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

The Convent of Santa Lucia, near Caserta

1794 - 1797

Primary Image: TG0744: (?) Thomas Girtin (1775–1802) and Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851), after John Robert Cozens (1752–97), The Convent of Santa Lucia, near Caserta, 1794–97, graphite and watercolour on wove paper, 15.2 × 23.8 cm, 6 × 9 ⅜ in. Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection (B1975.3.942).

Photo courtesy of Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection (Public Domain)

Description
Creator(s)
(?) Thomas Girtin (1775-1802) and Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775-1851) after John Robert Cozens (1752-1797)
Title
  • The Convent of Santa Lucia, near Caserta
Date
1794 - 1797
Medium and Support
Graphite and watercolour on wove paper
Dimensions
15.2 × 23.8 cm, 6 × 9 ⅜ in
Object Type
Collaborations; Monro School Copy
Subject Terms
Hills and Mountains; Italian View: Naples and Environs

Collection
Versions
The Convent of Santa Lucia, near Caserta (TG0743)
Catalogue Number
TG0744
Description Source(s)
Viewed in 2001

Provenance

J. Palser & Sons, 1908; bought by Thomas Girtin (1874–1960), £19, as by Joseph Mallord William Turner; given to Tom Girtin (1913–94), c.1938; bought by John Baskett on behalf of Paul Mellon (1907–99), 1970; presented to the Center, 1975

Exhibition History

New Haven, 1986a, no.120 as by Thomas Girtin and Joseph Mallord William Turner

Bibliography

Girtin and Loshak, 1954, p.204 as by Joseph Mallord William Turner; YCBA Online as by Joseph Mallord William Turner

About this Work

This is one of two views of the Franciscan convent of Santa Lucia near Caserta, to the north of Naples (the other being TG0743), which were copied from a composition by John Robert Cozens (1752–97) (see TG0743 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

Cozens’ on-the-spot sketch is inscribed ‘Santa Lucia a Convent beyond Caserta – Novr.26’ (Bell and Girtin, 1935, no.328) and is found in the fifth of the seven sketchbooks from his second Italian trip, which saw the artist travel to Naples in 1782 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 view of the convent near Caserta. 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 worked from tracings of the sketchbook views.

The bulk of the works sold at Monro’s posthumous sale in 1833 were attributed to Turner alone, but, despite the pioneering article published by Andrew Wilton in 1984, which established the joint authorship of many of the Monro School copies, this work is still listed as solely by Turner by the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven (Wilton, 1984a, pp.8–23). This is not entirely surprising given that the watercolour has been quite heavily worked by Turner with a relatively full palette of colours, which has effaced much of Girtin’s characteristic pencil work. Arguably, just enough of his hand is still apparent in the lighter middle ground to point to his involvement in the work’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.

1796 - 1797

The Convent of Santa Lucia, near Caserta

TG0743

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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