TORONTO.- This fall the
Art Gallery of Ontario hosts a major exhibition celebrating the experimental and contemplative works of Joseph Mallord William Turner (17751851), a giant of British art. J.M.W. Turner: Painting Set Free features more than 50 large-scale paintings and watercolours on loan from Tate Britain and makes the case that the radical works created in the final 15 years of Turners career, with their arresting use of light, represent a fulfillment of the artists upward trajectory.
By bringing an exhibition of this calibre to Toronto this fall, the AGO will offer an exceptional experience to its members and visitors, and were delighted to be partnering with one of the worlds most renowned art institutions to do so, says Stephanie Smith, the AGOs Chief Curator. Turner was a great artist who reimagined the medium of painting to create powerful and beautiful works. Through his art, he invites us to bear witness to the rapidly changing world of his time and to delight in the power of the artistic imagination."
Premiered at Tate Britain in September 2014 and heralded by critics across the U.K. as an exciting, entrancing show (The Guardian) and sensational (London Evening Standard), J.M.W. Turner: Painting Set Free focuses on the final and most experimental phase of the artists career. Beginning in 1835 and closing with his last exhibitions at the Royal Academy in 1850, the exhibition sets out to show how Turners final years were a time of exceptional energy and vigour, initiated by one of his most wide-ranging tours of Europe. The installation at the AGO has been coordinated by Lloyd DeWitt, AGO Curator of European Art.
Turners late works, with their emphasis on atmosphere, are famous for their sublime colour palettes, textures and arresting use of light. Highlights of the exhibition include the large historical works Ancient Rome: Agrippina Landing with the Ashes of Germanicus (exhibited 1839); Snow Storm - Steam Boat off a Harbours Mouth (exhibited 1842) and the iconic Angel Standing in the Sun (exhibited 1846); as well as numerous and magnificent watercolours, including The Blue Rigi, Sunrise (1842) and the haunting Fire at the Grand Storehouse of the Tower of London (1841).
J.M.W. Turner is a towering figure of British 19th-century art, says DeWitt. His innovative approach remains an ongoing inspiration to contemporary artists and audiences. And yet it was during this last, most fruitful period of his life that his art was most misunderstood. Mocked publicly, Turner baffled his critics with his radical approach. Nonetheless, he carried on experimenting with unusual subject matters and different canvas formats and mastering his free and spontaneous techniques in both oil and watercolour.
J.M.W. Turner: Painting Set Free runs at the AGO until Jan. 31, 2016.