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  • John Constable
    Jun 11, 1776 - Mar 31, 1837
  • View of Dedham Vale - John Constable RA was an English landscape painter in the Romantic tradition. Born in Suffolk, he is known principally for revolutionising the genre of landscape painting with his pictures of Dedham Vale, the area surrounding his home – now known as "Constable Country" – which he invested with an intensity of affection. "I should paint my own places best", he wrote to his friend John Fisher in 1821, "painting is but another word for feeling".
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View of Dedham Vale
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  • View of Dedham Vale

  • John Constable
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  • This lively plein air sketch was dated to c. 1810 by Graham Reynolds when he saw the picture in 2009. It depicts one of Constable's favourite subjects, one which he first painted in 1800 and returned to in later years. The view is taken from a wooded slope above Gun Hill Road (now known as The Coombs) looking west down the Stour Valley. Stratford St. Mary bridge can be seen centrally in the foreground, with the River Stour winding its way towards the estuary near Mistley. The tower of Dedham church rises prominently in the distance.

    The River Stour which is so central to this composition makes its way eastwards from its source in Cambridgeshire for about fifty miles until it reaches the sea. It also forms the boundary between Suffolk on the left bank and Essex on the right. The lower half of the river, from Sudbury to Brantham, became navigable in the early eighteenth century, with the water controlled by a series of locks. The toll-bridge at Stratford features prominently here as in most of Constable's views from Gun Hill, and its lock with the mill beside it was the subject of his great six-foot canvas. Dedham was a market town on the Essex side of the river with a grammar school, mill and fine church whose 130 foot tower rises up so splendidly in the distance.

    Constable enjoyed painting the landscape around Dedham, close to where he was born. The earliest known view of Dedham is a watercolour of 1800 (Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester) and his last was the celebrated Dedham Vale of 1828 (National Gallery of Scotland). Both of these were in vertical format. He seems to have gone back to the spot to paint the horizontal version of the subject regularly. In 1808 he painted The Valley of the Stour with Dedham in the distance (Victoria & Albert Museum), which belonged to his son Lionel. The present sketch dffers slightly from this in that it is taken from a slightly lower vantage point and concentrates on the view down the meandering river to the sea beyond. In 1984 Professor Charles Rhyne discovered that Constable started to paint a six-foot picture of Dedham from Gun Hill but abandoned it and later painted over it the full-size sketch for The White Horse (National Gallery of Art, Washington).

    According to a Leggatt label on the reverse of the frame, the picture belonged to David Lucas, Constable's favourite engraver and a loyal and devoted friend, who produced the great set of mezzotints entitled English Landscape. It is not known when he acquired any of the works by Constable which he owned, some of which passed to H.S. Theobald and appeared in a sale in 1910. The dealers Leggatt Brothers had a close link with the Constable family, and also knew Lucas's descendants – Ernest Leggatt wrote the introduction to the exhibition of the complete works of Lucas held by Gooden & Fox in 1903. The picture was later acquired by Kojiro Matsukata, president of Kawasaki Dockyard and a remarkable collector who invested his fortune between 1916 and 1923 in acquiring an enormous collection of western paintings, sculpture and works of art which later became the core of the National Museum of Western Art in Tokyo. His great collection included several other sketches by Constable.

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Other paintings by John Constable:

View from the Back of a Terrace of Houses, with Elder Tree
View from the Back of a Terrace of Houses, with Elder Tree
View of a Copse
View of a Copse
View of East Bergholt House
View of East Bergholt House
View of Salisbury
View of Salisbury
John ConstableJohn Constable (11 June 1776 – 31 March 1837) was born in East Bergholt, a village on the River Stour in Suffolk, to Golding and Ann Constable. His father was a wealthy corn merchant, owner of Flatford Mill in East Bergholt and, later, Dedham Mill. Golding Constable also owned his own small ship, The Telegraph, which he moored at Mistley on the Stour estuary and used to transport corn to London. Although Constable was his parents' second son, his older brother was mentally handicapped and so John was expected to succeed his father in the business, and after a brief period at a boarding school in Lavenham, he was enrolled in a day school in Dedham. Constable worked in the corn business after leaving school, but his younger brother Abram eventually took over the running of the mills.

In his youth, Constable embarked on amateur sketching trips in the surrounding Suffolk countryside that was to become the subject of a large proportion of his art. These scenes, in his own words, "made me a painter, and I am grateful"; "the sound of water escaping from mill dams etc., willows, old rotten planks, slimy posts, and brickwork, I love such things." He was introduced to George Beaumont, a collector, who showed him his prized Hagar and the Angel by Claude Lorrain, which inspired Constable. Later, while visiting relatives in Middlesex, he was introduced to the professional artist John Thomas Smith, who advised him on painting but also urged him to remain in his father's business rather than take up art professionally.

In 1799, Constable persuaded his father to let him pursue art, and Golding even granted him a small allowance. Entering the Royal Academy Schools as a probationer, he attended life classes and anatomical dissections as well as studying and copying Old Masters. Among works that particularly inspired him during this period were paintings by Thomas Gainsborough, Claude Lorrain, Peter Paul Rubens, Annibale Carracci and Jacob van Ruisdael. He also read widely among poetry and sermons, and later proved a notably articulate artist. By 1803, he was exhibiting paintings at the Royal Academy.

In 1802 he refused the position of drawing master at Great Marlow Military College, a move which Benjamin West (then master of the RA) counselled would mean the end of his career. In that year, Constable wrote a letter to John Dunthorne in which he spelled out his determination to become a professional landscape painter:
"For the last two years I have been running after pictures, and seeking the truth at second hand. I have not endeavoured to represent nature with the same elevation of mind with which I set out, but have rather tried to make my performances look like the work of other men... There is room enough for a natural painter. The great vice of the present day is bravura, an attempt to do something beyond the truth."

His early style has many of the qualities associated with his mature work, including a freshness of light, colour and touch, and reveals the compositional influence of the Old Masters he had studied, notably of Claude Lorrain. Constable's usual subjects, scenes of ordinary daily life, were unfashionable in an age that looked for more romantic visions of wild landscapes and ruins. He did, however, make occasional trips further afield. For example, in 1803 he spent almost a month aboard the East Indiaman ship Coutts as it visited south-east coastal ports, and in 1806 he undertook a two-month tour of the Lake District. But he told his friend and biographer Charles Leslie that the solitude of the mountains oppressed his spirits; Leslie went on to write:
"His nature was peculiarly social and could not feel satisfied with scenery, however grand in itself, that did not abound in human associations. He required villages, churches, farmhouses and cottages."