
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Borrowdale, with Longthwaite Bridge and Castle Crag
Joseph Mallord William Turner R.A.
- Date
- c. 1799–1802
- Medium
- Watercolor over graphite
- Department
- European Art
- Institution
- Minneapolis Institute of Art
**Conservation of this watercolor was made possible by a generous contribution from the Blackman-Helseth Foundation.** Challenging the academic hierarchies of the time, J.M.W. Turner promoted the watercolor medium as equal in rank to paintings on canvas, just as he sought to elevate the subject of landscape, then seen as inferior to scenes inspired by history or literature. An unrivaled master of watercolor, the artist achieved dazzling painterly and atmospheric effects long thought to be the exclusive domain of oil painting. Here he pulled out all the stops, employing bold brushstrokes, delicate washes, and broad passages of gouache and stopping out varnish—the latter a technique adopted from printmaking in which a fluid is used to mask colors (seen in the rooftops behind the trees at left). In the distant sky, we can see him scraping away pigment with a sharp tool. or his fingernails. Turner visited the valley of Borrowdale in the Lake District, in northwestern England in 1797 and filled two large sketchbooks with pencil drawings and watercolor studies (now Tate Britain). Back in his London studio he consulted these sketches to produce three highly finished watercolors with this composition featuring Longthwaite Bridge and Castle Crag. The smallest, measuring 10 x 15 1/4 inches, was commissioned, according to an inscription on the verso, by Col. Lane (sold Sotheby's, London, July 13, 1989, lot 104). Another, measuring 13 5/8 x 21 in. (sold by Miss Salvin at Christie's, London, July 8, 1986, lot 150) may have belonged to John Knowles (1810-1880) of Manchester, owner of the Theatre Royal. He was a major collector of watercolors, including at least five by Turner (see Christie's sales 1865, 1877, and 1880). The Minneapolis version, the largest of the three, once belonged to Sir James Joicey of County Durham. We are grateful to James Bennett for sharing his research into the provenance of this watercolor and Turner's different versions of this view. Europe
The authoritative record is held by Minneapolis Institute of Art. LinkedCulture surfaces this object and its connections; it does not alter institutional metadata.
Related across collections
Semantically similar works from Minneapolis Institute of Art and other institutions.

Watermill near a Flowing Brook
Rijksmuseum
Watercress Gatherers, plate 62 from Liber Studiorum
Art Institute of Chicago

A Storm at Sea
Minneapolis Institute of Art
Inverary Castle and Town, plate 65 from Liber Studiorum
Art Institute of Chicago

Gezicht op Farnley Hall in Yorkshire
Rijksmuseum

A View from Moel Cynwich: Looking Over the Vale of Afon Mawddach and Toward Cader Idris
Cleveland Museum of Art
Little Devil's Bridge, plate 19 from Liber Studiorum
Art Institute of Chicago
The Fall of the Clyde, plate 18 from Liber Studiorum
Art Institute of Chicago
An April Shower: A View from Binsey Ferry Near Oxford, Looking Towards Port Meadow and Godstow
Art Institute of Chicago
From Spenser's Fairy Queen, plate 36 from Liber Studiorum
Art Institute of Chicago

Conway Castle, North Wales
Getty Museum
Fishing Boats with Hucksters Bargaining for Fish
Art Institute of Chicago