Painted circa 1814–17, this exceptionally fine painting is a rare masterpiece of Constable’s early period and one of only a small handful of such paintings remaining in private hands. Long mistakenly thought to be by Ramsay Richard Reinagle (1775–1862), a friend and contemporary of Constable’s, recent scientific analysis and up-to-date connoisseurship has unanimously returned the work to its rightful place among the canon of the great master’s work and established beyond doubt its true authorship. It is without question one of the most exciting and important additions to Constable’s ?uvre to have emerged in the last fifty years.
Most likely the picture Constable referred to in a letter of 1814 that was commissioned by Thomas Fitzhugh as a wedding present for his future wife, Philadelphia Godfrey, the daughter of Constable’s near neighbour and an old family friend, the painting appears to have been begun on the spot, en plein air, before being completed in the artist’s studio. The view depicts Dedham Vale, with the River Stour in flood, as seen from the grounds of Old Hall, East Bergholt, the Godfrey family residence. It is handled with a degree of ‘finish’ and an attention to the work of the Old Masters, such as Claude Lorraine, Albert Cuyp and Thomas Gainsborough, that is typical of Constable’s practice in this period.
'I should paint my own places best – Painting is but another word for feeling. I associate my 'careless boyhood' to all that lies on the banks of the Stour. They made me a painter...' John Constable
Constable Country, as it has come to be known today – that area of the Stour Valley around Dedham Vale, on the border between Suffolk and Essex, bounded on the west by the village of Nayland, and on the east by the sea – has become synonymous with the great painter who immortalised its bucolic river meadows and shaded waterways. A fertile and workmanlike landscape centred on the village and parish of Dedham, which had been a prosperous cloth-working town in the Middle Ages, in Constable’s day Dedham Vale was principally an agricultural centre, the main industry being founded on the production of wheat, barley and oats. Encompassing the villages of East Bergholt, Stratford St Mary, Langham and Stoke-by-Nayland, it is today an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty, and was a part of the country with which Constable was particularly intimate. The artist's parents, Golding and Ann Constable, lived at East Bergholt, where the young painter was born and brought up. A prosperous miller and successful businessman, his father owned watermills at Flatford and Dedham, and a windmill on East Bergholt Heath.
We are grateful to Sarah Cove, who first proposed the attribution to Constable, and Anne Lyles for their assistance with the cataloguing of this lot, and for endorsing the attribution following thorough scientific analysis. We are also grateful to Conal Shields, Professor Michael Rosenthal and Dr Lindsay Stainton for endorsing the attribution following first-hand inspection. A full technical report on this painting by Sarah Cove ACR, Constable Research Project, is available upon request from the department.
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