
J. M. W. Turner, Snow Storm: Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth, 1842. Wikimedia Commons. · PD
Tempête de neige : bateau à vapeur au large d’un port
Détails
L'histoire
Turner exhibited this in 1842, when he was 67 and steam was beginning to push sail off the sea. At the centre, barely, is a paddle steamer firing a distress signal in a blizzard, everything else dissolved into churning snow, spray and smoke. Turner told people he had the sailors lash him to the mast for four hours during a real storm so he could watch it, and that he did not expect to survive. The story is almost certainly untrue, but he wanted the painting believed as first-hand experience. Critics were unkind. One dismissed the whole thing as soapsuds and whitewash. He gave the work a title nearly a paragraph long, naming the ship and the night it left Harwich.




