THE DELUGE (large scale)

Date 1828
Technique Mezzotint
Price $3,500.00
Exhibitor Roger Genser - The Prints and the Pauper
Contact the Exhibitor 310-392-5582
genserprints@verizon.net

(after) JOSEPH MALLORD WILLIAM  TURNER (1775 - 1851)

THE DELUGE, 1828

Mezzotint, Engraved by I. P. Quilly after a painting by  J. M.W. Turner R.A. . Image 15 1/8 x 22 3/4 inches, plate 18 1/8 x  25 inches, sheet 19 3/8 x 25 1/2 inches.

Dramatic ilarge scale mage in the manner of John Martin's important mezzotints. Good - fair condition with some surface rubbing as is common in mezzotints of this large size and vintage. Sheet has numerous tiny dots in the margins particularly the lower margin, that are likely not foxing but something else.

This example has the lightly engraved dedication line  "To The Right Honorable (the late) Earl of Carysfort KP", with the Publication line "London Published June 24, 1828 by Moon, Boys & Graves, Printsellers to the King, 6 Pall Mall"

SEE COMMENTS ON THIS PUBLICATION BELOW

The Tate Gallery discusses this print extensively:

It suggests that Turner produced this large scale mezzotint to compete with upstarts John Martin and Francis Danny

TATE GALLERY DESCRIPTION:

Lit: Rawlinson II 1913, no.794, engraver's proof (b); Lyles and Perkins 1989, pp.62–3, no.56, repr.

"In the late 1820s Turner supervised the production of a number of large-scale mezzotints after his oils, chiefly subjects which he had painted much earlier in his career. T 04838 was based on ‘The Deluge’, which was painted c. 1805 and exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1813 (Tate Gallery, N 00493; Butlin and Joll 1984, no.55). In their dark tonality many of Turner's early pictures lent themselves particularly well to translation into mezzotint.

It has been suggested that Turner's wish to bring ‘The Deluge’ to the public's attention again in 1828 by publishing a mezzotint of it may have been prompted by increasing competition from two younger painters who specialised in similar apocalyptic subjects, John Martin and Francis Danby (see Andrew Wilton, Turner and the Sublime, exh. cat., British Museum 1980, p.139). It was in 1826 that Martin produced his first version of a deluge subject, publishing a mezzotint of it in 1828. Danby's first biblical canvas was exhibited in 1825. Quilley's mezzotint includes a number of macabre details which are absent from the original oil and which suggest that Turner may indeed have been responding to the sensationalist canvases of these two rivals. The barest indication of a snake in the water in the foreground of the oil has been transformed in the print into a group of intertwined and writhing serpents; the print also adds a pair of outstretched hands protruding just above the surface of the water to the left, indicating the futile struggle of a panic-stricken victim who has already been engulfed. Both these details were pencilled in by Turner on an early engraver's proof now in the British Museum (1893-6-12-172).

The latest known impression of this engraving (of which there is an example in the British Museum, 1948-4-10-145) carries a dedication line ‘to The Right Honorable (the late) Earl of Carysfort KP’ and the publication line ‘London, Published June 24, 1828, by Moon, Boys & Graves, Printsellers to the King, 6 Pall Mall’. However, Rawlinson expresses doubts as to whether the print was actually published (Rawlinson II 1913, p.383), and indeed the Catalogue of the Fourth Portion of the Engravings from the Works of J.M.W. Turner R.A. (Turner sales, Christie's, 3–7 March 1874) lists ‘The Deluge’ under a sequence of ‘the unpublished mezzotints’.

In 1830 Quilley engraved another large mezzotint after Turner, ‘The Garden of Boccaccio - The Birdcage’ (Rawlinson II 1913, no.797), and in 1831 he also collaborated with John Martin in the production of a large mezzotint of ‘Pandemonium’ (see M.J. Campbell, John Martin: Visionary Printmaker, exh. cat., York City Art Gallery 1992, pp.108–9). However, little is known about his life or training (Rawlinson mistakenly refers to him as ‘J.B.’ Quilley)."