Romanticism

The Great Vision of Nature: John Constable and William McTaggart

Gokce Dyson 8 November 2024 min Read

John Constable was captivated by the beauty of nature. However, during his lifetime, his landscapes received mixed reviews. He thought he would never have his desired impact on the art world. Yet, Constable was unaware that his paintings would inspire Scotland’s most celebrated artist. When William McTaggart saw Constable’s Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows at the Art Treasures Exhibition in 1857, he was struck by the enormous painting. What else did these masters of landscape painting have in common?

Masters of Landscape Painting

John Constable

Masters of landscape painting: Ramsay Richard Reinagle, John Constable, 1799, National Portrait Gallery, London, UK.

When it was first exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1831, Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows received a lot of criticism. The Times’ critic wrote:

A very vigorous and masterly landscape, which someone has spoiled since painting by putting in such clouds as no human being ever saw. It is impossible that this offense can have been committed with the consent of the artist.

The Times Magazine on Salisbury’s Cathedral from the Meadows, ca. 1831. From: John Constable’s Skies: A Fusion of Art and Science, John E. Thornes.

Landscape paintings Constable McTaggart: John Constable, Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows
Masters of landscape painting: John Constable, Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows, 1831, Tate, London, UK..

Constable started painting Salisbury Cathedral from the Meadows a year after his wife Maria’s death in 1828. The loss of her affected him deeply; “I shall never feel again as I have felt…” In this turbulent landscape, faith, grief, and artistic ambition are interwoven. After putting the last brush stroke on the six-foot canvas, Constable must have felt sure it was his finest achievement. After all, he named his painting The Great Salisbury.

John Constable, The Hay Wain, 1821, The National Gallery, London, England, UK.
Masters of landscape painting: John Constable, The Hay Wain, 1821, National Gallery, London, UK.

William McTaggart

Landscape paintings Constable McTaggart: William McTaggart, A Study of Oak Leaves in Autumn (Self-portrait),
Masters of landscape painting: William McTaggart, A Study of Oak Leaves in Autumn (Self-portrait), 1892, National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.

From the beginning of his career, sketching nature was an essential aspect of John Constable’s working practice. William McTaggart also adopted the same habit. Constable’s work was a source of profound inspiration for McTaggart throughout his career. The future “Father of Scottish Painting” studied Constable’s oil sketches of seascapes and cloudy skies when they were on loan to the Edinburgh Museum of Science and Art between 1883 and 1887.

Landscape paintings Constable McTaggart: John Constable, Cloud Study, Hampstead, Tree at Right, 1821, The Royal Academy of Arts, London, England, UK.
Masters of landscape painting: John Constable, Cloud Study, Hampstead, Tree at Right, 1821, Royal Academy of Arts, London, UK.

Having read Constable’s biography by C.R. Leslie, McTaggart immediately went to see his masterpiece at the Manchester exhibition. His visit sparked a lifelong inspiration of the subject of nature.

Masters of landscape painting: William McTaggart, The Young Fishers, 1876, National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh, UK.

In 1890, McTaggart created his now-called national masterpiece, The Storm. It is a powerful example of McTaggart’s dedication to this coastal region. McTaggart’s thunderous sky and capricious waves in The Storm are the climaxes of his lifelong study of nature. In between his energetic brushwork and bold colors, you can see a struggle to try to save a group of fishermen.

Landscape paintings Constable McTaggart: William McTaggart, The Storm, 1890, National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Masters of landscape painting: William McTaggart, The Storm, 1890, National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.

Countrymen at Heart

Both Constable and McTaggart deeply affiliated their paintings with particular locations. Apart from his home landscape of Suffolk, Constable painted Salisbury more than any other place. He first visited in 1811 and kept returning there many times until he died in 1837.

This love for the countryside was a mutual passion for McTaggart. Although he moved to Edinburgh to attend the Trustees’ Academy, he used every opportunity to return to his hometown, Kintyre. There he painted the likeness of his local community embedded in nature.

Landscape paintings Constable McTaggart: William McTaggart, Harvest at Broomieknowe, National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.
Masters of landscape painting: William McTaggart, Harvest at Broomieknowe, National Galleries Scotland, Edinburgh, UK.

Their Legacy

John Constable, View of Dedham, 1810-1815, Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK.

Today, both Constable and McTaggart are some of the most celebrated landscape artists. While capturing nature’s vigor, they also brought to life the relationship nature had with people.

William McTaggart, The Village, Whitehouse, The Fleming Collection, London, UK. Art UK.

Get your daily dose of art

Click and follow us on Google News to stay updated all the time

Recommended

Romanticism

Eugène Delacroix in 10 Paintings: Poetry, Passion, and Power

Early 19th-century French art was a battle between cool, crisp, precisely observed Neoclassicism and Romanticism’s passion for emotion, drama,...

Catriona Miller 3 July 2024

Romanticism

J. M. W. Turner in 10 Paintings

If one wanted to impress their friends at dinner with facts about the highly unique painter Joseph Mallord William Turner, I would point them to...

Coleman Richards 17 June 2024

Romanticism

Francisco Goya’s Tapestry Cartoons

Francisco Goya’s work is well-known as dark and pessimistic. This reaction to his work is not uncommon, mostly due to the circumstances of his...

Anna Ingram 17 June 2023

Romanticism

William Blake’s Demonic Red Dragon

William Blake was a great artist, poet and engraver of the Romantic Age. But he died penniless, scorned by his contemporaries and the art establishment. Take a look at one of his most famous works: The Great Red Dragon and the Woman Clothed in Sun.

Candy Bedworth 20 May 2024