Sidmouth (1856)
Thomas Goff LuptonRepository | Library | Shelf |
---|---|---|
Devon | West Country Studies | L SC2498-1 |
Devon | West Country Studies | L SC2498-1(r) |
SC2498-1
CD 38 DVD 6
Publication Details
Ruskin, John. The harbours of England. London: Day & Son, c1830. p. 45.IX. SIDMOUTH.THIS drawing has always been interesting to me among Turner's sea pieces, on account of the noble gathering together of the great wave on the left,-the back of a breaker, just heaving itself up, and provoking itself into passion, before its leap and roar against the beach. But the enjoyment of these designs is much interfered with by their monotony: it is seriously to be regretted that in all but one the view is taken from the sea ; for the spectator is necessarily tired by the perpetual rush and sparkle of water, and ceases to be impressed by it. It would be felt, if this plate were seen alone, that there are few marine paintings in which the weight and heaping of the sea are given so faithfully. For the rest it is perhaps more to be regretted that we are kept to our sea-level at Sidmouth than at any other of the localities illustrated. What claim the pretty little village has to be considered as a port of England, I know not; but if it was to be so ranked, a far more interesting study of it might have been made from the heights above the town, whence the ranges of dark-red sandstone cliffs stretching to the south-west are singularly bold and varied. The detached fragment of sandstone which forms the principal object in Turner's view has long ago fallen, and even while it stood could hardly have been worth the honour of so careful illustration. [Text may be taken from a different source or edition than that listed as the source by Somers Cocks.]
Mezz
169x238mm
Reissue of SC2498
From the sea
1830