John Constable, (1776-1837)
Constable was born on June 11, 1776, (one year after
Turner) in East Bergholt, Suffolk, the son of a
prosperous corn merchant with two water mills and 90
acres of land. After leaving Dedham Grammar School
(now a private house), he worked in the family
business but his real desire was to be an artist. In
1795 he met Sir George Beaumont an amateur painter,
who showed him a landscape painting by
Claude Lorrain,
enticing Constable to study art and in 1799 his father
allow him to attend the Royal Academy. He exhibited
his first landscape paintings in 1802 after which he
developing a distinctly individual style. In 1816, on
the death of his father, Constable became financially
secure and married Maria Bicknell, whom he had
courted for seven years and was the guiding passion in
his life. The couple moved to Hampstead Heath, London,
in 1821 and had seven children, five of whom became
artists. Mary age 40 had developed TB and died,
leaving Constable broken hearted.
Turner
and Constable were at the
Academy School
together but never became friends. Turner became rich
and famous, Constable only sold 20 paintings in
England in his lifetime and not until he was 39 years
old, denied his accolade until the age of 52 - just
eight years before his death.
1812-14 makes hundreds of sketches in Stour Valley
Suffolk / Essex
1815
Exhibits Boat building at the RA
1823 Shows Salisbury Cathedral at RA, next year is
awarded gold medal by King of France.
All that Constable hoped to achieve through his art is
summed up in a revealing comment he made
in David Lucas's English Landscape Scenery (in
which some of Constable's designs had been converted
into mezzotints): "to increase the interest for … and
study of the Rural Scenery of England with all its
endearing associations, its amenities, and even in its
most simple locations; abounding as it does in
grandeur, and every description of Pastoral Beauty."
Salisbury Cathedral John Constable
The Royal Academy refused
Constable full membership until 1829, his work
received little recognition in England. In France,
however, where his famous Haywain (exhibited RA
1821 see below) and later exhibited in the
Salon, Paris in 1824, was much admired by the
Romantic painter
Eugène Delacroix, by the Barbizon painters, who,
following Constable's example, began to paint
outdoors, and by the Impressionists, who sought to
capture the effects of light. He died in London, on
March 31, 1837.
link to
art54.com John Constable and shopping
J. M. W. Turner Book Shop
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