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John Constable, Stonehenge, a watercolour over black chalk

1836/1836

British Museum

British Museum
London, United Kingdom

Constable visited Stonehenge in July 1820. He made a sketch that was eventually worked up into a large watercolour for his last exhibition at the Royal Academy in 1836. This watercolour represents a middle stage in the process - it is squared for transfer to a larger sheet. The finished work (Victoria and Albert Museum, London) was captioned: 'the mysterious monument... standing remote on a bare and boundless heath, as much unconnected with the events of the past as it is with the uses of the present, carries you back beyond all historical records into the obscurity of a totally unknown period'.
The double rainbow was a recurrent motif in Constable's later works, but Constable wavered on its symbolic meaning. Sometimes he picked out specific symbols in his work (seeing a ruin, for example, as himself after the death of his wife), but at other times the nature that he observed was simply nature - a rainbow meaning no more than 'the exhilaration of the returning sun'.

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  • Title: John Constable, Stonehenge, a watercolour over black chalk
  • Date Created: 1836/1836
  • Physical Dimensions: Height: 168.00mm; Width: 249.00mm
  • External Link: British Museum collection online
  • Technique: drawn
  • Registration number: 1888,0215.38
  • Producer: Drawn by Constable, John
  • Material: paper
  • Copyright: Photo: © Trustees of the British Museum
  • Acquisition: Donated by Constable, Isabel
British Museum

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