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Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1775–1851
A Paddle-Steamer in a Storm on Lake Lucerne
ca. 1841
This iridescent, delicately toned watercolor’s setting is believed to be Lake Lucerne, where Turner spent many hours observing changing weather conditions. A band of blue-black rain clouds curves across the center of the image, while faint vertical brushstrokes evoke the downpour. A lightning flash — a figurative and literal gash in the surface of the paper — confirms the violence of the breaking storm. But the real focus of the image is the steamboat. A source of fascination to the artist, it is often interpreted as a symbol of modernity and human ingenuity. Here, however, it appears strangely vulnerable as it heads into the dark waters, the black smoke from its funnel drifting tentatively skyward.
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J. M. W. Turner: Romance and Reality
The year 2025 marks the 250th anniversary of the birth of Joseph Mallord William Turner (1775–1851), possibly the most widely admired and influential British artist of all time.
Though Turner was trained within the English topographical tradition, his practice was deeply rooted in a wider European heritage of landscape painting. Turner pushed this inheritance to its limits in pursuit of his own expressive ends, astounding contemporaries with his bold and highly original compositions. His unique approach paved the way for a new form of landscape art, one that combined virtuoso brushwork with brilliant color, dazzling light effects, and an almost abstract sensibility. As a result, Turner came to be recognized as the most radical and innovative painter of his time and has continued to be so ever since.
This exhibition, the first show focused on Turner to be held at the Yale Center for British Art in more than thirty years, will showcase the museum’s rich holdings of the artist’s work. Unequaled in North America, this collection includes some of Turner’s most acclaimed oil paintings, notably his masterpiece Dort or Dordrecht: The Dort Packet-Boat from Rotterdam Becalmed (1818) and his celebrated later painting Staffa, Fingal’s Cave (1831–32). Alongside these major works, the exhibition will also feature outstanding watercolors and prints from the YCBA’s collection, including the artist’s only complete sketchbook outside of the British Isles.
Turner’s works are akin to painted poems, filled with incident, anecdote, and symbolism. Conveying both the beauty and cruelty of nature and human life, they shed fascinating light on the artist’s world and reveal an aesthetic—and moral—complexity that is at once discomforting and strangely modern.
britishart.yale.edu/exhibitions-programs/j-m-w-turner-rom...
"In two inaugural exhibitions upstairs, large gestural paintings on the second floor focused on the female body by Emin — who established her reputation with confessional, ramshackle sculptural installations — have unexpected resonance with atmospheric landscapes on the third floor drawn from the center’s almost 3,000 works by J.M.W. Turner, who was born almost 200 years before Emin and, like her, counted the English seaside town of Margate as an important second home.
This pairing reflects the center’s new curatorial approach, Droth said, showcasing the depth and richness of its historical collections “and then taking those threads into the present moment with someone like Tracey, who absolutely sees herself in the lineage of Margate, famous for Turner and now famous for Tracey, and in those sort of painting traditions.”
www.nytimes.com/2025/04/25/arts/design/yale-british-art-t...
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Opened in 1977 through the generosity of Yale graduate and philanthropist Paul Mellon, the Yale Center for British Art holds the largest and most significant collection of British art outside the United Kingdom. The collection spans five centuries and is the foundation for a museum uniquely focused on the histories, legacies, and shifting contexts of British art. Housed in a celebrated modernist building designed by Louis I. Kahn, the museum is situated on the Yale University campus in the city of New Haven. It is free and open to all.
"On the campus of Yale University, two art museums housed in landmark modernist buildings — each designed by Louis I. Kahn — sit directly across the street from one another. One, the Yale University Art Gallery, with an encyclopedic collection of about 300,000 objects, draws close to a quarter million people annually. The other, the Yale Center for British Art, with its specialized collection of more than 100,000 works from the 15th century to the present, brings in less than half that traffic.
The British center is now aiming to even up those visitor numbers.
It reopened in March after a two-year closure for conservation of the skylights and lighting throughout the building — the acclaimed architect’s last realized project, which opened in 1977 and is widely considered an artwork in itself — and with a fresh exhibition philosophy.
A piece by Tracey Emin, who came to fame as one of the so-called Young British Artists in the 1990s alongside peers like Damien Hirst and Sarah Lucas, inaugurates a new program of contemporary works in the lobby. Her glowing sculptural installation, with yellow neon lighting proclaiming in script “I loved you until the morning” on a mirrored wall in the museum’s entrance court, is visible from the street. It serves as an “invitation” at the front door, said Martina Droth, the center’s director, who was appointed in January after working with its collections for 16 years, most recently as chief curator."
www.nytimes.com/2025/04/25/arts/design/yale-british-art-t...
The museum’s collections include more than 2,000 paintings, 250 sculptures, 20,000 drawings and watercolors, 40,000 prints, and 35,000 rare books and manuscripts dating from the fifteenth century to the present. More than 40,000 volumes supporting research in British art and related fields are available in the Reference Library. The collection is rich with historic works by John Constable, Thomas Gainsborough, Joshua Reynolds, George Stubbs, and J. M. W. Turner, as well as works by major artists of the twentieth- and twenty-first centuries, including Hurvin Anderson, Francis Bacon, Vanessa Bell, Sonia Boyce, Cecily Brown, Barbara Hepworth, Anish Kapoor, Henry Moore, Ben Nicholson, Yinka Shonibare, and Barbara Walker.
britishart.yale.edu/collections-overview
One of the museum's greatest treasures is the building itself. Opened to the public in 1977, the Yale Center for British Art is the last building designed by the internationally acclaimed American architect Louis I. Kahn. The structure integrates the dual functions of study center and gallery, while providing an environment for works of art that is appropriately elegant and dignified. The building stands across the street from Kahn’s first major commission, the Yale University Art Gallery (1953). Located in downtown New Haven, the YCBA is near many of the city’s best restaurants, theaters, and shops.
The YCBA’s exterior of matte steel and reflective glass confers a monumental presence in downtown New Haven. The geometrical four-floor interior is designed around two interior courtyards and is comprised of a restrained palette of natural materials including travertine marble, white oak, concrete, and Belgian linen. Kahn succeeded in creating intimate galleries where one can view objects in diffused natural light. He wanted to allow in as much daylight as possible, with artificial illumination used only on dark days or in the evening. The building’s design, materials, and skylit rooms combine to provide an environment for the works of art that is simple and dignified.
britishart.yale.edu/architecture
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Macro Monday - theme: DIY
I made brackets like these for each of my flash units. When a flash is on an umbrella adapter with an umbrella, with this bracket it's flat and very close to the stem of the umbrella, aimed along the center axis (instead of 5"-8" offset in typical position on an umbrella adapter). Also, the weight of the flash unit counter-balances the umbrella better.
See next image to get the visual details and perspective.
Selwyn pointing out his new 40d. Bounce flash off of a concrete wall, it cast a yellow-ish hue to Selwyn, so a little white-balance was necessary. Nikon speedlight sb-24, i believe at 1/2 power. Metered for the sky.
exploded view of the ring flash, plus a 2-d view of select parts. The center cylinder is cut from a flat section of cardboard, then rolled into a cylinder shape.
The three layers at the bottom were glued together. Place some books atop the three layers to hold them flat until the glue dries.
Score one side of areas to be folded with a knife prior to folding.
Questa mattina ho iniziato un po' a studiare come utilizzare al meglio il flash disponibile sulla reflex. Dopo la lettura di manuali e siti ho fotografato gli oggetti di casa.
Lo scatto migliore è questo dove l'uso del flash ha permesso di colorare di blu l'ombra degli attrezzi. Il blu è dovuto ad una scatola colorata posta li vicino...
This morning I started a little 'how to' study to use the flash available on the reflex. After the reading of books and sites I photographed some objects around the house.
The best shot is this ore where the use of flash allowed me to color in blu the shade of kitchen'sgear.
You may know the feeling; like an old-fashioned flash bulb one day You are shining perfection nothing but promising potential full of explosive chemicals ready to enlighten the world. Pop and you are nothing but discardable junk and you are not even sure the light set any lasting mark on anything. It's all imagination for sure but that is how it is with quite a lot of our life isn't it? Pain based on some kind of unreality...
Well at least some of you are old enough to remember the flash bulbs I know ;o)
I managed to surprise Argent with the flash. Actually, I managed to surprise myself - I'm still getting used to the new camera.
Two flashes used for this image. One above the model with blue gel. One sb-26 with CTO gel camera left pointing at her face. White balance set to 2800 kelvins. Triggered with elinchrom skyports.
A photo from the Birmingham City University Open Day held on June 18th 2011.
For more on our Open Days www.bcu.ac.uk/student-info/open-days
STROBIST: SB-600 through white umbrella above camera right. SB-600 through a plastic magazine stand to light the background.
Self portraits: needed a model to test my new flash gear and I was the only person available.
Flash Gordon - Former Polo Player Sportsman - Current Adventurer Dimensional parallel universe traveler future astronaut brandishing a laser gun against Ming the Merciless galaxy villain Newspaper Science Fiction Sci-Fi comic strip hero action figure spaceman flight void cutout cut out silhouette white 2013 background shadow Captain Action Man mask toy toys King of the Impossible film movie serial Sam Jones version
Eau Rouge at night with someone else's flash. If a remote flash works at such a distance, I want one!