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Charles Turner

A Witch Sailing to Aleppo in a Sieve Print by Charles Turner

A Witch Sailing to Aleppo in a Sieve

Mary, Queen of Scots Print by Charles Turner

Mary, Queen of Scots

Charles Turner (31 August 1774[1] in Woodstock, Oxfordshire – 1 August 1857) was an English mezzotint engraver and draughtsman, specialising in portraiture. He also collaborated with JMW Turner (to who he was not related) on the earlier plates of the latter's Liber Studiorum.


Life
Engraving of Dudley Digges by Charles Turner

Turner was born at Woodstock in Oxfordshire. His father, also named Charles, was an excise officer, and his mother, Jane was a former paid companion to the Duchess of Marlborough at Blenheim Palace. Following his father's death, his mother returned to the Duchess's service,[2] with the result that Turner had access to the gallery at the palace.[3] He moved to London in about 1789, where he worked for John Boydell, a major print publisher, and enrolled in the Royal Academy Schools.

He made his first mezzotint in 1795, working from a portrait of John Kirby, the keeper of Newgate, painted by his friend John James Masquerier, and immediately afterwards produced a stipple engraving after a portrait of Joshua Reynolds. Turner's biographer, Alfred Whitman, dismisses a tradition in the artist's family that he was apprenticed to George Jones, who was in fact younger than Turner, but suggests that he may have come under the influence of George Jones' father John Jones, who was a notable exponent both of mezzotint and stipple, without making any mention of any formal apprenticeship.[4] In 1798 he was employed by the publisher Edward Orme to produce the first plates for his "transparencies", a new type of varnished and coloured print designed to be illuminated from behind.[5]

In 1801 he issued, with great success, a print of Napoleon, apparently based on a portrait by Masquerier painted on a visit to Paris, and was involved in the exhibition of a gigantic painting, Bonaparte Reviewing the Consular Guards, also ostensibly by Masquerier. Turner's annotated copy of the exhibition catalogue, however, indicates that there was an element of deception to the enterprise, and that Masquerier had never in fact seen Napoleon. Turner himself had executed much of the painting.[6]

While a student at the Royal Academy, he had become a friend of JMW Turner (to who he was not related), and in 1806 he made a mezzotint of his Shipwreck. This ambitious plate – 82 cm across.[7] – was the first individual print to be made after one of the artist's paintings. In that year he also began work on the Liber Studiorum, working in mezzotint over outlines etched by JMW Turner. After the issue of the first part he also took over as publisher.[8] The two men worked closely on the plates, JMW Turner adding new ideas to the proofs as the work progressed.[9] Charles Turner continued to work on the project until 1809, when a quarrel over money led to the end of the arrangement: according to his own account, the two men did not speak for the next 19 years. He did however engrave and publish a plate after JMW Turner's Vesuvius in Eruption in 1815, and engraved five plates for the artist's Rivers of England from 1823 onwards.[10] The relationship seems eventually to have been mended, and Charles Turner was one of the executors of JMW Turner's will.[11]

Although predominantly working in mezzotint, Turner also produced stipple engravings, aquatints, and etchings. The mezzotints themselves were worked over an etched background.[12] Although his work covers a wide range of genres, his main interest was portraiture; Whitman lists 637 portraits, out of a total of 921 prints.[13] He was exceptionally prolific, his ability to produce work quickly allowing him to successfully exploit the market for images of people were currently attracting public attention.[14]

He was appointed "Mezzotinto Engraver in Ordinary to his Majesty" in 1812[15] and was elected an associate of the Royal Academy in 1828.[16] Up to that point he had only exhibited paintings and drawings at the Academy, but from then on also showed prints.[15] From about 1836 his output declined, and he exhibited no more mezzotints after 1843.[15]

He died at his home on, Warren Street, London, on 1 August 1857 and was buried in Highgate Cemetery.[17]


References and sources

References

Royal Academy
Whitman, Alfred, Charles Turner, London: George Bell and Sons, 1907, p.2.
Old Prints and Engravings
Whitman 1907, p.4
Whitman 1907, p.5
Whitman 1907, p.7
Hermann, Luke, Turner Prints, Oxford, Phaidon, 1990.
Whitman 1907, p.11
Hermannn 1990, p.12
Whitman 1907, pp.11–12
Whitman 1907, p.20
Whitman 1907, p.23
Whitman 1907, pp. 220, 285
Whitman 1907, p.15
Whitman 1907, p.17
"Turner, Charles (1774–1857)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.

Whitman 1907, p.22

Sources

Whittingham, Selby, Brentford to Oxford: J. M. W. Turner's Early Career Under the Guardianship of His Uncle J. M. W. Marshall, R.A. Publications, 2010.

External links

National Portrait Gallery
Tate Collection
Royal Academy Collection

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