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Turner was always intellectually ambitious and
deeply interested in literature. He was so fascinated by the Odyssey that he
wanted to read it in the original, and he made a compact with his friend the
Reverend H. S. Trimmer to give the minister lessons on painting in exchange for
lessons in Greek. The clergyman made progress; Turner made none. He found he was
better as a pedagogue than as a scholar, and he soon gave up his studies. There
were plenty of translations of Homer, however, and for this picture, which he
showed at the Royal Academy in 1829, he turned to Alexander Pope.
The subject, a moment of high tragedy, is suited to Turner's
search for the sublime. Ulysses has just escaped from a night of terror in the
cave of the giant Polyphemus, whom he has blinded and whose huge form can be
seen on the summit of the mountainous Sicilian promontory. The hero, standing on
the prow of his ship, holds aloft a torch, taunting his enemy; his followers,
from the rigging of their fanciful vessel, joyfully watch their victim contorted
in agony. On the right the rest of the Greek fleet, prow to prow, enflames the
scene.
Nereids, with stars on their foreheads, swim
playfully around Ulysses ship. Their pale, iridescent tones suggest, as John
Gage has observed, the phosphorescence often to be noted as a boat moves through
the sea, especially in warm latitudes.
This was a phenomenon commented on by contemporary writers like Erasmus
Darwin and Joseph Priestly, and Turner has added to the Homeric legend his own
allegorical gloss on eighteenth-century scientific observation.
The
sky, too, one of the most beautiful ever painted, had its own reference to Greek
mythology. According to Ruskin, horses, still faintly visible, were originally a
conspicuous part of the sunbeams that fan across the heavens. They were
"drawn in fiery outline, leaping up into the sky and shaking their crests
out into flashes of scarlet cloud. These chargers are evidence of Turner's
intellectual curiosity. They were Inspired by the Horses of the Dawn, which he
had come across while looking through James Stuart and Nicholas Revett's
drawings of the east pediment of the Parthenon. Alas, cleaning has virtually
obliterated this charming poetic conceit. But
the supremely beautiful colour remains. Turner· has learned from his studies in
Italy how to attain a tonal richness that makes his earlier work seem pale by
comparison. Such chromatic resonance based on a play of warm and cool tones,
here essentially the azure of the sea against the guild of the ships. Repeated,
though less intensely, in the sun, clouds, and sky, is characteristic of many of
his late paintings. Ruskin rightly said, "Polyphemus asserts his perfect
power and is, therefore, to be considered as the central picture in Turner's
career.
132.5 x 203 cm, oil on canvas, National Gallery, London
See John Walker's book 'Turner'
http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/collection/e_wing/index.html
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