
Oil on canvas (62 x 92 in.157.5 x 233.7 cm)
Artwork by Joseph Mallord William Turner (J.M.W. Turner)
Deborah R. Pratt
Professor Jerome Nevins
April 11, 2007
AH251: The Museum Experience
On April 11th, I went to the Yale Center for British Art, 1080 Chapel Street, New Haven, CT. This was another beautiful museum with huge paintings. I was told there were some other paintings, but they were on loan and they are larger than the ones I saw. The museum was under renovation the same time as the Yale Art Museum. The founder of the Yale Center for British Arts was Paul Mellon (1907-1999), and the museum is spearheading a celebration of the centennial of the birth.
The Yale Center for British Art will have a special exhibition showcasing his extraordinary collection of British art. Paul Mellon's Legacy: A Passion for British Art features nearly 250 treasures from the Paul Mellon Collection. There are several works that are not often seen by the public and include drawings and watercolors by: William Hogarth, Thomas Rowlandson, William Blake, and J.M.W. Turner.
The Paul Mellon Collection is one of the most widespread representations of the visual arts of a single culture ever assembled. Paul Mellon's Legacy demonstrates Mr. Mellon's unparalleled collecting activity in the field of British art. His art is arranged chronologically from the 15th Century to the early 20th Century, and the collection features certain themes in British culture, such as early exploration, architecture, sport, travel, fashion, and the natural world. The most important aspect of his exhibition is it also celebrates Mr. Mellon’s remarkable vision in creating an organization in North America that would serve as a public museum for British art and as a research institute of international repute, which is located here at Yale University.
Note: “Following its premiere at the Center, a selection of nearly 150 masterpieces from Paul Mellon's Legacy, including some of the Centers greatest paintings, will travel to the Royal Academy of Arts, London, where it will be on view from October 20, 2007 to January 27, 2008. This will be the first and only time that certain important works such as Turner's Dort or Dordrecht: The Dort Packet-Boat from Rotterdam Becalmed (181718) will ever leave the Center”.

J.M.W.T. was an English landscape painter who was known for is natural light effects in land and marine subjects. During 1800-20 he painted many mythological and historical scenes. The colors and details were subdued, but more emphasis were put on details. He was influenced by the French landscape painter Claude Lorrain. During 1820-35 he chose to do more brilliant coloring and by diffusion of light. On December 19, 1851, Turner died in London.


Below are other pictures that were taken while I was there. It was a fun time, and I really enjoyed what I saw.