Новое отношение к природе воплотил в своем творчестве Джон Констебл. Констебл никогда не покидал Англию. Он изучал только ту живопись, которую мог видеть на родине. Констебл один из первых стал писать этюды на пленэре, опередив в непосредственности впечатления художников французской школы. Важным нововведением Констебля явились его большие эскизы маслом. Констебл писал смелыми подвижными мазками.
Картины Констебля на парижских выставках 1824 и 1825 гг. явились истинным откровением для французских романтиков. Новаторская живопись Констебля оказала большое влияние на развитие французского пейзажа XIX века.
VI. Summarize the text.
VII. Topics for discussion.
1. Constable's style and colour.
2. Constable's artistic influence.
Unit VIII Turner (1775-1851)
Joseph Mallord William Turner was a Londoner. He had no mystical attachment to nature. He made frequent trips throughout the Continent, especially Germany, Switzerland and Italy, revelling in mountain landscapes, gorgeous cities (especially Venice), and the most extreme effects of storms, fires and sunsets. Once he even had himself tied to a mast during a storm at sea so that he could experience the full force of the wind, waves, and clouds swirling about him. Turner made beautiful and accurate colour notes on the spot in water-colour, and painted his pictures in the studio, in secrecy, living under an assumed name and accepting no pupils. He was the first to abandon pale brown in favour of white, against which his brilliant colour effects could sing with perfect clarity.
Turner often painted historical subjects, usually those of Delacroix, involving violence as well as shipwrecks and conflagrations, in which the individual figures appear as scarcely more than spots in a seething tide of humanity. He liked to accompany the labels with quotations from poetry, often his own. Nonetheless, at his death a great many unfinished canvases were found that had no identifiable subject or representation at all. Turner really enjoyed and painted the pure movement of masses of colour – a kind of colour music, strikingly relevant to Abstract Expressionism of the 1950s. Shortly before the opening of an exhibition at the Royal Academy, the ageing Turner, would send unfinished works, and on varnishing day paint in the details to make the pictures exhibitable to a nineteenth-century public.
Make sure you know how to pronounce the following words:
Joseph Mallord William Turner; attachment; gorgeous; quotation; revelling; revelation; violence; especially; reveries; Monet
1. Turner had mystical attachment to nature.
2. Turner liked to accompany the labels with quotations from poetry.
3. Turner often painted landscapes which he constructed in the studio.
4. Turner always sent finished works to the Royal Academy.
5. Turner painted the pure movement of masses of colour – a kind of colour music, strikingly relevant to Abstract Expressionism of the 1950s.
6. Turner's heightened and liberated colour sense provided a revelation to the Impressionists.
II. How well have you read? Can you answer the following questions?
1. What countries did Turner visit? What did he want to experience?
2. Where did Turner paint his pictures? What colour did he favour?
3. What subjects did Turner like to paint? What canvases were found after Turner's death?
4. What did Turner enjoy to paint?
5. What does the
6. What is depicted in one of the first paintings with the Romantic idealisation of «progress»?
III. i. Give Russian equivalents of the following phrases: