Description: Winner receives a signed watercolor painting by well listed English artist John Constable (1776-1837). The painting depicts an early Sutton-Surrey landscape, and is signed with the artist's initials in the lower right corner, seen magnified in picture 5. The painting has impeccable provenance from Raydon Gallery, NY, with the original gallery labels seen on the verso in pictures 7 & 8. Although partially torn, we included a copy of what the original gallery label looks like on the verso for comparative purposes. The painting was exhibited in a traveling exhibition in Japan in 1983-84 titled "The Rediscovery of Nature: An Anthology of 19th Century Landscape Painting in the West". The painting was exhibited at The Museum Of Modern Art, Hyogo from November 3-27, 1983. It was exhibited at The Iwate Prefectural Museum from December 2-25, 1983. It was exhibited at the Museum Of Modern Art, Saitama from January 5-29, 1984. It was exhibited at The Hiroshima Prefectural Museum from February 3-26, 1984. Finally it was exhibited at The Kitakyushu Municipal Museum Of Art from March 2-25, 1984. The original exhibition label can be seen on the verso, magnified in picture 9. The painting is in exquisite condition with no rips, tears, repairs, foxing, toning, creasing, or in-painting. The gold gilt gallery frame is in excellent condition with no chips, cracks, losses, or repairs, but does have some minor nicks and chips. The painting is an absolute gem and ready for hanging as-is. The frame measures roughly 24.5" x 20", with the image measuring roughly 12.75" x 9". Please note the pictures may not be as clear as we'd like due to the settings on the camera to reduce the glare. Below is some information about the artist, who really needs no introduction with recent auction results of up to $34,792,635. Please feel free to ask us any questions you may have prior to bidding or making an offer. Thank you for checking out our listing. John Constable (1776-1837) was a major figure in English landscape painting in the early 19th century. He is best known for his paintings of the English countryside, particularly those representing his native valley of the River Stour, an area that came to be known as “Constable country.” The son of a wealthy miller and merchant who owned a substantial house and small farm, Constable was reared in a small Suffolk village. The environs of his childhood and his understanding of its rural economy would later figure prominently in his work. As he would write in 1821, “I should paint my own places best…I associate my ‘careless boyhood’ to all that lies on the banks of the Stour.” Constable was meant to enter his father’s business, but, after meeting the famous connoisseur Sir George Beaumont in 1795, and then a circle of antiquarians and connoisseurs at Edmonton in 1796, he was inspired to pursue art. In February 1799 he made himself known to the influential academician Joseph Farington, and in March he entered the prestigious Royal Academy schools, with the grudging approval of his father. At the time, art academies stressed history painting as the most appropriate subject matter for their students, but from the beginning Constable showed a particular interest in landscape.In 1802 Constable refused the stability of a post as drawing master at a military academy so that he could instead dedicate himself to landscape painting and to studying nature directly in the English countryside. That same year he exhibited his work at the Royal Academy for the first time. Despite some early explorations in oil, in the first part of this decade he preferred using watercolour and graphic media in his studies of nature. He produced fine studies in these media during a trip to the famously picturesque Lake District in autumn 1806, but his exhibitions of these works in both 1807 and 1808 were Although based in London during this period, Constable would frequently make extended visits to his native East Bergholt to sketch. (On one such stay in 1809, he fell in love with Maria Bicknell, who was visiting her grandfather, the rector there.) Constable had been regularly sketching in oil since 1808, and by 1810 he had achieved extraordinary deftness with the medium (he would often be associated with his oil sketches in the future). His art became far more focused about this time: his sketches were either discrete studies, or, befitting academic practice, they were made in preparation for preconceived easel paintings. The most significant large easel painting of the period was Dedham Vale: Morning (1811), which married closely observed naturalistic effect to a scene composed according to the academic criteria established by 17th-century French painter Claude Lorrain.In September 1811 Constable stayed in Salisbury with an old family friend, the Bishop of Salisbury, and grew close to the bishop’s nephew, John Fisher. Their correspondence is a hugely informative source on Constable’s art: he explains his aims and aspirations, reacts candidly and sometimes aggressively to contemporary criticism, and reveals himself to be driven, ambitious, and prey to gnawing self-doubt.During this period, Bicknell’s family was pressuring her to end her relationship with the struggling artist, and her courtship with him had to become effectively clandestine. Constable found relief from this distraction by working in East Bergholt and, by 1814, with Boatbuilding and The Stour Valley and Dedham Village, he was painting easel pictures in the open. In his works from this period, such as Flatford Mill (1816), Constable displayed remarkable precision of touch and accuracy in description, comparable to contemporary landscapes by George Robert Lewis and John Linnell. His iconography was traditional and celebrated the continuum and stability of English country life. Constable achieved a bittersweet stability of his own when, upon his father’s death in 1816, he received an inheritance that allowed him the financial independence to marry Maria. By 1817 Constable was an established Londoner, and, with the birth of his son John that December, he became a father. With a family to support, professional recognition became essential. In order to achieve this, he began to paint on a large scale, and the 1.9-metre (6.2-foot) Stour scene The White Horse, which he showed at the 1819 Royal Academy exhibit, attracted public attention, generated critical approval, and helped bring about his election to become an Associate of the Royal Academy. By 1819 Maria was exhibiting the early stages of tuberculosis, and her failing health led the family to rent a house in the north London suburb of Hampstead, where she could find fresh air. Constable began painting on Hampstead Heath, before turning his focus to the skies. His cloud studies are unique, capturing the momentary qualities of changeable skies and accurately documenting meteorological phenomena with which he was familiar. In contrast to these small sketches were his large, detailed paintings made for exhibition. He based these paintings on oil and pencil sketches, from which he would essay a composition onto a full-scale canvas before painting the final work. Constable laboured over these large works as befitted grand academic painting from the period. The White Horse initiated a series of large, well-received paintings that he exhibited, including Stratford Mill in 1819–20; The Hay-Wain, one of his best-known works, in 1821; View on the Stour near Dedham in 1822; The Lock in 1824; and The Leaping Horse in 1825. These all featured views of the Stour, but at a remove, as if filtered through memory. By 1824 Constable’s paint surfaces were becoming increasingly fractured, communicating optical effects that evoked the physical experience of nature; these qualities, in addition to his increasingly vibrant, luminous use of colour, have led many, erroneously, to see his work as a precursor to Impressionism. He moved away from recording precise details of a certain locale partly because he was sketching at a variety of places during this period—briefly in Salisbury in 1823, and from 1824 in the fashionable seaside resort of Brighton, where the family repaired for the sake of Maria’s health and where Constable made a last great series of oil sketches. But his abstracted locales and omission of any agricultural representation can be read another way. An economic depression after the Napoleonic Wars had led to agrarian riots, and yet Constable, a loyal Tory, chose to portray an abstracted, well-ordered English society that was untouched by the industrial and social changes surrounding him. Throughout the 1820s critics praised his work and Constable sold paintings. He achieved international success in 1824 when The Hay-Wain was shown at the Paris Salon, where he won a gold medal that was awarded by the king. Constable’s output also diversified: Chain Pier, Brighton (1826–27) pictured, among other things, urban modernity. In 1828, Dedham Vale, reprising a scene first painted in his youth, secured him election to become a Royal Academician in 1829, a post that was much belated due in part to his famously difficult personality. This honour was soured, however, by the death of Maria, his great love and the mother of his seven children, in 1828. Constable’s letters of the 1830s are suffused with an alienation and depression no doubt heightened by the critical attacks to which both he and his great contemporary J.M.W. Turner had been subjected in periodicals since the mid-1820s. Although they were never close and had radically different approaches to landscape painting, Constable and Turner both espoused the grounding in tradition of British painter Sir Joshua Reynolds; such ties to tradition were increasingly seen as obsolete by a new generation of artists and critics that was forming its values in a rapidly developing, industrialized society. Constable nonetheless stayed active. In 1829 he exhibited Hadleigh Castle, a stark image of ruin and desolation, at the Royal Academy. He teamed up with the engraver David Lucas in 1829, producing mezzotints after his works that were published as a suite of prints entitled English Landscape. In his studies of nature during the period, Constable reverted from oil to watercolour and drawing, and he exhibited a fascinating range of work, such as Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows (1831). Constable created this painting, which quoted motifs from his renowned Hay-Wain, while agitation for parliamentary reform against the church made conservatives such as himself very anxious. This panic is perhaps embodied in the painting’s dramatic shifts in scale: the wagon appears enormous next to the houses, yet is dwarfed by the looming cathedral, which symbolically stands firm, enveloped in a rainbow, in the face of stormy skies. In 1836 Constable submitted his last Royal Academy entry, Cenotaph to the Memory of Sir Joshua Reynolds, Erected in the Grounds of Coleorton Hall, Leicestershire, by the Late Sir George Beaumont. The work was a valediction to Reynolds, the father of British art, whose ties to tradition Constable revered; to George Beaumont, whose early influence inspired him; and to Somerset House, the site of exhibitions by the Royal Academy, England’s bastion of historic art, up until this final 1836 show. The painting served as an appropriate ode to the evaporating, traditional world in which Constable’s personal and artistic values had been formed. Constable was a significant painter during a period when landscape was a dominant genre in British art. His oeuvre was unique in that he usually did not elect to paint places popular with the touring public or other artists, but rather concentrated on sites with which he had family connections, or where, for personal reasons, he happened to be. And while other artists made oil sketches, none did so as extensively and intensively as Constable. His landscapes represent a sometimes astonishing capacity to represent natural appearances—particularly, in his later years, the fleeting and dramatic effects of stormy skies—as well as a profound and prolonged meditation on the rural realities of a Britain undergoing a bewildering socioeconomic transformation. Constable achieved a reasonable reputation during his lifetime as a respected and significant landscape painter. After Constable’s death, Charles Robert Leslie’s Memoirs of the Life of John Constable (1843), based on Constable’s edited correspondence, extended his reputation, laying out the fictional life of a sincere and dedicated artist struggling against iniquity and incomprehension; it was Leslie’s loyalty to his friend that perhaps caused him to gloss over many of Constable’s less-appealing characteristics. By the early 20th century Constable’s oeuvre was reexamined when scholars’ need to find British antecedents to Impressionism led to an overemphasis on his oil sketches. In the late 20th century a reassessment grounded more in historical factors was attempted, an area of study that remains contentious. While some have tried to relocate Constable’s landscapes within their contemporary context and have suggested that they are complex works of art with, often, a deeply political content, others have preferred to see them as embodying a quintessential “Englishness.” The fact that the argument is ongoing confirms the continuing vitality of these landscapes. All of our items have been stored in a temperature controlled environment with no pets or smoking allowed. We strive to provide a wide array of artwork, antiques, and collectibles for everyone from the casual collector to other gallery owners. Whether you are a collector or a reseller, we will always try to work with you to the best of our ability to sell you the item you are interested in. We are always adding new treasures to our collection so please feel free to make an offer, as we constantly are turning over our inventory and need to free space up for our newest finds. We will never decline or ignore an offer. 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Price: 8995 USD
Location: Hudson, New York
End Time: 2024-11-26T23:40:39.000Z
Shipping Cost: 0 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
Artist: John Constable
Unit of Sale: Single-Piece Work
Auction Results To $34,792,635: Old Master English Landscape
Signed By: John Constable
Size: Medium (up to 36in.)
Signed: Yes
Period: Early 19th Century (1800-1830)
Material: Watercolor
Region of Origin: United Kingdom
Framing: Matted & Framed
Subject: Landscape
Listed By: Dealer or Reseller
Type: Painting
Original/Licensed Reproduction: Original
Style: Realism
Painting Surface: Paper
Theme: Architecture, Cities & Towns, Exhibitions, Nature
Features: One of a Kind (OOAK), Framed, Matted, Signed, Provenance: Raydon Gallery, NY, Exhibited: Multiple Museums In Japan 1983-84
Production Technique: Watercolor Painting
Country/Region of Manufacture: United Kingdom
Handmade: Yes
Time Period Produced: 1800-1849