Search This Blog

Monday, April 24, 2023

The Burning of the House of Lords and Commons, JMW Turner

Yesterday was JMW Turner's 248th birthday, and he (for me) is still the master of depicting light. This one is the portrayal of an actual event, and he painted two versions, one of which is at the Cleveland Museumof Art. Fire consumed London’s famous Houses of Parliament on the night of October 16, 1834, and people gathered along the banks of the river Thames to gaze in awe at the horrifying spectacle. Initially, a low tide made it difficult to pump water to land and hampered steamers towing firefighting equipment along the river. The blaze burned uncontrollably for hours. J. M. W. Turner records the struggle as the boats in the lower-right corner head toward the flames. Although Turner based the painting on an actual event, he magnified the height of the flames, using the disaster as the starting point to express man’s helplessness when confronted with the destructive powers of nature. Brilliant swathes of color and variable atmospheric effects border on abstraction.

No comments:

Post a Comment