|
1. Click player below to start the music. 2. Click the image to dive into the art. 3. Study for twoandahalf minutes this great piece of art and all the drama. |
Overall I am not a big Turner fan. I was always amazed in London when people spent hours in front of his blurry masterpieces in the National Gallery.
But this one I like (more info here):
The scene is fairly certainly identifiable as Maidenhead railway bridge, which spans the Thames between Taplow and Maidenhead. The bridge, designed by the engineer Isambard Kingdom Brunel and completed in 1839, has two main arches of brick, very wide and flat. The view is to the east, towards London.
On the left people are boating on the river, while to the right a ploughman works on a field. The tranquility of these traditional activities contrasts with the steam train rushing towards the viewer, the stark outline of its black funnel clearly visible. In front of the train a hare, one of the speediest of animals, dashes for cover.
Turner’s picture can be associated with the ‘railway mania’ which swept across England in the 1840s. It is also an outstanding example of his late style of painting. Sky and river landscape are dissolved in a haze of freely applied oil paint, to give a striking impression of the contrasting movement of driving rain and speeding train.
*Thanks to Edosan to sending in this picture*
Tags: european art, industrial age, landscape, painting, Turner
Related Post
Posted by orangeguru at 2008-03-28 (0:01).
Copyright 2006 by the author or the related copyright holder.
You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
Please leave a comment, or trackback link from your own site.













Please leave a Comment:
No fakes and no insults please. Thanks!