Turner and the Sublime - Québec City will host an exclusive Canadian engagement of the English master's grandiose landscapes Français
QUÉBEC CITY, Feb. 9, 2021 /CNW Telbec/ - Minister of Culture and Communications Nathalie Roy is joining with the entire Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec (MNBAQ) team to celebrate from February 10 to May 2, 2021 the work of one of the foremost 19th century European artists, the visionary English painter, watercolourist, and engraver Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851), to mark with pleasure the reopening of the museum by showcasing an artist who shaped the history of international art.
"It is a genuine honour for the Capitale-Nationale and Québec as a whole to host this outstanding major exhibition. Your government is proud to support the MNBAQ in carrying out its projects, which are drawing ever greater numbers of culture enthusiasts. Moreover, I would like to congratulate the MNBAQ for enhancing Québec's cultural reputation abroad and its determination to make its exhibitions key events," Ms. Roy noted.
The international exhibition Turner and the Sublime presented by National Bank of Canada during an exclusive Canadian engagement in Québec City this winter has been innovatively designed and focuses on very topical questions. It will afford visitors an opportunity to view striking landscapes that highlight spectacular storms, turbulent seas, or impressive mountain vistas, and to experience the sublime.
Turner's unique, modern grasp of landscape continues to engage us. The innovative research of the so-called "painter of light" ranks him at the forefront of the Romantic movement. His avant-garde approach appeals to all generations.
Highly relevant, timeless works
Organized in collaboration with Tate Britain from the Turner Bequest, this major exhibition affords an opportunity to see works that are rarely exhibited outside England. The works are drawn from the artist's collection, bequeathed to the nation upon his death. This outstanding collection of 77 paintings and works on paper presented in Québec City covers the biggest portion of Turner's career, from the outset in the 1790s until his apogee around 1840.
The works exhibited at the MNBAQ include major works such as Fishermen at Sea (1796), the first work that Turner, then 21 years old, submitted to the Royal Academy. This ambitious seascape posed a genuine challenge for the young painter, who heightened the level of difficulty by adopting as his subject a nocturnal scene illuminated by pale moonlight. The painting reveals Turner's interest in striking plays of light that characterize his entire body of work. The Blue Rigi, Sunrise (1842) is a masterly work that celebrates the greatness of creation in an image of transcendent calm. The mountain bathed in the ambient light resembles a delicate coloured veiled suspended in space. The painting The St Gotthard Road between Amsteg and Wassen, Looking up the Reuss Valley (circa 1814–1815) also transposes the artist's encounter with the sublime in the Swiss Alps. Turner produced the work, whose innovative composition hinges on powerful contrasts between light and shadow, several years after a trip in 1802.
Three immersive installations that capture Turner
To highlight the English master's emblematic work, the exhibition is proposing scenography centred on the contrast between light and darkness. In keeping with its desire to innovate in the realm of staging, the MNBAQ has also asked Lionel Arnould, a multimedia designer who has worked for Ex Machina, the Théâtre du Trident, and the Centre du Théâtre d'Aujourd'hui, in association with sound creation firm Peak Media, to create three original immersive video installations relating to three Turner paintings. They round out the presentation by proposing a contemporary experience of the sublime. The Fall of an Avalanche in the Grisons explores the theme of catastrophe when nature explodes. Venice – Maria della Salute focuses on a fabulous underwater Venice where the city of the Doges slowly sinks in the waves through a mirror-like effect. Lastly, Sun Setting over a Lake offers an experience linked to the phenomenon of industrialization. Is it an apocalyptic vision or the "industrial sublime"? Visitors will discover a virtual world in which clouds and black tides coalesce.
A Turner from the collection of the MNBAQ to be featured
Turner and the Sublime will also enable the MNBAQ to highlight a painting by the English artist from its collection. This is a rare opportunity to see a seminal work from the MNBAQ's European art collection.
Scene in Derbyshire (1827) is a gift from the estate of Maurice Duplessis in the late 1950s. Its remarkable history reveals that the landscape represents the Derwent Valley seen from the heights of Abraham, near Matlock Bath, a site in Derbyshire named to pay tribute to British General James Wolfe, who died on the Plains of Abraham, during a pivotal battle in the Seven Years' War.
"Atmosphere is my style."
– Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1844
The art of the sublime
The exhibition focuses on the theme of the sublime, a core concept of late 18th century aesthetics and art criticism in Germany and England, which spread throughout Europe in the 19th century. Irish writer Edmund Burke's seminal work A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful (1757) influenced an entire generation of artists by proposing a new conception of beauty, centred on the emotion that the force of nature arouses. This notion of the sublime expressed itself in Turner's work in dramatic landscapes describing spectacular storms, tumultuous seas and grandiose natural spaces.
Turner, a master of landscapes
Turner developed an eminently sensitive conception of landscapes. He sought to render atmospheric effects through the suggestive power of colour. He is recognized for his great mastery of the rendering of light on the sea or mountainous landscapes glimpsed through clouds or rain. Throughout his life, the artist constantly travelled around England and in Europe. He is regarded as a master watercolourist and developed an especially bold technique. His landscapes have a resolutely modern dimension. With Turner, landscape painting became a major art form.
The first section of the exhibition is devoted to Turner's early works. The second section proposes a fine series of mountain landscapes, whose striking majesty is especially suited to rendering the notion of the sublime. A spectacular series of historic and mythological scenes is followed by magnificent lakeside landscapes in Switzerland and Italy, including a superb series of views of Venice, in which the water motif is used to develop a lyrical interpretation of nature. The seascapes and studies of the sky propose fantastic, deeply suggestive images that evoke the infinite. Lastly, the theme of machines, which the artist uses extensively, makes it possible to place Turner at the root of modernity and establish links between the first Industrial Revolution and the advent of environmental awareness.
An informative audio guide
The audio guide of the Turner and the Sublime exhibition not only reveals the English master but also enables visitors to discover why his works continue to be vibrantly topical nearly two centuries after his death. It proposes reflections from guest experts Ollivier Dyens, a full professor at McGill University, and Colleen Thorpe, Director General of Équiterre, on the links between the legendary artist, who revolutionized landscape art, and key societal challenges, especially related to the environment, and our place in the world. Visitors can download the contents, available in French and in English, on their smartphones.
For listening:
https://soundcloud.com/user-426041794-859549171/sets/turner-et-le-sublime-anglais-english
Credits
The Turner and the Sublime exhibition is organized in collaboration with Tate. It has been made possible through a cultural development agreement between the Québec government and Québec City. The contribution comes from the Mesure d'aide financière à l'intention des musées d'État pour des expositions internationales majeures.
Project Director
Annie Gauthier
Director of Collections and Exhibitions, MNBAQ
David Blayney Brown
Senior Curator of British Art, 1790-1850, Tate
Curatorship
David Blayney Brown
Senior Curator of British Art, 1790-1850, Tate
André Gilbert
Curator of Exhibitions, MNBAQ
Exhibition Manager
Pascal Normandin
Head of Exhibitions and Curatorial, MNBAQ
Operations Management
Yasmée Faucher
Head of Museography, MNBAQ
Scenography
Jean Hazel
Designer, MNBAQ
Mediation Coordinator
Marie-Hélène Audet
Head of Mediation, MNBAQ
Immersive installations
Lionel Arnould
Theatrical video designer
Sound Creation
Peak Media
The Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec is a state corporation funded by the Gouvernement du Québec. |
Turner and the Sublime
Pierre Lassonde Pavilion of the MNBAQ
From February 10, to May 2, 2021
SOURCE Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec
418 643-2150 or 1 866 220-2150
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