I would bare my head and kneel at his grave”
I would bare my head and kneel at his grave”
nearly exact contemporaries and yet led completely different lives. Turner was born in 1775 in Covent Garden son of a barber and a wig maker, and after his sister's and his mentally ill mother's deaths he attended school in Margate, Kent, in the area of the Thames estuary. That was when he first saw the sea, an important subject in his future work. Constable, on the other hand, was born in 1776 in East Bergholt, Suffolk, son of a wealthy corn and coal merchant and farmer. He was in fact the heir of the family business, which post was eventually taken by his younger brother. He loved the countryside, which later became a pervasive
theme in his art. Unlike Turner, who despite having two children always refused to get married, Constable had a family with seven children. His wife sadly died from tuberculosis in 1828 though, leaving the artist devastated.
Turner was working on the spacious gallery in his house in Harley Street by the age of twenty-seven and continued to exhibit every year in the Royal Academy for most of his life, Constable sold only twenty paintings in his lifetime, and was never recognised in his homeland while he was alive. His country did not accept him, but France did. His 1821 master work The Haywain was exhibited at the Paris Salon of 1824, and his works actually influenced
the great Delacroix and the "Barbizon School", who followed his lead in working outdoors. Turner has been considered as the precursor of Impressionism, but the French Impressionists were actually inspired by Constable when it came to capture the moods of light.
to witness first-hand, which resulted in a series of watercolour sketches. He liked to emphasize the vulnerability of humanity amidst the natural world, its grandeur being the evidence of the power of God. Light was precisely emanation of God's spirit to the artist, idea reflected in all his later works. One thing which he was then fond of doing was sending unfinished canvases to the Academy
exhibitions and then turning up to complete them in what became legendary performances. I really admire his ability to express motion and different atmospheres but I prefer his early works. Being personally drawn to the technique, I can't help but marvel at his watercolours. They are simply perfect, and I actually prefer them to his oil paintings.
ove with the countryside but rejected the formal depiction of nature present in the work of artists like Gainsborough. Instead he focussed on light and atmosphere. "When I sit down to make a sketch from nature, the first thing I try to do is to forget that I have ever seen a picture". He worked in the open air performing full-size sketches in oil, but finished his works in his studio. Constable's recordings 
Now, if ever there was a region in the World that could dream to compete against the English countryside in terms of beauty, it is