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Someone Sent a Fuzzy Photo of a Painting to Christie's. It Turned Out to Be a Rare Watercolor by J.M.W. TurnerThe painting turned out to be a watercolor by the English artist J.M.W. Turner. Born in 1775, Turner is “perhaps the best-loved English Romantic artist,” as London’s National Gallery writes.
The gallery said it was the first time the entire set of the prints had been shown in more than 100 years. Exhibition curator Imogen Holmes-Roe said it was "probably one of Turner's most ambitious ...
Look at Turner’s mezzotints, and it can be hard to believe they’re just dots of ink in the grooves of a copper plate.
This exhibition delves into the ‘golden age’ of British watercolour painting, a transformative period that saw the rise of an ...
Another Turner painting of Hampton Court dating back to 1795 is part of the V&A's collection. Kinsham Court was once owned in the early-1900s by John Stanhope Arkwright, who had also previously ...
Turner was the most famous British artist of the 19th Century, with a career which spanned half a century. Henry Vaughan was an avid fan who collected more than 200 works and shared them between ...
Photo: JSP Studios. Image courtesy of the artist and JDJ, New York J.M.W. Turner famously tied himself to a mast so he could depict the most terrifying storm. In contrast, Felsenthal’s rousing ...
The painting turned out to be a watercolor by the English artist J.M.W. Turner. Born in 1775, Turner is “perhaps the best-loved English Romantic artist,” as London’s National Gallery writes.
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