art.wikisort.org - PaintingDolbadarn Castle is an oil painting by J. M. W. Turner (1775–1851) depicting Dolbadarn Castle, created in 1798–1799. It is part of a body of work completed by Turner during a tour of the region, which included Dolbadarn, Llanberis and other parts of Snowdonia. Many supporting studies can be found in a sketch book now held by Tate Britain (Record: TB XLVI).[1] When Turner returned to his London studio he developed these sketches into a number of more accomplished paintings of North Wales, including this one, which is now kept at the National Library of Wales.[2]
Painting by J. M. W. Turner
Dolbadarn Castle |
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Artist | J. M. W. Turner |
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Year | 1798 (1798) |
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Medium | oil on wood |
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Subject | Dolbadarn Castle |
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Dimensions | 45.5 cm × 30 cm (17.9 in × 12 in) |
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This painting is particularly notable as it is one of two that Turner submitted as Diploma works to the Royal Academy in 1800.[3]
Historical event
The painting is an artist's impression of a 13th-century event of some importance in Welsh history. It depicts Owain Goch, the brother of Prince Llywelyn ap Gruffudd (LLywelyn the Second), being taken by soldiers to prison at Dolbadarn Castle. Owain was imprisoned at the Castle between 1255 and 1277, when he was released. The imprisonment of Owain, dressed in red in the painting, left his brother Llywelyn free to concentrate on uniting Wales against the English.[4]
Travel through Wales
Turner first visited Wales in 1792, when he traveled through the south of the country. On his second visit in 1794, he visited Flintshire and Denbighshire. In 1798 he paid a much longer visit to Wales, travelling through Ddyfryn Wysg, Ceredigion, Aberystwyth, Gwynedd and Llangollen.
Details of the picture
The frame was especially commissioned for the painting from John Jones of London, in the 1940s. The picture was purchased by the Library with the help of the National Art Collection Fund and the National Lottery. The medium is oil on a wood panel and the visible area measures 45.5 x 30 cm., and the frame 62 x 50 cm.[5] Turner also submitted this work with some lines of verse related to the painting's themes, a relatively common practice of his. The verse reads, "How awful is the silence of the waste,/ Where nature lifts her mountains to the sky,/ Majestic solitude, behold the tower/ Where hopeless OWEN, long imprison'd, pined/ And wrung his hands for liberty in vain."[1]
Turner's use of contrast between light and dark creates a sense of peril and categorizes the painting as an example of the Sublime.[1]
References
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Paintings |
- List of paintings
- Interior of a Romanesque Church (c. 1795–1800)
- Landscape with Windmill and Rainbow (c. 1795–1800)
- Diana and Callisto (c. 1796)
- Fishermen at Sea (1796)
- Interior of a Gothic Church (c. 1797)
- Limekiln at Coalbrookdale (c. 1797)
- Moonlight, a Study at Millbank (1797)
- Aeneas and the Sibyl, Lake Avernus (c. 1798)
- Buttermere Lake, with Part of Cromackwater, Cumberland, a Shower (1798)
- Caernarvon Castle (c. 1798)
- Morning amongst the Coniston Fells, Cumberland (1798)
- Shipping by a Breakwater (1798)
- Tivoli and the Roman Campagna (c. 1798)
- View of a Town (c. 1798)
- Dolbadarn Castle (1798–1799)
- Self-Portrait (c. 1799)
- View in Wales: Mountain Scene with Village and Castle – Evening (c. 1799–1800)
- Welsh Mountain Landscape (c. 1799–1800)
- A Beech Wood with Gypsies round a Campfire (c. 1800)
- A Beech Wood with Gypsies Seated in the Distance (c. 1800)
- Landscape with Lake and Fallen Tree (c. 1800)
- View on Clapham Common (c. 1800–1805)
- The Shipwreck (1805)
- The Fifth Plague of Egypt (1810)
- High Street, Oxford (1810)
- Snow Storm: Hannibal and his Army Crossing the Alps (1812)
- Dido building Carthage, or, The Rise of the Carthaginian Empire (1815)
- Dort or Dordrecht: The Dort packet-boat from Rotterdam becalmed (1818)
- The Battle of Trafalgar (1822)
- Port Ruysdael (1826)
- Chichester Canal (1828)
- Ulysses Deriding Polyphemus (1829)
- The Fountain of Indolence (1834)
- The Golden Bough (1834)
- The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons, 16th October, 1834 (1835)
- Rome, From Mount Aventine (1835)
- Venice, from the Porch of Madonna della Salute (c. 1835)
- The Fighting Temeraire Tugged to Her Last Berth to Be Broken up (1838)
- Modern Rome – Campo Vaccino (1839)
- Slave Ship (Slavers Throwing Overboard the Dead and Dying, Typhoon Coming On) (1840)
- Snow Storm: Steam-Boat off a Harbour's Mouth (1842)
- The Blue Rigi (1842)
- The Red Rigi (1842)
- Peace – Burial at Sea (1842)
- War. The Exile and the Rock Limpet (1842)
- Light and Colour (Goethe's Theory) – The Morning after the Deluge – Moses Writing the Book of Genesis (1843)
- Rain, Steam and Speed – The Great Western Railway (1844)
- Sunrise with Sea Monsters (1845)
- Norham Castle, Sunrise (c. 1845)
- Whalers (c. 1845)
- The Beacon Light (unknown)
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Prints |
- Liber Studiorum (1807–1819)
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На других языках
- [en] Dolbadarn Castle (Turner)
[fr] Château de Dolbadarn (Turner)
Le Château de Dolbadarn (titre original : Dolbadarn Castle) est un tableau de Joseph Mallord William Turner.
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