Saturday, March 10, 2018

More Work by the Unfortunate Richard Parkes Bonington

Margaret Sarah Carpenter
Portrait of Richard Parkes Bonington
ca. 1827
chalk drawing
National Portrait Gallery, London

attributed to Richard Parkes Bonington
Port Scene
before 1828
watercolour
Morgan Library, New York

"Bonington frequently sketch watercolor scenes of the French ports of Boulogne, Honfleur, and Le Havre, and continued to explore these maritime themes through the mid-1820s.  The Morgan drawing is quite typical of Bonington's work of this period in its depiction of a city port flanked by a harbor bastion or fort to the right, a group of ships in the middle, and a church spire visible in the distance to the left.  The shimmering, immaterial atmosphere of Bonington's  harbor scene, the exact location of which has not been identified, is punctuated by rhyming verticals of the fort's flagpole, the ship masts, and the church spire."

 – curator's notes from the Morgan Library

Richard Parkes Bonington
Salt Marshes near Trouville
1826
watercolor
Getty Museum, Los Angeles

Richard Parkes Bonington
The Institut seen from the Quais, Paris
ca. 1828
watercolour, bodycolour
British Museum

"The brilliance and luminosity of watercolours such as this inspired Bonington's friends with admiration, if not envy.  . . .  The Institut seen from the Quais, a composition which the artist also treated as an oil painting, is among his most remarkable landscapes, imbued with a quality of perfect if melancholy serenity, the essence of which is the sky, reminiscent of Constable.  Although painted on a very small scale, the panoramic effect, with the Château acting as a discreet focus of the design, is striking.  . . .  Bonington has captured the essentials of the architectural detail with a beautifully nervous touch, but the composition itself could well have been suggested by the work of someone like Samuel Prout.  Where he differs from Prout is in his concern with light and atmosphere, rather than the quaintness of architectural detail."

– curator's notes from the British Museum

Richard Parkes Bonington
Study of dismantled Man of War
ca. 1825
drawing
British Museum

Richard Parkes Bonington
Sketch for deathbed episode
ca. 1827-28
drawing
British Museum

Richard Parkes Bonington
Academic study made in Paris (statue or cast)
ca. 1819-22
drawing
British Museum

Richard Parkes Bonington
after etching by Theodoor van Thulden
after painting by Peter Paul Rubens
Three sketches of bound captives
ca. 1825-26
drawing
British Museum

Richard Parkes Bonington
Figure studies of a dancer
ca. 1827-28
drawing
British Museum

Richard Parkes Bonington
Peasant women from Ragusa
1826
watercolour
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Richard Parkes Bonington
Study of three Swiss girls at Meiringen
1826
watercolour
British Museum

attributed to Richard Parkes Bonington
Goetz and Elizabeth (from Goethe's Wilhelm Meister)
ca. 1826
watercolour
Morgan Library, New York

Richard Parkes Bonington
View of Rouen from St Catherine's Hill
ca. 1821-22
watercolour
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"The French Romantic painter Eugène Delacroix described the sparkling, jewel-toned watercolors of the British painter Bonington, with whom he shared a Paris studio, as 'like diamonds.'  In this view of Rouen seen from the northeast, broad wet washes evoke the sunlit sky, a dark cathedral soars above the blotted colors of the city's haze, and exquisite touches of a fine brush suggest tiny figures and the masts of distant ships."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Richard Parkes Bonington
View of Rouen from the river
1822
watercolour, (print study)
British Museum

Richard Parkes Bonington
Piazza dell'Erbe, Verona
ca. 1826-27
watercolour
Tate Gallery

"Some of the finest of Bonington's watercolors relate to a tour he made in northern Italy in 1826 with his patron Baron Charles Rivet.  This example shows one of Verona's famous squares, enlivened with market stalls.  It reveals the impressive range of Bonington's technique: vivacious underdrawing and rich contrasts of colours; fine stroke of the brush for structure and accent (his so-called 'touche coquette'); and broken wash layers of dry colour."

– curator's notes from the Tate, London