The Rigi


In 1842, British artist
The Blue Rigi, Sunrise, better known simply as The Blue Rigi, was acquired in 2007 by the
Between January and March 2007, the three Rigi watercolours were united for the first time in an exhibition held at the Tate Gallery.[2]
Background
Turner painted several variations of the Rigi in 1842, following a visit to Switzerland the previous summer. Completed examples include The Red Rigi, blushed by the evening sun, originally sold to
Victorian art critic
Turner painted the watercolours as part of a commercial series of ten watercolours. He worked up 15 sample studies (sketches) to show potential patrons his intentions, with the hope of securing commissions for fully worked up watercolours to be sold for 80 guineas each. He also completed The Blue Rigi and The Red Rigi, and two others, as examples of how the finished paintings would look. Most were bought by Munro, including The Red Rigi, and he commissioned Turner to complete The Dark Rigi. Ruskin later bought The Red Rigi from Munro.
Description
The Blue Rigi depicts the Rigi mountain in central Switzerland, viewed from the southwest across Lake Lucerne. The "Queen of Mountains" is blue in the early morning light, wreathed by veils of morning mist. The tonality is built up with layers of colour wash, with fine detail added through cross-hatching with a fine brush. Two “stars”, of which the brighter one often erroneously identified as Venus, glint in the yellow morning sky above, where paint has been scratched out with a fingernail to reveal the bright white ground. In the left foreground, drawn in with pen and brown ink, ducks can be seen rising from the lake, alarmed by a gunshot and chased by two dogs, to the right foreground.
Provenance
Turner sold The Blue Rigi in 1842 through dealer Thomas Griffith to whaling mogul
After Taylor's death, the painting was sold in July 1912 for 2,700 guineas, again auctioned at Christie's and acquired by Agnew's. Agnew's acquired about two thirds of the Taylor's Turners in the 12-day sale, including The Red Rigi for 2,100 guineas. The Blue Rigi was acquired by cotton broker Walter H. Jones and inherited by his widow, Maud. Jones later also acquired The Red Rigi from Agnew's, after it was sold to a different collector and then auctioned at Christie's again in 1928. After her death, The Blue Rigi was acquired for a third time by Agnew's at a Christie's auction, in July 1942, for 1,500 guineas, and sold to a private collector. The Red Rigi was sold at the same sale for 1,100 guineas. It was acquired by the National Gallery of Victoria, in Melbourne, Australia, in 1947.
In 2000-01, The Blue Rigi was illustrated as the frontispiece to the catalogue accompanying an exhibition of Turner's watercolours at the
The Dark Rigi was also sold to a private collector in February 2006, for £2.7m. A proposed sale to the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, was abandoned when the British government imposed a temporary export ban.
The three Rigi paintings - Blue, Red and Dark - were exhibited together at the Tate Gallery in 2007, and again in 2014.
Martin Hardie wrote of Turner: "In the Rigi drawings he is the insuperable master of technique. He used every possible manipulation of brush, colour and paper, every device, every weapon in his armoury, sponging, rubbing, washing, stippling, hatching, touching and retouching, to express the vibration and radiation of light. Light was his theme."
In popular culture
The Blue Rigi appears in several episodes of Better Call Saul, where it is seen hanging on the wall at the law offices of Schweikart and Coakley.
See also
References
- The Blue Rigi, Tate Gallery
- The Dark Rigi, Tate Gallery
- The Red Rigi, Tate Gallery
- J.M.W. Turner: The Three Rigis, Tate Gallery, 22 January-25 March 2007
- Turner watercolour sells for record £5.8m, The Guardian, 6 June 2006
- Turner masterpiece to stay in Britain as Tate raises £4.95m in five weeks, The Guardian, Friday 2 March 2007
- Why did we pull on national colours for the Blue Rigi?, The Guardian, 2 March 2007
- Turner watercolour fetches record £5.8m, Telegraph, 6 June 2006
- Turner's treasure set to leave the UK, The Guardian, 4 June 2006
- Turners unite to save masterpiece, BBC News, 7 December 2006
- The Blue Rigi, Sunrise by JMW Turner, The Art Fund
- Joseph Mallord William Turner, R.A. (1775-1851), The Blue Rigi: Lake of Lucerne, Sunrise, Christies, 5 June 2006
- At Tate Britain, Peter Campbell, London Review of Books, Vol. 29, No. 5, page 8, 8 March 2007
- The Red Rigi, National Gallery of Victoria
- The Red Rigi, National Gallery of Victoria
- Export of Objects of Cultural Interest, 2006-07, Department for Culture, Media and Sport, December 2007
- Review: ‘Late Turner’ at Tate Britain, Martin Oldham, Apollo magazine, 15 September 2014
- Specific
- ^ Cook, E. T.; Wedderburn, A. The Works of John Ruskin. vol. xiii, London: George Allen, 1904, p. 484.
- ^ "J.M.W. Turner: The Three Rigis". Tate Gallery. Retrieved 17 April 2018.