This recently rediscovered sketch is an important, previously lost, early study for one of John Constable’s most celebrated paintings, The Opening of Waterloo Bridge (Tate Gallery, London, fig. 1), which the artist exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1832. Probably the artist’s first attempt at working out the composition, it is believed to be the picture Constable showed to Joseph Farington in 1819, an event recorded in the latter’s diary for 11 August that year but which hitherto no previously known sketch has been traced. Recent scientific analysis has shown that the handling and technique are typical of Constables practice circa 1819–20, whilst the elevated perspective correspond with the ‘bird’s eye view’ that Farington describes. Previously unknown to scholars, the sketch has a distinguished provenance, having belonged to the great French collector Camille Groult, who established the most significant collection of British art in France in the nineteenth century.
The view is taken from the south-west, looking north-east towards the City, with the north bank of the river on the left and the south bank on the right. In the lower left foreground is the garden of Fife House, at that time the home of the Prime Minister, Lord Liverpool, with the flag of St George flying from the garden wall and myriad figures scurrying about on the lawn. Below, on the water, are clustered several ceremonial barges, one of which flies the Royal Standard. The bridge itself, gleaming bright against the otherwise muted palette of the picture, cuts across the stream in the middle distance, reaching from Somerset House (home of the Royal Academy between 1780 and 1837) and the Savoy on the north bank, to Lambeth on the south. In the eighteenth century the south bank of the Thames had been characterised by pleasure gardens and theatres but by the early nineteenth century was becoming increasingly industrialised, as can be seen by the tower belching smoke and the densely packed, low lying wharfs along the bank. Beyond, in the far distance, the dome of St Paul’s Cathedral looms large above the skyline whilst the horizon is marked with white dashes indicating the numerous medieval church spires of the City of London. A puff of smoke at the centre of the bridge indicates that a salute has been fired, whilst out on the water and along its banks the river teams with life as the pageantry of the occasion gets under way. Such depictions of London’s river based festivities had long been a staple of artistic subject matter. Jan Wyck had painted Frost Fairs on the Thames in the seventeenth century and Canaletto, who spent a decade in London from the mid-1740s, painted numerous such scenes, like Westminster Bridge, with the Lord Mayor’s Procession on the Thames, 1747 (Yale Centre for British Art, New Haven). In addition to Constable’s many sketches and re-workings of this scene the original Waterloo Bridge would famously become immortalised in a large series of luminous paintings by Claude Monet in the very early twentieth century.
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