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John Constable(British, 1776–1837)

Constable left his native Suffolk in 1799 to study at the Royal Academy, of which he became an associate in 1819 and a full member only in 1829. His landscapes, which depict chiefly the Suffolk countryside, had a deep influence on his contemporaries, particularly the French. His elaborately finished exhibition pieces were based on numerous sketches painted outdoors directly from nature. The naturalism and simplicity of Constable’s approach to the English landscape have been compared to the poetry of his early Romantic contemporaries, such as Wordsworth.

Source: Art in The Frick Collection: Paintings, Sculpture, Decorative Arts, New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1996.

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Oil painting of landscape with boat on river
John Constable
1819
Black and white print of a landscape of the English countryside with a small boat crossing a ri…
David Lucas
1838
Oil study of dark grey cumulus clouds viewed from below against a blue sky.
John Constable
ca. 1822
Oil study of dark grey cumulus clouds with lighter stratus clouds behind them viewed from below…
John Constable
ca. 1822
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