La Grotte de la reine Mab

J. M. W. Turner, Queen Mab’s Cave, 1846. Wikimedia Commons. · PD

La Grotte de la reine Mab


Détails

Musée
Tate
Année
1846
Technique
huile sur toile
Type
peinture
Dimensions
92,1 × 122,6 cm

L'histoire

Turner was past 70 and near the end when he showed this in 1846, and by then his paintings had dissolved almost entirely into light. The title points to Queen Mab, the tiny fairy of dreams from a speech in Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, and probably also to a long poem of that name by Shelley. But you would struggle to find a story in it. What is actually on the canvas is a swirl of pale gold and green with the faint suggestion of fairies and a few Welsh ruins, more weather than scene. Critics of the day were baffled by these late works and muttered that the old man had lost his grip. Turner made a smaller second version of the same subject, now in Cleveland.

La Grotte de la reine Mab — J. M. W. Turner — MuseScope