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<jrn_title>Auto/Biography</jrn_title>
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<date><yy>2005</yy><mm>03</mm></date>
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<art_title>Biography and Vulnerability: Loss, Dying and Death in the Romantic Paintings of J.M.W. Turner (1775&#x2014;1851)</art_title>
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<per_aut><fn>Steven</fn><mn>P.</mn><ln>Wainwright</ln><affil>University of London, UK, <eml>steven.wainwright@kcl.ac.uk</eml></affil></per_aut>
<per_aut><fn>Clare</fn><ln>Williams</ln><affil>University of London, UK</affil></per_aut>
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<abstract><p>Narratives of suffering and vulnerability are an important theme in western art, the humanities and the social sciences. It is argued here that J.M.W. Turner's pictures, like those of many artists, are biographical tales. The central tenet of Turner's romantic art is the arousal of sensation and Turner's pictures include wonderfully evocative `visual poems' on the human experiences of loss, decline, `the fallacies of hope', grief and death. This paper first explores the connections between Turner's biography and his art through a discussion of several of Turner's key paintings. It then moves on to a more in-depth discussion of two pictures painted by Turner in 1842, when he was 67 years old: <it>Peace &#x2014; Burial at Sea</it>, and <it>War &#x2014; The Exile and the Rock Limpet</it>. These paintings can be seen as insightful biographical narratives on the embodiment of vulnerability. In conclusion, it is suggested that Turner's paintings of loss and death are valuable exemplars of the capacity of art to meld together biography, narrative, vulnerability, suffering and embodiment.</p></abstract>
<full_text>16
Biography
and Vulnerability: Loss, Dying and Death in the Romantic Paintings of J.M.W.
Turner (1775&#x2014;1851)
SAGE Publications, Inc.200510.1191/0967550705ab015oa
Steven P.Wainwright
University of London, UK, steven.wainwright@kcl.ac.uk
ClareWilliams
University of London, UK
Address
for correspondence: Steven P. Wainwright, Florence Nightingale School of Nursing,
King's College London, University of London, 57 Waterloo Road, London, SE1
8WA, UK; Email: steven.wainwright@kcl.ac.uk
Narratives of suffering
and vulnerability are an important theme in western art, the humanities and
the social sciences. It is argued here that J.M.W. Turner's pictures, like
those of many artists, are biographical tales. The central tenet of Turner's
romantic art is the arousal of sensation and Turner's pictures include wonderfully
evocative `visual poems' on the human experiences of loss, decline, `the
fallacies of hope', grief and death. This paper first explores the connections
between Turner's biography and his art through a discussion of several of
Turner's key paintings. It then moves on to a more in-depth discussion of
two pictures painted by Turner in 1842, when he was 67 years old: Peace &#x2014; Burial at Sea, and War &#x2014; The Exile and the Rock Limpet. These
paintings can be seen as insightful biographical narratives on the embodiment
of vulnerability. In conclusion, it is suggested that Turner's paintings
of loss and death are valuable exemplars of the capacity of art to meld together
biography, narrative, vulnerability, suffering and embodiment.
INTRODUCTION
The paintings of Turner may seem an unpromising way to approach the topic
of suffering in western painting. This is because Turner is not usu- ally
seen as a painter of suffering, but rather as a painter of unforgettable sunrises
and breathtaking sunsets (Beckett, 1994). There are, of course, more obvious
examples of paintings illustrating suffering than those by Turner, for example:
The Scream (1893) by Munch, and Guernica (1937) by Picasso (see Gombrich,
1995; Spivey, 2001). The purpose of this paper, however, is to concentrate
on the less obvious examples. It hopes to
17
demonstrate
that some of Turner's pictures are insightful narratives on the precariousness
of the body, on suffering, on vulnerability and there- fore on the nature
of our shared humanity. In other words, the aim in this paper is to reflect
upon a dictum of the French philosopher, anthropologist and sociologist Pierre
Bourdieu (Calhoun et al., 1993; Shusterman, 1999). For Bourdieu, the objective
of academic research is, `to make the mun- dane exotic and the exotic mundane'
(Bourdieu and Wacquant, 1992: 68). Or, to put it a little differently, the
goal is to illustrate the ethnographic dictum of `making the familiar seem
strange and the strange seem familiar' (Atkinson et al., 2001) through a discussion
of some paintings by J.M.W. Turner that are narratives of suffering. Turner
tends to be viewed as a landscape painter with an innovative use of colour
to depict movement and atmosphere, rather than as a painter of `the body'.
However, many of Turner's paintings can be understood as studies of the embodiment
of vulnerability, being visual reflections on loss, `the fallacies of hope',
grief, ageing and death. Moreover, the emotional effect that his landscape
paintings can produce in the bodily spectator underlines this link between
his art and the vulnerable body. The guiding principle of Turner's romantic
art is the arousal of sensation. In summary, Turner reminds us that our bodies
are fragile, and it is our awareness of this precariousness that is the epitome
of being human (Turner and Rojek, 2001). Human frailty is seen more explicitly
in portrait painting, and this genre of art can be read as life narratives
(Brockmeier, 2001). In particular, self- portraiture provides a rich genre
of life writing. So, for example, the numerous self-portraits of artists such
as D&#x00FC;rer, Rembrandt, Van Gogh and Schiele all offer compelling examples of
the interweaving of the creative process with the trajectory of their artistic
lives (Brightstocke, 2001). This is summed up by Brockmeier, who states: `Leonardo
[da Vinci] worried that an artist's creative and self-inquiring soul is so
potent that it risks creeping into all his work, until every figure he paints
comes to feel, even look, like him. ... The art of portraiture became the
art of under- standing life' (2001: 262, 263). However, Turner was a poor
figure painter, painting only one self-portrait and no other portraits, but
he revo- lutionized the genre of landscape painting. This paper argues that
Turner's paintings represent aspects of his life, as painted by himself. Turner
is arguably Britain's greatest artist (Gowing, 1966; Vaughan, 1999; Joll et
al., 2001). However, despite the large literature on Turner, there is no single
account of his paintings as narratives of suffering. Instead, there is a series
of academic books concentrating on a particular aspect of his art; for instance,
his hundreds of oil paintings (Butlin and Joll, 1984), his prints (Herrmann,
1990), his travels (Herold, 1997), the impact of the industrial revolution
on his art (Rodner, 1997) and his
18
thousands
of watercolours (Shanes, 2000). In addition, there is a plethora of more popular
biographical books that chronicle Turner's life and career (Lindsey, 1966; 1985; Reynolds, 1969; Tate Gallery, 1987; Wilton, 1987; Bailey, 1997; Hamilton,
1997; Venner, 2003), plus a number of illustrated books on the art of Turner
(Gaunt, 1981; Bockem&#x00FC;hl, 2000; Smiles, 2000; D. Brown, 2001a). In contrast,
this paper supplements an art history approach with social science insights
to Turner's paintings as biographi- cal narratives of vulnerability (Wainwright
and Turner, 2003). It draws upon a range of both recent and historical sources
on Turner to illustrate our theme of Turner as a painter of human frailty
and suffering. Our argument in this paper is the uncontentious one that both
Turner's biogra- phy and the society within which he lived are essential to
understanding his art and his life. Turner's paintings link `personal troubles'
and `public issues' &#x2013; to borrow Mills's (1959) classic formulation
of `the sociological imagination'. As we shall see, these public issues included
war, empire, slavery, decline, loss and death. Painting is a rich medium through
which to expose our embodied vul- nerability (D. Brown, 2001b). We have all
yelled in pain, we have all bled, and we have all wept. These three universal
human experiences are the explicit subjects of some great paintings (see Spivey,
2001). One reason why artists paint such matters is because they want to move
us (Clarke, 1969). As the artist John Constable said: `Painting is another
word for feeling' (Reynolds, 1969: 127; our emphasis). As John Drury (1999:
ix&#x2013;x) writes: `First and above all, it is simply true that pain and
pleasure are the constant reality of our lives. Horrible things happen in
lovely places and beauty dies in torment.' In short, the pleasure and pain
of great art (whether it be music, literature, painting) can penetrate us,
so that we rec- ognize some insight, some `deeper truth', about the nature
of our human condition (Alexander, 2003). In relation to Turner himself, Clarke
(1976: 194; our italics) states: `Turner fulfils practically every aim that
the ear- lier romantics foreshadowed. He is penetrated by a sense of nature's
unsubduable, destructive force.' We, as spectators, can imagine and even feel
similar emotions. As we will see, a number of Turner's paintings remind us
that life is a litany of loss &#x2013; at times we all venture through a vale
of vulnerability and we are all swamped by surging seas of suffering. Specific
works of art can reduce us to tears. More generally, the arts make us feel.
In our view, paintings should be seen as more than either; just `spots of
beauty on the wall', or merely `index cards for intellectual debates' (Elkins,
2001: ix). In contrast, the aim of James Elkins's book &#x2013; Pictures and
tears &#x2013; is to counter this tendency, because, quite simply, `the more
you look, the more you feel' (Elkins, 2001: x; our italics). Medieval paintings
and prayer books are full of `devotional images ... enjoining worshippers
to do more than sympathise with Jesus or Mary: the aim of
19
prayer
was to identify with them bodily, to try and think of yourself as Jesus' (Elkins,
2001: 155; original italics). In the medieval world intensity of faith was
made manifest, and tears of compunction (where the praying viewer weeps as
they experience the suffering of Christ) were an every- day example of blatant
emotion. In a somewhat similar way, the `sublime landscapes' of nineteenth-
century romanticism &#x2013; in literature, painting and music &#x2013; evoked
the fierce wildness of the irrepressible forces of Nature (Wu, 2000). Edmund
Burke (1958: 39; original italics) defined the elements of sublimity as `whatever
is in any sort terrible ... is a source of the sublime, that is, pro- ductive
of the strongest emotion'. It is argued that romanticism is the art of the
sublime (Joll et al., 2001), being essentially a movement of yearn- ing, of
`an irretrievable sense of loss' (D. Brown, 2001b). Turner's paint- ings have
the capacity to emotionally overwhelm the spectator. As one art historian
puts it: `There can be few things more exhilarating than to encounter the
full force of a great Turner' (Beckett, 1994: 266). Turner's genius transforms
nature into the stuff of great art. He is famed as the cre- ator of a visual
poetry of spectacular iridescence (Brightstocke, 2001). However, Turner is
also the creator of tremendous images of fatality and suffering: `His subjects
usually encapsulate pivotal movements, a rise or a fall, a victory or a defeat,
a sunrise or a sunset. ... [They] emphasise man's insignificance in the face
of the powers of nature' (Strong, 1999: 498). In the following section, the
analysis of Turner's work starts with an overview of the relationship between
his art and his biography. J.M.W. TURNER: ART AND BIOGRAPHY John Mallord William
Turner (1775&#x2013;1851), the son of a Covent Garden barber, was born, lived
and died in London. He showed such a prodigious talent for drawing that his
father sold his childhood pictures in his barber's shop. He learnt the rudiments
of art through copying and colouring prints and drawings and through working
as an assistant to an architectural draughtsman. He attended the Royal Academy
of Art from the age of 14, exhibited his first watercolour a year later, and
he soon became recog- nized as one of the leading watercolourists in Britain.
Many of these pic- tures were engraved, and in his twenties he became quite
wealthy from the sale of prints and watercolours. He continued to dominate
art in these two fields for the rest of his long life. He exhibited his first
oil painting in 1796, was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy (ARA)
at the youngest possible age (24) in 1799, and became a full member of the
Royal Academy (RA) in 1802. This meant that he could exhibit any of his new
paintings at the annual RA exhibition, which enabled the flowering of his
considerable artistic imagination.
20
Turner
was extremely hardworking and prolific throughout his life &#x2013; filling
over 300 sketchbooks, and producing over 1500 finished water- colours and
some 550 oil paintings (Joll et al., 2001). He assimilated and synthesized
the influence of a wide range of other artists and artistic tra- ditions to
produce works of distinctive originality. Turner was fully aware of his artistic
genius; for example, he claimed at one RA dinner, `I am the great lion of
the day' (Hamilton, 1997: 301). He let nothing deflect him from his artistic
mission, being driven to experiment and to excel. His rev- olutionary use
of colours, especially yellow, together with his tendency to dissolve forms
in a luminous haze, provoked scathing accusations of eccentricity and madness &#x2013; especially of his later paintings (Butlin and Joll, 1984). Lindsey (1985)
links key features of Turner's life and art with the madness of his mother.
He writes: The experience of living for his first 25 years with a fierce mother
torn by tempests of fury and ending insane [in Bedlam] could not but have
deeply affected her son. ... We are probably correct in linking it with his
interests as an artist in convulsions and violent moods of nature. (1985:
5) Although this is one plausible interpretation, albeit a rather simplistic
one, little is actually known on this matter. Turner was a revolutionary figure
in art and he was constantly driven to better his rivals, many of whom also
painted the violent moods of nature. Much of Turner's emotional and social
life centred on the RA, so that the Royal Academy became Turner's family and
his paintings became his surrogate children (Lindsey, 1985). A lifelong bachelor,
Turner left a com- plex will in which he left almost 400 oils and thousands
of other pictures to the nation. Lindsey (1985: 163) claims that Turner left:
`95,800 water- colours, sketches, [unfinished] oils, engravings and plates'.
It was almost 130 years before the `Turner bequest' was housed together (in
the Clore Gallery of Tate Britain), although six of his most famous paintings
are on permanent loan to the National Gallery (London). Turner was aware of
his own mortality, but he believed his bequest assured him of immortality.
What is striking about Turner is his movement from an architectural draughtsman
to the masterly painter of `tinted steam' (Shanes, 2000). We see this transformation
when we compare, say, a painting such as High Street Oxford (1810, BJ 102,1
Ashmolean Museum, Oxford)2 with Norham Castle, Sunrise (c. 1845&#x2013;50,
BJ 512, Tate Britain, London). The good (in Oxford) becomes the great (in
Norham Castle). Norham Castle is a wonderfully transcendent vision of shimmering
morning light. The drinking cow shows us that this is not just an abstraction,
but rather a wonderfully imaginative artistic response to the real world.
As Kenneth Clarke (1976: 102) writes: `Turner is one of those rare cases
21
of a
great artist whose early work gives no indication of the character of his
genius.' Turner travelled widely, sketching extravagant scenery and extreme
climate conditions, which he transformed into paintings that he exhibited
with poetic quotations (Langmuir, 1997: 325), often from his own unpublished
epic poem on `the Fallacies of Hope' (Joll et al., 2001). The light of the
Mediterranean had a profound effect on Turner (and on many other artists too; Gombrich, 1995). Kenneth Clarke (1976: 186) puts it admirably when he writes:
The memories of Italy were like fumes of wine in his mind, and the landscape
seemed to swim before his eyes in a sea of light. Shadows became scarlet and
yellow, distances mother-of-pearl, trees lapis lazuli blue, and figures floated
in the heat engendered haze, like diaphanous tropical fish. For instance,
Turner's painting of the sea near Naples, The Bay of Baiae, with Apollo and
the Sibyl (1823, BJ 230, Tate Britain, London), is a picture that critics
often describe as `gorgeous'. John Ruskin described this painting as an illustration
`of the vanity of human life' (Butlin and Joll, 1984: 139). It is based on
the story of the unrequited love of the god Apollo for the Cumaean sibyl.
Apollo offered her eternal youth in return for her love, but she denied him,
and so her body aged and wasted away until she became a disembodied voice.
The youthful beauty of the sibyl is contrasted against a middle ground of
ageing and ruinous buildings, which suggest the finite nature of existence.
Like Byron, Turner saw Italy (and especially Venice) as a poetic lesson in
the transience of human achievements (Tate Britain, 2003). Apollo and the
Sibyl is a painting on the ruined beauty of Italy and also a warning of the
unavoidable deterio- ration, distress and death of our ageing human bodies.
Turner's seascapes also illustrate this theme of suffering. Turner's sea storms,
in particular, are meant to evoke in the viewer his or her own vividly felt
personal experience of human vulnerability. The landscapes of romanticism
called for violent and spectacular effects to invoke the untamed awesomeness
and mysteriousness of nature (Wilton, 1987). The precariousness of man is
overwhelmed by a natural world of uncontainable forces: of mountains, fires,
floods, storms and raging seas. Shipwreck (1805, BJ 17, Tate Britain, London)
was the first of Turner's oil paintings to be engraved. The graphic realism
of the boats lurching in a churning sea reflects Turner's romantic view of
man's frailty in his rela- tionship to the terrible power of nature. We will
never know whether the trembling individuals in the centre of the picture
were saved. `They remain for ever in danger' (Vaughan, 1999: 228). Their peril,
and the threat to the viewer too, is heightened by the painting's deliberate
lack of a refuge of safety (Appleton, 1975). With his seascapes Turner set
22
himself
the task of matching the great Dutch marine painters of the seventeenth century,
for instance, Aelbert Cuyp. Sea storms reflected Turner's own experiences; for instance, his painting of Calais Pier (1803, BJ 48, Tate Britain, London)
has the documentary realism of his own stormy arrival, about which his graphic
diary entry states: `Nearly swampt' (Joll et al., 2001). Snow Storm: Hannibal
and his Army Crossing the Alps (1812, BJ 126, Tate Britain, London) is another
picture in which Turner's own experi- ences of extreme weather are transmuted
into his art. In this case, the inspiration came during a snowstorm in Yorkshire.
Turner told his patron's son (who was watching him sketch), `in two years
time you will see this again and call it Hannibal crossing the Alps' (Butlin
and Joll 1984: 89). This `terrible magnificence' was well received by critics.
The swirling snowstorm was seen as a masterly blending of moral and physical
elements that awaken emotions of awe and splendour in the viewer. This is
a romantic masterpiece, where the diminutive figures are engulfed in a vortex
of atmospheric light and darkness. The painting is symbolic of the disappointed
ambitions of life and history. Gage (1987) suggests that Turner saw a parallel
between the struggle of Rome and Carthage, and that between England and Napoleonic
France. The Napoleonic wars also had a direct and overt influence on Turner's
art. Turner's paintings of war are about death and suffering. The Field of
Waterloo (1818, BJ 138, Tate Britain, London) presents the horrors of war
in a composition of great theatrical power. Turner visited Waterloo in 1817
(some two years after the battle) and made numerous sketches, plans and notes
about the famous site (Joll et al., 2001). His anti-triumphalist painting
on the subject was exhibited with the following quotation from Lord Byron's
epic poem Childe Harold (iii, 28):3 Last noon behold them full of lusty life; Last eve in Beauty's circle proudly gay; The midnight brought the signal &#x2013; sound of strife; The morn the marshalling of arms &#x2013; the day, Battle's
magnificently stern array! The thunder clouds close o'er it, which when rent,
The earth is covered thick with other clay Which her own clay shall cover,
heaped and pent, Rider and horse &#x2013; friend, foe, in one red burial blent!
The Examiner (25 May 1818)4 praised the work's depiction of, `the car- nage
after the battle when the wives and brothers and sons of the slain come, with
anxious eyes and agonised hearts'. Waterloo is a lament for the disintegration
of a wider culture through war. Such `war pictures' are inevitably imbued
with graphic images of death.
23
Intense
feelings of loss, blackness, rage and despair are all exemplified in Turner's
deeply disturbing painting of the inhumane horrors of the slave trade. Ruskin
remarked of Slavers Throwing Overboard the Dead and Dying &#x2013; Typhoon
Coming on (1840, BJ 385, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts): `If
I were reduced to rest Turner's immortality upon any single work, I should
choose this' (Butlin and Joll 1984: 236). In fact, Ruskin owned this painting
for 28 years &#x2013; until the subject became too painful for him to live
with. This intensely dramatic picture is based on the story of a shocking
incident. The captain of the slave ship Zong ordered sick slaves to be thrown
overboard, as insurance could be claimed for slaves that drowned, but not
for those who died of disease. This is a horrifying image of carnage and death.
In the foreground, sea monsters are devouring the drowning slaves. Lindsey
(1966: 187) sees The Slave Ship as an indictment of a society where, `human
relationships were being supplanted by the cash nexus. The slave trader and
the shark are one'. In a capitalist world enthralled by material ends, Turner
asks, `Where is thy market now?' Slavers was exhibited with the following
lines by Turner: Aloft all hands, strike the top masts and belay; Yon angry
setting sun and fierce-edged clouds Declare the Typhoon's coming. Before it
sweeps your decks, throw overboard The dead and dying &#x2013; ne'er heed
their chains Hope, Hope, fallacious Hope! Where is thy market now? Vaughan
(1999: 243) states that: `Nowhere did [Turner] use his new sense of colour
with more power than when he painted the ship's rigging blood red to suggest
guilt and the sky with purple and violent orange to intimate Divine retribution.'
Ruskin (cited in Joll et al., 2001) writes in adulatory prose that the picture
contains: The noblest sea that Turner has ever painted ... and, if so, the
noblest ever painted by man. ... Purple and blue, the lurid shadows of the
hollow breakers are cast upon the mist of night, which gathers cold and low,
advancing like the shadow of death upon the guilty ship as it labours amidst
the lightening of the sea, its thin mast written upon the sky in lines of
blood, girded with condemnation in that fearful hue which signs the sky with
horror, and mixes its flaming flood with the sunlight, and cast far along
the desolate heave of the sepulchral waves, incarnadines the multitudinous
sea. Death on a Pale Horse (c. 1825&#x2013;30, BJ 259, Tate Britain, London)
is Turner's most harrowing image of death. This painting was formerly called
A Skeleton Falling off a Horse (Butlin and Joll, 1984: 158). Gowing (1966)
suggests that the subject may have been inspired by the death of
24
Turner's
father in 1829. The painting reflects the pale horse bearing Death in the
Book of Revelation (6:2), with a decomposing skeletal body slumped in the
saddle. It is a wonderful example of the art of `the terrible sublime'. Death
on a Pale Horse was never exhibited, and it is argued that it remained in
the artist's studio as Turner's lament to the profound loss of his father:
`a passionate reaction to the overwhelming power of death' (Hamilton, 1997:
259). Venner (2003: 4, 205) argues that as Turner: ... grew older he became
more conscious of the brevity of life and the frailty of human ambitions.
... In the last two decades of his life Turner became increasingly distressed
whenever a friend or colleague died. In addition, the robust good health he
had generally enjoyed until the 1830s was interrupted by periods of illness,
which led him to reflect more often on his demise. Having looked more generally
at the relationship between Turner's art and biography, in the next section
we focus on a pair of his paintings depict- ing loss, death, suffering and
vulnerability, enabling aspects of this theme to be explored in more detail.
PEACE &#x2013; BURIAL AT SEA AND WAR &#x2013; THE EXILE AND THE ROCK LIMPET
Peace &#x2013; Burial at Sea (oil on canvas, BJ 399, exhibited at the Royal
Academy London in 1842, 87 &#x00D7; 86.5 cm, now in Tate Britain, London) is a poignant
narrative of loss and suffering. Peace is a painting that is a memorial to
Turner's friend and rival, the painter Sir David Wilkie (1785&#x2013;1841),
who died at sea on his way home from Egypt, and who was buried at sea off
the coast of Gibraltar. `The presence of a Mallard, a pun on Turner's second
name, stresses his involvement [in the subject]' (Joll et al., 2001: 222).
The picture was exhibited, as a `complementary pair' with War (see below).
Peace was exhibited with the following lines from Turner's own poem on the
Fallacies of Hope: The midnight torch gleamed o'er the steamers's side And
Merit's corse was yielded to the tide The dominant black of Peace forms a
striking contrast to the domineering red of War. Clarkson Stanfield, RA, objected
to the darkness of the sails, to which Turner famously replied, `I only wish
I had any colour to make them blacker' (Butlin and Joll, 1984: 248; our italics),
surely a measure of the depth of Turner's sorrow. Peace is Turner's threnody
for his colleague Wilkie. George Jones, another contemporary painter friend
of Turner's, thought the black sails were characteristic of Turner, although
he claims that it is typical of Turner to imbue his painting
25
with
obscure symbolism: `to have indicated mourning by this means probably retaining
some confused notions of the death of Aegeus and the black sails of the returning
Theseus' (Thornbury, 1897: 323&#x2013;24). For us, this is a wonderful evocation
of the utter blackness that we can all be engulfed by in our moments of despair
and despondency. Being human means that there are times when we are completely
shattered and distraught &#x2013; when we all suffer from the feeling of
being `filled with emptiness'. An obsession with the apparent, and painfully
real, meaninglessness of life is the theme of the other half of this pair
of paintings by Turner. War &#x2013; The Exile and the Rock Limpet (oil on
canvas, BJ 400, exhibited at the Royal Academy London in 1842, 79.5 &#x00D7; 79.5
cm, now in Tate Britain, London) is a pendant to Peace, and has been described
as a `quirky commentary on the banal end of Napoleon's career' (Bailey, 1997:
70). For us, however, this picture visibly encompasses the themes of loss,
suffering and vulnerability. For Ruskin, Turner's `crimsoned sunset skies'
always symbolized death (Butlin and Joll, 1984: 231). The painting was exhibited
with Turner's suggestive lines: Ah! Thy tent-formed shell is like A soldier's
nightly bivouac, alone Midst a sea of blood But you can join your comrades
John Ruskin commented (Butlin and Joll, 1984: 249): The lines that Turner
gave the picture are very important, being the only verbal expression of that
association in his mind of sunset colour with blood ... the conceit of Napoleon's
seeing a resemblance in the limpet's shell to a tent was thought trivial by
most people at the time; it may be so (though not to my mind); the second
thought, that even this poor wave-washed disk had power and liberty, denied
to him, will hardly, I think, be mocked at. Ruskin's view, however, was at
odds with those of the other critics, and the contemporary press was universal
in its condemnation of this picture of Napoleon Bonaparte (1769&#x2013;1821),
general and Emperor of France, on St Helena (Blackburn, 1991) &#x2013; and
also of Turner's painting Peace. For instance, The Spectator (7 May 1842)
remarked: `He is as successful as ever in caricaturing himself in two round
blotches of rouge et noir.' The Athenaeum (14 May 1842) was even more scornful,
commenting sarcas- tically that it could `not endure the music of Berlioz,
nor abide Hoffmann's fantasy-pieces'. The Times (6 May 1842) described the
ship in Peace as `an object resembling a burnt and blackened fish-kettle',
whilst the Literary Gazette (14 May 1842) condemned War, claiming that `the
whole thing is truly ludicrous'.
26
The
savagery of these criticisms in 1842 spurred Ruskin on to write the first
volume of his classic Modern painters (1843). Ruskin saw Turner as the greatest
landscape painter who had ever lived, persuasively arguing that Turner's apparent
`abstractionism' was in fact a profound and vision- ary form of naturalism.
With the benefit of hindsight, The Exile and the Rock Limpet can be seen as
a moving narrative of loneliness and loss, a moving evocation of the suffering
of a defeated Emperor. It is, in Virginia Woolf's (1976) phrase, a `moment
of being'. Napoleon died on St Helena in 1822, but his body was returned to
Paris in October of 1840, which gave War a topical outlook. Clarke argues
that Turner eloquently exposed: `The pathetic inadequacy of human beings in
an ineffably beautiful and terrible universe' (1973: 234). Napoleon stands
on the shore of St Helena amidst the visionary landscape that Turner's artistic
imagination has con- jured up around him. The natural is allied with the spiritual
in a painting that exemplifies Turner's daring, atmospheric, romantic vision.
The powerful bond between the pair of paintings on Peace and War is tellingly
emphasized through the emphatic use of the symbolic colours of dark orange
and red for blood in War, and of the blackest of blacks for despair in Peace.
Moreover, the dominant colours of each painting are also introduced into its
companion, so that the black and white uniform of Napoleon in War balances
the red and yellow torches for Wilkie in Peace. The deeper connections between
the two paintings is highlighted by Joll et al. (2001: 198), when they compare
the fate of Wilkie with that of Napoleon: Wilkie's burial at sea after self-chosen
exile in peacetime must have recalled for Turner the many losses in that same
Mediterranean as a result of the long years of war [the Napoleonic wars tore
much of Europe apart between 1783&#x2013;1815], the outcome of which had been
for their instigator no more than humiliating, solitary exile. History and
painting become entwined in Turner's imagination. Turner's art has the power
to speak to us of the vulnerability and suffering both he and we experience
as we pass along the trajectory of our lives. DISCUSSION Death as a narrative
of suffering is an important theme of some recent writings on painting (Drury,
1999; Elkins, 2001; Kemp and Wallace, 2000; R. Brown, 2001; Spivey, 2001).
In his survey of the `sweet violence of the tragic' in literature, Eagleton
(2003) highlights the reciprocal con- nections between the tragedies of life
and tragic art, for instance, between Goethe's unrequited love and his novel,
The perils of young Werther (Goethe, 1956). It is claimed that this book was
largely responsible for the
27
cult
of romantic suicide (Minois, 1999), contributing to the suicide of the teenage
poet Thomas Chatterton (see R. Brown, 2001: 138&#x2013;45), which was subsequently
immortalized in the painting The Death of Chatterton (Henry Wallis, 1856,
Tate Britain). In this discussion, the sociological notion of embodied vulnerability
is drawn on to further explore Turner's paintings of loss, dying and death.
A focus on the embodiment of vulnerability is a fruitful approach to the
intimate relations between self and society, biology and culture, and reason
and emotion (Shildrick, 2002; Wainwright and Turner, 2003). Embodiment is
an ongoing ensemble of corporal practices that produces and gives `a body'
its place in everyday life (Crossley, 2001). Our embodied vulnerability is
fundamental to our existence as persons (Crowther, 1993). Our vulnerability
is a conspicuous feature of biographical approaches that typically explore
what Denzin (1989: 69) labels `epiphanies', as they describe `turning point
moments in an individual's life'; or what Giddens (1991) calls, `fateful moments'.
Biographical transformations are forged in such fateful moments, so that `vulnerability
is ... the very condition of becoming' (Shildrick, 2002: 133). The concept
of vulnerability is derived from the Latin word for wound &#x2013; vulnus &#x2013; and in its modern usage vulnerability has come to denote the human ability
to be open to wounds (Wainwright, 2004). Hence vulnerability denotes our openness
to physical, psychological, social and moral injury (Turner, 2001). Our vulnerability
is evinced as we chart our way through the vicissitudes of the world. This
susceptibility is essential as: `the peculiar beauty of human excellence just
is its vulnera- bility' (Nussbaum, 1986: 86). The representations of suffering
in the romantic paintings of Turner speak to our innate human embodied vulner-
ability. `Romantics ... probe the inner psyche ... [and so epitomize] the
romantic principle that artists must be judged by sensibility' (D. Brown,
2001b: 12, 64). Romantic art delivers unprecedented freedom of imagina- tion
and expression, and appeals directly to the emotions of the audience. Turner's
paintings, which are essentially visions of feelings, are pro- foundly poignant,
being `fundamental to our concept, not only of art, but also of ourselves'
(D. Brown, 2001b: 16). As Rapport (2000: 39) writes: `Narratives manifest
the connection between individuals' outer worlds and their inner consciousness.'
Turner's paintings inevitably reflect his own life experiences. Examples abound
(Joll et al., 2001), for instance, of Turner sticking his head out of a train
window and then drawing on this experience to paint the evocative Rain, Steam
and Speed (1841); of being tied to a ship's mast in a storm and then transmuting
this into the turbulent Staffa: Fingal's Cave (1832); whilst his experience
of his coach overturning in an Alpine pass was transformed into the dramatic
watercolour Return from Italy, in a Snow
28
Drift
upon Mount Tarrar (1829). As the current Keeper of the Turner bequest at Tate
Britain notes, Turner `delighted in weathering such storms and incorporating
them into his art' (D. Brown, 2001a: 147). For Turner, the whole of life was
grist to his artistic mill. Hence this account of some of Turner's paintings
as autobiographical narratives is certainly a plausi- ble one. It is not,
however, claimed that Turner's life experiences always completely determined
the topic and nature of his paintings. The com- poser Wagner shows that there
is never a one-to-one correspondence between life and art, as he wrote his
most comic opera when he was in despair and his most tragic opera when he
was at his happiest (Magee, 2000). Turner both contributed to the romantic
movement in the arts and he was inevitably moulded by the romantic spirit
of his age, and the pervasive romantic tendency of the time to represent extreme
emotional states, tragedies and wild conditions of nature. Although it is
incontrovertible that the experience of suffering is universal, the notion
that there is a universal representation of suffering in visual art is contested.
Symbolic representations of suffering are cultur- ally specific; for example,
although black is a symbol of death in the West, it is not a universal symbol,
in that white stands for death in China and India (Gombrich et al., 1972).
Moreover, a postmodern approach to aesthetics denies that there can be a universal
approach even to western art. This paper argued that loss, death and dying
are important themes within Turner's art and that these themes reflect elements
of Turner's life and times. These can all be seen as forms of grand narrative
and as Lyotard (1984: xxiv) `define[s] postmodernism as incredulity towards
metanarratives', the theme of universals in art needs to be briefly addressed.
Much of aesthetics amounts to an attempt to support or deny the uni- versal
features of art (Wolheim, 1980). For Tolstoy (1960), the universal essence
of art is its communicative capacity to bind people together; for Hume (1987),
the best works of art, such as Greek tragedy, pass `the test of time' as their
appeal to a universal human nature remains constant across cultures and history; whilst for evolutionary psychologists, art, especially in the form of stories,
functions as a universally adaptive prac- tice for living (Pinker, 1997).
Fuller (1983) draws on Timpanaro's (1985) Marxist materialism of the stability
of the human body to argue for a universal approach to representation in art
via a focus on both what is sig- nified (for instance, a suffering body) and
by the linkage of somatic expe- riences and visual metaphors of value. Dutton
(2002), in his summary of some of these approaches, lists seven `universal
features of art': expertise or virtuosity, non-utilitarian pleasure, style,
criticism, imitation, a special focus, and an imaginative experience for both
artists and audiences. There is much in Dutton's (2002) claim that universal
`theories of aesthetic
29
value,
which are dead set against absolute relativism, go hand-in-hand with hypotheses
about the universal nature of human beings ... [conse- quently] Arts travel
across boundaries as well as they do because they are rooted in our common
humanity', or in our terms, the arts reflect our shared embodied vulnerability.
This paper has tried to make some links between the motifs of suffer- ing
and vulnerability in some pictures by Turner on the themes of loss, dying
and death, and to begin to illustrate the dictum of Bourdieu and Wacquant
(1992): to `make the mundane exotic and the exotic mundane'. This paper also
contested a commonly held view of Turner as essentially a landscape painter
with an innovative use of colour, by showing that Turner's pictures can be
interpreted as emotive paintings of our embodied vulnerability; as moving
testimonies to the universal human experiences of suffering through ageing,
loss and death. In particular, Turner's pair of evocative pictures on Peace
and War remind us that the themes of per- sonal growth and transformation
through loss and suffering are the univer- sal shared experiences of our embodied
human lives. In terms of James Elkins's (2001) recommendations about `seeing
art', Turner's pictures should be witnessed, and not just viewed. In other
words, Turner's paintings are not simply something one should fleetingly look
at. Rather, they are pictures that should be stared at and studied because
these are paintings that the imaginative observer can actually live and feel.
After all, romantic art is the art of the visceral and as such is deliberately
designed to evoke a profoundly emotional and embodied response (Vaughan, 1994).
In conclusion, it is claimed that Turner's paintings on the themes of loss
and death are highly evocative examples of the ways in which art can deepen
our understanding of the interconnections between biography, narrative, vulnerability,
suffering and embodiment. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The authors would like to thank
the Editor and the anonymous referees who have greatly improved the original
manuscript.
NOTES
1 Turner's oil paintings
have been catalogued by Butlin and Joll (1984) and a unique BJ number now
refers to each painting.
2 For outstanding colour
images of Turner's paintings see the following websites:
&#x2022; Tate Britain
(London): http://www.tate.org.uk/britain (where both Peace and
War can be found, together with hundreds of other Turner paintings)
&#x2022; The National
Gallery (London): http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk (for some of Turner's
most famous paintings)
30
&#x2022; The Ashmolean Museum
(Oxford): http://www.ashmol.ox.ac.uk/
&#x2022; Museum of Fine Arts
(Boston): http://www.mfa.org/
3 All quotations of poetry
are from Joll et al. (2001).
4 All quotes from newspaper
reports are from Butlin and Joll (1984).
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NOTES
ON CONTRIBUTORS STEVEN WAINWRIGHT is a lecturer at King's College, University
of London. His research focuses on three areas: the Sociology of Health and
Illness (especially innovative health technologies); Medical Humanities (especially
narratives of ageing and death in painting, opera and ballet); and the Sociology
of the Body (especially the reciprocal relationships between the arts, the
social sciences and medicine). CLARE WILLIAMS is a senior research fellow
at King's College, University of London. Her research focuses on four areas
within the Sociology of Health and Illness: innovative health technologies,
particu- larly those related to genetics; sociology of ethics; gender, health
and illness; and practitioner education.</full_text>
</body>
<note>
<p><list type="ordered">
<li><p>1 Turner's oil paintings have been catalogued by Butlin and Joll (1984) and a unique BJ number now refers to each painting.</p></li>
<li><p>2 For outstanding colour images of Turner's paintings see the following websites:</p></li>
<li><p>&#x2022; Tate Britain (London): http://www.tate.org.uk/britain (where both <it>Peace</it> and <it> War</it> can be found, together with hundreds of other Turner paintings)</p></li>
<li><p>&#x2022; The National Gallery (London): http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk (for some of Turner's most famous paintings)</p></li>
<li><p>&#x2022; The Ashmolean Museum (Oxford): http://www.ashmol.ox.ac.uk/</p></li>
<li><p>&#x2022; Museum of Fine Arts (Boston): http://www.mfa.org/</p></li>
<li><p>3 All quotations of poetry are from Joll <it>et al.</it> (2001).</p></li>
<li><p>4 All quotes from newspaper reports are from Butlin and Joll (1984).</p></li>
</list></p>
</note>
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