View of Richmond Hill and Bridge explained

View of Richmond Hill and Bridge
Artist:J. M. W. Turner
Year:1808
Type:Oil on canvas, landscape
Height Metric:91.4
Width Metric:121.9
Metric Unit:cm
Imperial Unit:in
City:London

View of Richmond Hill and Bridge is an 1808 landscape painting by the British artist Joseph Mallord William Turner.[1] It depicts a view of Richmond Bridge in Surrey, then some miles outside London. In the distance is Richmond Hill. A few years later Turner designed and lived in Sandycombe Lodge in nearby Twickenham.

Turner presents it as a pastoral scene with bright sunshine and bathing woman and grazing sheep despite the presence of the substantial nearby settlement of Richmond. Edwin Landseer saw the painting in Turner's studio in 1808 and reviewed it. It is now in the collection of the Tate Britain in Pimlico, having been part of the Turner bequest of 1856.[2]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Ackroyd p.53
  2. Web site: 'View of Richmond Hill and Bridge', Joseph Mallord William Turner, exhibited 1808 .