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Works Thomas Girtin and Joseph Mallord William Turner after John Robert Cozens

The Castle of Arona on Lake Maggiore

1794 - 1797

Primary Image: TG0756: Thomas Girtin (1775-1802) and Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851), after John Robert Cozens (1752-1797), The Castle of Arona on Lake Maggiore, 1794–97, graphite and watercolour on paper, 15.3 × 24.2 cm, 6 × 9 ½ in. Private Collection.

Photo courtesy of Christie's

Description
Creator(s)
Thomas Girtin (1775-1802) and Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851) after John Robert Cozens (1752-1797)
Title
  • The Castle of Arona on Lake Maggiore
Date
1794 - 1797
Medium and Support
Graphite and watercolour on paper
Dimensions
15.3 × 24.2 cm, 6 × 9 ½ in
Inscription

‘Arona, Lago Maggiore’ on the back

Object Type
Collaborations; Monro School Copy
Subject Terms
Italian View: The North; Lake Scenery

Collection
Catalogue Number
TG0756
Description Source(s)
Auction Catalogue

Provenance

R. E. Summerfield; R. E. Summerfield Charitable Trust sale, Christie’s, 7 April 1992, lot 107 as 'Arona, Lago Maggiore' by Joseph Mallord William Turner and Thomas Girtin, £1,650

Bibliography

Bell and Girtin, 1935, p.76

About this Work

This view of the Castle of Arona, on the south-western shore of Lake Maggiore, was copied from a composition by John Robert Cozens (1752–97) (see figure 1). It was produced at the home of Dr Thomas Monro (1759–1833), where Girtin and his contemporary Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851) were employed across three winters, probably between 1794 and 1797, to make ‘finished drawings’ from the ‘Copies’ of the ‘outlines or unfinished drawings of Cozens’. The majority of the resulting watercolours saw the two artists engaged in a unique collaboration; as they later recalled, Girtin ‘drew in outlines and Turner washed in the effects’. ‘They went at 6 and staid till Ten’ and, as the diarist Joseph Farington (1747–1821) reported, Turner received ‘3s. 6d each night’, though ‘Girtin did not say what He had’ (Farington, Diary, 12 November 1798).1

The Castle of Arona, Lake Maggiore

Cozens’ on-the-spot sketch is inscribed and dated ‘Arona – Lago Magiore – Octr. 10’, meaning that he observed the view during the return leg of his second trip to the Continent, in the autumn of 1783 (Bell and Girtin, 1935, no.407). The sketch is found in the sixth of the seven sketchbooks that are associated with a visit that began with a journey to Naples in the company of his patron William Beckford (1760–1844). It is unlikely that the Monro School watercolour was copied directly from the sketch by Cozens, however. It would have been uncharacteristic of Beckford to have lent the sketchbooks to Monro, and the existence of a large number of tracings of their contents by Cozens himself suggests that the patron, rather than the artist, retained the books. An album put together by Sir George Beaumont (1753–1827), now in the collection of the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, includes more than seventy tracings from on-the-spot drawings in the first three of the sketchbooks, and these provided the basis for at least thirty Monro School works. There are only five tracings from the next three books, but there is no reason to think that others did not exist, and it was presumably from these lost copies by Cozens that as many as thirty-five more watercolours were produced by Girtin and Turner, including this, one of six views on Lake Maggiore, and another showing the adjacent castle at Angera (TG0755). The fact that the Monro School copies never follow either the shading or the distribution of light seen in the on-the-spot sketches, though they always replicate the basic outlines, further suggests that Girtin and Turner generally worked from a tracing of the sketchbook view, and surely that was the case here as well. The Castle of Arona no longer dominates the shoreline of Maggiore: it was destroyed by Napoleon’s army a few years after this view was taken.

The majority of the Italian scenes sold at Monro’s posthumous sale were listed as by Turner alone, and this generally remained the case until the publication of Andrew Wilton’s pioneering article in 1984, since when the joint attribution of the Monro School works to Turner and Girtin has increasingly become the norm (Wilton, 1984a, pp.8–23). In this case, some of the pencil work can be seen in areas where Turner has left the paper untouched to create highlights, and there is just enough of this visible, even in a black and white image, to suggest that Girtin was involved in the view’s production, albeit at the most basic level, tracing the outlines from a Cozens drawing; it was Turner’s more onerous task to obscure the essentially mechanical practice of replication and produce something that approximates to a finished work.

A copy of this drawing is to be found in a collection of watercolours painted from Monro School collaborations known as ‘The LeGeyt Volume’ after a later owner May Le Geyt (d.1942) who was a descendent of Dr Thomas Monro (Lacy Scott & Knight, 11 March 2017, lot 1464 (p.13)).  One of the drawings is inscribed ‘J. Monro’, presumably John Monro (1801-80) the fourth son of the doctor and he may have been the author of all of the sheets in the book. Some of the drawings are dated 1827 and 1837 suggesting that the copies were made both prior to the 1833 sale, whilst others, as in this case, were painted from material retained by the Monro family.

1794 - 1797

Angera: The Borromeo Castle Overlooking Lake Maggiore

TG0755

by Greg Smith

Place depicted

Footnotes

  1. 1 The full diary entry, giving crucial details of the artists’ work at Monro’s house, is transcribed in the Documents section of the Archive (1798 – Item 2).

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