罗马斗兽场,来自南方

约瑟夫·玛罗德·威廉·特纳

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2023-07-05 13:13

Catalogue entry

Arguably the most famous of all the surviving monuments of classical Rome is the Flavian Amphitheatre, a huge building universally known as the Colosseum, which stands at the eastern end of the Roman Forum between the Palatine and Esquiline Hills. Built between 72–80 AD., the immense ruin was as popular with tourists during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries as it is today, and its crumbling but impressive remains represented a constant source of inspiration for artists. Turner had read John Chetwode Eustace’s book, A Classical Tour Through Italy , which stated that ‘Never did human art present to the eye a fabric so well calculated by its size and form, to surprise and delight’ (see the Italian Guide Book sketchbook, Tate D13943 ; Turner Bequest CLXXII 7). 1 Eustace recommended viewing the building first from the north, and then the south before finally visiting the interior. 2 This sketch depicts a view of the southern façade of the building on the side of the Caelian Hill. During the early nineteenth century this face was in a state of considerable disrepair due to the removal of stone over the years for other building projects within the city (the wall was reconstructed in brick from the 1840s onwards). Turner shows us a glimpse of the interior seen through the ruined gaps in the wall and through the multiple arches of the tiers of arcades. In the background is the high back wall of the northern façade. As Cecilia Powell has discussed, Turner’s depiction was strongly influenced by eighteenth-century models such as the etchings of Giovanni Battista Piranesi. 3 The overwhelming physical presence of the building, as well as the dramatic play of light and shadow recalls Piranesi’s plates for the Vedute di Roma . 4

Like many drawings within this sketchbook, the composition has been executed in pencil over a washed grey background and Turner has created pale highlights by rubbing or lifting through to the white paper beneath. Following his 1819 tour, the sketch provided the basis for a finished watercolour, Rome: the Colosseum , 1820 (British Museum, London) bought by his great friend and patron, Walter Fawkes. 5 The painting faithfully follows the design of the drawing in all respects apart from the transformation of the foreground cattle into goats, a different arrangement of figures, and the fact that Turner extends the scale of the Colosseum so that it entirely fills the picture plane. He also translated the tonal monochrome into a full coloured scheme, possibly based at least in part on other studies of the building from this sketchbook (see Tate D16345 , D16346 and D16364 ; CLXXXIX 19, 20 and 37).

1

John Chetwode Eustace, A Classical Tour Through Italy , London 1815, 3rd edition, vol.I, pp.374–5.

2

Ibid., p.375.

3

Powell 1987, pp.107–9.

4

See for example Luigi Ficacci, Piranesi: The Complete Etchings , Köln and London 2000, nos.929 and 997, reproduced pp.717, 755.

5

Wilton 1979, no.723.

6

See Moorby 2009, p.115.

Nicola Moorby

July 2009 Read full Catalogue entry

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