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JOHN CONSTABLE 1776-1837

John Constable was born at East Bergholt, Suffolk, on June 11, 1776. He was the son of the rich miller. The countryside around his birthplace is pastoral and gently undulating, marked chiefly by the low hills flanking Dedham Vale, along which the River Stour ran. The artist’s father, Golding Constable, owned mills on the banks of the river, made navigable by locks in the 18th century. The landscape setting of his early years influenced Constable greatly. His choice came to be limited to a small group of places in which his affections were deeply engaged, all sharing the pastoral quality of the scenes of his childhood. He showed an early aptitude for drawing landscape and capturing climatic effects in his locality. He was later to say: “These (Suffolk) scenes made me an artist”.
A youthful friendship with an artisan who was an amateur painter aroused Constable’s own ambitions; but up to his 20th year his work was painfully lacking in ability, and it was intended that he should follow his father’s calling. He went to London in 1799 to begin his formal artistic training in the schools of the Royal Academy. At this time the model for landscape painting in England was still the classical ideal landscape of the 17th century. Works by Claude Lorrain and Nicolas Poussin* were in every large collection, and a contemporary artist was expected to conform to the principles of formal composition, lighting, and detailed finish which marked their pictures and even to imitate their tonality, distorted though this might be by a century or more of discoloured varnish.
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* Qelee Claude known as Claude Lorrain (1600-1682)—French painter, achieved renown as painter of idyllic landscapes and seascapes;
Poussin, Nicolas (1594-1665) — most significant 17th-century French painter, a master of the Classical school.
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Constable realized that within such limitations he could not paint the English countryside as he saw it, and in his search for more suitable methods he created his own art.
In 1802, he began the practice of sketching in oils in the open air, the form of study, which he continued throughout his life. His nature sketches are fresh and brilliant and give direct contact with the mind of the artist, but to him they were the exercises and the raw material out of which he could create more ambitious and logically constructed landscape. Constable’s originality was soon recognized and he received help from Benjamen West*, the president of the Royal Academy.
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* West, Benjamen (1738-1820) — American-born artist, who set up in London in 1763.
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During the formative period, from 1800 to 1810, Constable attempted to follow the usual practice of making sketching expeditions to a countryside of recognized romantic beauty. In 1801, he went to the Peak District* and in 1806 to the Lake District.
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* Peak District — a picturesque countryside in North Derbyshire
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Unlike his contemporaries, he found that mountains did not exhilarate but depressed him, and he made no further sketching tours. A casual visit to a new scene could not replace for him the long process of getting to know a landscape intimately, and accordingly he went year after year from his London home to visit his close friends in the southern counties. During this time he painted two altarpieces for local churches. He made efforts to succeed as a portrait painter, the chief means of earning a living then available to an English artist. By 1810, he was producing oil sketches of the countryside in which he achieved natural colour, and rich atmospheric quality, free from the shackles of past formalism.
The years 1810 to 1815 were years of intense concentration on his painting. In 1813 and 1814 Constable filled two small notebooks with hundreds of studies of the fields near his birthplace. These sketchbooks, which have all the fascination of an intimate diary, were often drawn on for the paintings he made in later years; in them he is seen to return to the same scene day after day; drawing it under varying lights and seeking for a viewpoint in which his subject formed a naturally balanced composition.
Constable began to gain some recognition. He sold his first painting to a stranger in 1814 and was elected as Associate of the Royal Academy in 1819. He felt confident enough to embark upon a series of large canvases, the subjects of which were taken from the banks of the River Stour and which he exhibited in successive years at the Royal Academy. Among them were “The Hay Wain” (1827), “View on the Stour near Dedham” (1822), “The Leaping Horse” (1825).
In 1811, Constable formed a close friendship with John Fisher, a clergyman living in Dorsetshire and later in the cathedral town of Salisbury. The friendship was not only a great encouragement to the artist, because of Fisher’s understanding of his work, but widened his choice of themes. On his many visits to Fisher’s house Constable made a number of sketches, and these he used when he was commissioned to paint “Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishop’s Grounds” (1823) a subject he used several times. His range of subjects was further extended in 1819, when he moved his family to the summer months to Hampstead, a village on a hill on the northern outskirts of London, then surrounded by open country. This more became an annual custom, eventually, he took a house in Hampstead. Here he began a long series of sky studies, based on the conviction that only one aspect of the sky was consistent with a particular kind of illumination of the objects on the ground. On the backs of his studies he usually recorded the date, the time of the day, and the weather conditions prevailing at the time they were painted.
At Hampstead Constable found a new type of subject unused by any landscape painter, the combination of suburban buildings with rural surroundings, as exemplified in “A Romantic House” (1832).
The paintings exhibited yearly at the Royal Academy were based on such sky studies and on many oil and pencil studies of the main scene and of subordinate details.
With the exhibition of “The Hay Wain” at the Royal Academy in 1821 Constable’s work became known to French artists. His works were shown in Paris in 1824 and were a great success. “The Hay Wain” was awarded a gold medal, and Constable’s influence over the younger French artists, in particular Delacroix*, dated from this event.
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* Delacroix, Eugene (1798-1824) — French painter, representative of the Romantic movement in France.
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In 1824, Constable’s wife’s increasingly poor health caused Constable to take her to Brighton, a fashionable seaside resort on the South coast. He found the landscape of the surrounding country unsympathetic, but he set to work on oil studies and drawings of the beach and shipping, many of which were really remarkable. Constable became more and more concerned with what he called “the chiaroscuro of the Nature”, a term covering the broken lights and accents caused by the reflection of sunlight on wet leaves and the alternation of lights and darks in the sky and the shadowed landscape. To Constable’s contemporaries his painting looked unfinished, and the glazed highlights with which he enhanced them became known as “Constable’s Snow”.
That Constable was now established as a landscape painter is shown in the number of repetitions he was called upon to make from his more popular compositions. Among the subjects he repeated most often, though always with some variation in the lighting and mood, were “Dedham Mill” (1820) and “Hampstead Heath” (first version 1828).
In 1829, his wife died, and election in that year to full membership in the Royal Academy he regarded without significance. In 1830, he began to issue a series of mezzotint engravings under the title “English Language Scenery”. It was designed to illustrate Constable’s range in landscapes, chosen especially with a view to recording the “chiaroscuro of Nature”.
From this time onward Constable was subject to fits of depression. He had been left with a family of seven young children and forced himself to extra exertions on their behalf. He was working on the picture the day he died in 1837, but it was sufficiently finished to be exhibited posthumously at the Royal Exhibition of that year.
Constable’s large finished pictures, produced for the exhibitions at the Royal Academy, were necessary to his acceptance as an artist. His own real interest, though, lay in his sketches and it is these works which have excited the interest of all painters since his death. It is necessary to clarify the use of the word “sketch” in this context. These were not rough unfinished works or merely notes. In their free, broad and spontaneous way they were carefully considered and were complete in their pictorial statement. In them, Constable catches the effects of rapidly changing light, showing for example how patterns of light change on a landscape and clouds scud across the sky. They embody his most important contribution to European art and explain his work made such an impact upon the Impressionists*.
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*Impressionism — a style of painting (used especially in France between 1870 and 1900) which produces effects (especially of light) by use of colour rather than by details of form. The French impressionists painted directly from nature.
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