A splash of watercolour in a dull month

We could show Turner’s art all year round – but would the spectacular watercolours then be rendered everyday?

We could show Turner’s art all year round – but would the spectacular watercolours then be rendered everyday?

'WE ARE SO unaccustomed to be remembered in such matters, and receive so few public presents of such magnitude, that we can scarcely realise our claim to recognition in the disposal of the national benefaction." This is how The Irish Timesreported the news of Henry Vaughan's bequest of 31 Turner watercolours to the National Gallery of Ireland on January 6th, 1900.

Ever since, each January, the watercolours have emerged like flower bulbs from the darkness of storage to bloom gloriously for their one month of public display. They all repay viewing, but the most dramatic piece is A Ship Against the Mew Stone, at the Entrance to Plymouth Sound, painted around 1814, of a galleon in full sail tilting into a stormy green sea with dark blue clouds roaring above it.

This year, for the first time, Vaughan’s specially-made oak cabinet in which they are stored the rest of the year, is also on show. It occupies a central place in the dimly-lit room. The watercolours now on display fit into wooden panels, which in turn slot into racks, all concealed behind doors.

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“We try to have a different theme each year, and this year it’s conservation,” explains curator Anne Hodge. “So we thought it would be interesting for people to see the cabinet Vaughan had made for the watercolours.” This year the exhibition is entitled Colour and Light: Caring for Turner’s Watercolours.

The watercolours held in Dublin are but part of the bequest Vaughan made. He also bequeathed 38 to the National Gallery of Scotland, in Edinburgh, and 23 to the National Gallery in London. Hodge outlines the terms of the bequest: that the watercolours were to be displayed in January only; that they were to be shown together; and that the exhibitions were to be free. The custom-made cabinet held at Dublin is apparently the only one of the original three to survive.

Edinburgh, along with Dublin, has kept to the terms of the bequest. London, however – where the Turners are now at the Tate – has long displayed the watercolours all year round. “They were subsumed into their general Turner collection,” says Hodge. “I have to do some more research to see what the terms of their agreement was. Perhaps they had something different.”

Vaughan’s reason for stipulating the watercolours be displayed only in January, when daylight is weakest, was to protect the colours from fading. In 2011, and for many years modern technology has meant the watercolours could be displayed year-round without any danger of damage. So why aren’t they? “We stick to the condition of the will,” Hodge says.

The National Gallery has a copy of Vaughan’s will, plus a handwritten extract transcribed from the will, which was sent to Dublin by his solicitors on New Year’s Day in 1900. It details the numbers of the works bequeathed to the gallery and the conditions of the bequest. (His solicitors had an office in High Holborn at the time, but are no longer in existence.)

“There is a sense of drama to only having them on show once a year. They draw people to the gallery. We see grandparents bringing grandchildren to see what they themselves saw as children, particularly people who live in Dublin.”

It’s early on a weekday morning, yet the print gallery in which the Turners are on show has a very sizeable crowd of people constantly moving through it. What do these visitors think: would they like to see the watercolours on show year-round or do they prefer the fact that they can only be seen in January?

“If they were on show all through the year, we probably wouldn’t come to see them at all,” says Sam Hutchison, who has come specially to see the watercolours.

“It creates an interest in the gallery that wouldn’t usually be there,” agrees his friend Albert Sloane. “It’s a way of drawing attention to the place.”

“I try to come every year. It’s my annual visit,” says Thelma Doran. “I like the fact we can only see them in January. It’s about respecting the terms of the bequest.”

Noel Doyle and Eric Lidwell, who are both art students, have come specifically to see the Turners for the second year running. They have the same response as other visitors when asked if they’d like them to be exhibited all year.

“You could see them all year around, because we can do that kind of thing now, but because they’re only here in January, there’s a heightened interest in them,” says Doyle.

“It makes it more concentrated,” says Lidwell. “From a marketing point of view, and getting feet going through the gallery, it makes sense.”

Dorothy Elliott says she comes every year just to see the Turners, and loves the fact they are on show only once a year. “It’s part of my calendar. It’s easier to find the time to come in January, rather than, say, on a summer’s day when the sun is shining. It reminds me of something I must do, in a dull month where not much is happening.”


A number of talks associated with Turner’s work and life, and tours of the exhibition, are running throughout January. See nationalgallery.ie

Rosita Boland

Rosita Boland

Rosita Boland is Senior Features Writer with The Irish Times. She was named NewsBrands Ireland Journalist of the Year for 2018