La Cathédrale de Salisbury et Leadenhall depuis la rivière Avon

John Constable · PD

La Cathédrale de Salisbury et Leadenhall depuis la rivière Avon


Détails

Année
1820
Technique
huile sur toile
Type
peinture
Dimensions
52,7 × 77 cm

L'histoire

Constable painted this outdoors, quickly, during a six-week summer stay in Salisbury in 1820. He and his family were lodging with his close friend John Fisher, an archdeacon, in the house called Leadenhall that stands at the right of the view, inside the cathedral close. You can still see how fast he worked: the warm buff ground he began on is left bare in patches of the sky and the trees, and the leaves are just flicks and dabs of unmixed paint. This was a private study, not a picture to sell or exhibit. It never found a buyer in his lifetime and passed to his daughter Isabel, reaching the National Gallery only in 1910, 90 years after he set it down beside the river.

L'appli vous les lit, en dix langues. Bientôt.
La Cathédrale de Salisbury et Leadenhall depuis la rivière Avon — John Constable — MuseScope