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John Constable, from lectures at the Royal Institution (June 1836) “...I am anxious that the world should be inclined to look to painters for information.

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Presentation on theme: "John Constable, from lectures at the Royal Institution (June 1836) “...I am anxious that the world should be inclined to look to painters for information."— Presentation transcript:

1 John Constable, from lectures at the Royal Institution (June 1836) “...I am anxious that the world should be inclined to look to painters for information on painting. I hope to show that ours is a regularly taught profession; that it is scientific as well as poetic; that imagination alone never did, and never can, produce works that are to stand by a comparison with realities; and to show, by tracing the connecting links in the history of landscape painting, that no great painter was ever self-taught.” “…Painting is a science, and should be pursued as an inquiry into the laws of nature. Why, then, may not landscape be considered as a branch of natural philosophy, of which pictures are but experiments?”

2 Constable’s Study of Clouds at Hampstead, London

3 Study of Clouds, Ashmolean Museum

4 Clouds, 5 September 1822, National Gallery of Victoria

5 Road to ‘the Spaniards’, Hampstead, Philadelphia

6 Cloud study, horizon of trees 27 September 1821, Royal Academy of Arts, London

7 View from Hampstead Heath, looking towards Harrow, Manchester

8 Landscape with Clouds, New Art Gallery Walsall

9 Constable’s White Horse, New York

10 Constable’s Brighton Beach, Victoria & Albert Museum, London

11 Constable’s The Haywain, National Gallery, London

12 Bibliography Richard Hamblyn, The Invention of Clouds: How an Amateur Meteorologist Forged the Language of the Skies, the true story of Luke Howard. In 1803, Howard gave the clouds their names- cumulus, stratus, cirrostratus, cirrocumulus, and cirrus. Copyright 2001.


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