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Study of clouds and trees

Oil Painting
1821-1822 (painted)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Study of clouds and trees - low horizon with dark green scrub and trees. Sky cloudy, blue with bright white clouds.

Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleStudy of clouds and trees (popular title)
Materials and techniques
Oil on paper
Brief description
Oil sketch, 'Study of Clouds and trees', John Constable, British School, 1821-2
Physical description
Study of clouds and trees - low horizon with dark green scrub and trees. Sky cloudy, blue with bright white clouds.
Dimensions
  • Estimate height: 24.8cm
  • Estimate width: 29.8cm
  • Frame height: 45cm (Note: Taken from frame)
  • Frame width: 49.9cm (Note: Taken from frame)
  • Frame height: 450mm
  • Frame width: 500mm
  • Frame depth: 40mm
Dimensions taken from Catalogue of the Constable Collection, Graham Reynolds, Victoria and Albert Museum, London: HMSO, 1973
Style
Marks and inscriptions
'Charles Constable' (Inscribed on the back in pencil)
Credit line
Given by Isabel Constable
Object history
One of a group of cloud studies that he executed at Hampstead in years 1821-2. They depict the sky at a particular moment in time, and under certain weather conditions, just as a portrait-painter might try and capture some fleeting but particularly characteristic expression on a sitter's face. Often these studies are annotated with precise details of the time and weather conditions in which they were painted.

Given by Isabel Constable, 1888
Historical context
The chief of Constable’s four exhibits in 1821 was ‘Landscape: Noon’ (‘The Hay Wain’) (National Gallery No. 1207; for the full-scale sketch see No. 209 [987-1900] in this Catalogue). His third child, Charles Golding Constable, was born on 29 March. He accompanied Archdeacon John Fisher on his visitation of Berkshire in June, took No. 2 Lower Terrace, Hampstead, for his family during the summer and autumn and paid a visit to Fisher at Salisbury in November.

[G Reynolds, 1973, p. 135]

Constable's interest in landscape painting was a deeply felt response to the beauty and variety of nature. 'Painting is with me but another word for feeling' he told his friend John Fisher. Yet he saw the process by which he translated his vision into two dimensions as essentially scientific. 'In such an age as this', he wrote, 'painting should be understood, not looked on with blind wonder, not considered only as a poetic aspiration, but as a pursuit, legitimate, scientific and mechanical.'
Subjects depicted
Bibliographic references
  • Catalogue of the Constable Collection, Graham Reynolds, Victoria and Albert Museum, London: HMSO, 1973, pp. 135, 144, 146, 147
  • 100 Great Paintings in The Victoria & Albert Museum.London: V&A, 1985, p.110
Other number
230, plate 174 - Reynolds catalogue no.
Collection
Accession number
162-1888

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Record createdFebruary 21, 2000
Record URL
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