‘Figures in the Piazza San Marco (St Mark’s Square), Venice, with the Piazzetta Beyond 1840 by Joseph Mallord William Turner’, catalogue entry, September 2018, in David Blayney Brown (ed.), J.M.W. Turner: Sketchbooks, Drawings and Watercolours, Tate Research Publication, December 2019, https://www.tate.org.uk/art/research-publications/jmw-turner/joseph-mallord-william-turner-figures-in-the-piazza-san-marco-st-marks-square-venice-with-r1197041, accessed 27 April 2024.