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Constable, John |
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Constable, John (1776-1837)![]() Dedham Lock and Mill, by English landscape painter John Constable. Constable acquired his skills slowly, studying nature and trying to remain true to what he saw. He would make bold sketches during walks in the countryside and then, in his studio, work for the effects of sunlight and drifting cloud that he achieved with an apparent simplicity. English artist; one of the greatest landscape painters of the 19th century. He painted scenes of his native Suffolk, including The Haywain (1821; National Gallery, London), as well as castles, cathedrals, landscapes, and coastal scenes in other parts of Britain. Constable inherited the Dutch tradition of sombre realism, in particular the style of Jacob Ruisdael. He aimed to capture the momentary changes of the weather as well as to create monumental images of British scenery, as in The White Horse (1819; Frick Collection, New York) and Salisbury Cathedral from the Bishop's Grounds (1827; Victoria and Albert Museum, London). Constable's paintings are remarkable for their atmospheric effects and were admired by many French painters, including Eugène Delacroix. Notable are The Leaping Horse (1825; Royal Academy, London); The Cornfield (1826; National Gallery, London); and Dedham Vale (1828; National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh). His many oil sketches are often considered among his best work.
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My Own Places: Poems On John Constable by Don Kerr (Professor Emeritus in the Department of English at the University of Saskatchewan) is a collection of free-verse poetry from brief lyric poems to extended narratives, all inspired by British landscape painter John Constable (1776-1837). Indeed, his work, perhaps inadvertently, conveys more than a hint of the problematics of meaning in contemporary painting: As much as he strives to articulate his place in a figurative tradition that stretches from John Constable to Walter Sickert and Giorgio Morandi, his quasi homage strenuously resists its own time. Painting: The Cornfield, by John Constable (1826, National Gallery, London). |
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