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The Life and Times of John Constable


John Constable was born in East Bergholt in Suffolk on 11 June 1776, the fourth of his parents' six children. His father Golding was a prosperous corn merchant who owned wind-and water-mills in East Bergholt and nearby Dedham, together with land in the village and his own small ship, The Telegraph, which he moored at Mistley on the Stour estuary and used to transport corn to London. Constable was brought up with all the advantages of a wealthy, happy home. 
Most of his "careless boyhood", as he called it, was spent in and around the Stour valley. After a brief period at boarding school in Lavenham, where the boys received more beatings than lessons, he was moved to a day school in Dedham. There the schoolmaster indulged Constable's interest in drawing, which was encouraged in a more practical way by the local plumber and glazier, John Dunthorne, who took him on sketching expeditions. 
Golding Constable was not enthusiastic about his son's hobby, but gave up the idea of educating him for the church and decided instead to train him as a miller. John spent a year at this work and, though he never took to the family business, he did acquire a thorough knowledge of its technicalities. When his younger brother Abram eventually came to run the business, he often consulted Lohn about repairs to the mill machinery.
FIRST SIGHT OF A MASTERPIECE
Constable's passion for art was decisively stimulated by Sir George Beaumont, an amateur painter and art fanatic, whom he met in 1795. Beaumont owned a French masterpiece, Hagar and the Angel, by Claude Lorrain, which he took with him wherever he went, packed in a specially made traveling box. The sight of this picture convinced Constable of his vocation as an artist. Soon afterwards, on a trip to London, he began to take lessons from the painter "Antiquity Smith", an eccentric character who gave him sound advice and introduced him to the world of professional painting.
By 1799 Golding Constable's reluctance to allow his son to pursue his unprofitable and scarcely respectable career was tempered by the fact that a younger brother, Abram, was showing promise as a miller and business man. So Constable was admitted to the Royal Academy school and his departure was blessed by his father with a small allowance.
In London Constable was a hardworking and committed student, who spent his evenings reading and making drawings, but he was homesick for his friends and family in Suffolk, and also for its countryside. For a while he shared rooms with another student, Ramsay Reinagle, who painted his portrait (below), but Constable became disgusted with his sly copying of Old Masters and his doubtful dealings in the art market. His morale was not improved by the discovery that landscape and landscape painters were held in very low esteem by the Academy, which only respected history and portrait painting.
Letters and baskets of food transported by the family ship kept him in constant contact with East Bergholt, and he spent many of his summer holidays there, using a cottage near his parents house as a studio. He also did some traveling around England. In 1801 he toured the Peak District in Derbyshire and two years later made a short sea voyage from London to Deal in Kent aboard an East Indianman. He visited the Lake District in 1806, but found the solitude oppressive.
By 1809, when Constable reached the age of 33, he had more or less mastered his craft, but had not as yet made a success of his career. He had not been elected an Associate of the Academy - let alone a full Member - and could not live independently on his meager earnings from a few portrait and alter-piece commissions. However, it was at this unpromising point in his life that he fell in love with Maria Bicknell. She was 12 years younger than him and the daughter of a senior civil servant. More significantly, she was the granddaughter of Dr. Rhudde, rector of East Bergholt and a formidable old man, who was believed by his family to be very rich. When Constable announced his desire to marry Maria, Dr. Rhudde promptly threatened her with disinheritance.
        A LONG, FRUSTRATING COURTSHIP
During the next seven years the unhappy couple were often parted and sometimes forbidden even to write, but throughout their long, frustrating courtship they remained loyal to each other. Constable, who felt badly isolated in London, was sustained by his family, all of whom wished to see him married to Maria (pictured right), and by the Rev. John Fisher, a nephew of the Bishop of Salisbury, one of his earliest patrons.
Without a strong vein of obstinacy in his character, Constable would not have survived these difficult years, though they also sharpened his tendency to suffer from depression and moodiness. He gained a reputation for being hostile, arrogant and sarcastic in his professional dealings, which did not help to sell his pictures. On the other hand, with his family and close friends, he was unfailingly generous and affectionate. In fact, his make-up was in many ways contradictory. He was, for example, a die-hard reactionary in his politics, viewing the prospect of Reform with alarm, but in his art he was distinctly radical.
While courting Maria he fell into a regular pattern of work. He would spend the late autumn, winter and early spring in London, working up his sketches from nature and preparing his paintings for the Royal Academy exhibition, which opened each May. Then he would go down to East Bergholt for the summer and early autumn, escaping the city with relief.
In 1815 Mrs. Constable died, which was a great blow to him. Not long after, Maria's mother died too. These sad events seem to have strengthened the couple's resolve and by the February of 1816 they had made up their minds to marry in defiance of all opposition. Then in May, Constable's father died, sitting peacefully in his chair. According to his will, Abram was to take over the firm and pay John his share of some L200 a year. Added to his allowance and his earnings from painting, this made marriage possible at last.
Constable wrote to Dr. Rhudde, seeking his consent for the final time. He did not reply, but confined himself to a frosty bow from his coach, which was reinforced by a huge grin of congratulation on the face of his coachman above. At the last moment, Constable astounded Maria by trying to delay the wedding, while he worked on a painting, but on 2 October they were married in St Martin-in-the-Fields by his friend Fisher, now an archdeacon. None of the Bicknell family attended.
They enjoyed a long and happy honeymoon, returning to London in December. By the spring of the next year Maria was pregnant, having already suffered a miscarriage, and Constable arranged for them to move into larger lodgings. He chose a house in Keppel Street in Bloomsbury, which appealed to him because it overlooked fields and ponds. There was even a pig farm near the British Museum to remind him of Suffolk. In these rustic surroundings their first son was born in 1817.
Marriage and fatherhood seemed to release in Constable new powers of creativity, and he was soon at work on his "six-footers", the large scenes of the River Stour, which were to become his best-loved masterpieces. The family now enjoyed a settled way of life, dominated each spring by the exhibition of these big canvases, which slowly added to the growth of his reputation.
 
SKETCHES FOR THE HAY WAIN
In 1820, he began his oil sketch of the picture that was to be The Hay Wain. The wain itself gave him much trouble and he finally had to ask Johnny Dunthorne, the son of his old friend, to supply him with an accurate drawing. He finished it in April of the following year soon after his second son was born. It has become his most famous picture, though it made little impact in England at the time of its original exhibition, and was eventually bought by a French dealer.
Maria's health had always been delicate and in 1821 Constable settled his family into a house in Hampstead where the air was cleaner. For his own use, he rented a room and a little shed from the village glazier. Standing some 400 feet above the smoke of London, Hampstead was at that time a farming area, with sand and gravel workings. Along the Stour valley and Salisbury, it became one of the few landscapes Constable responded to creativity.
In 1824 the king of France awarded him, in his absence, a gold medal for The Hay Wain. And for the first time his six-footer of the season, The Lock, was bought for the asking price while on exhibition at the Royal Academy.
MARIA'S TRAGIC ILLNESS
Tragically, just as it looked as if he might be achieving professional independence, the first signs of his wife's fatal illness, pulmonary tuberculosis, showed themselves. To restore her health, he sent her and their young children, now four in number, to Brighton for the summer. Constable joined them for a few weeks and painted a number of marine scenes.
The next two years saw the birth of two more children, but no improvement in Maria's health. And the birth, in January 1828, of her seventh child weakened Maria badly. In March her father died, leaving her L20,000 and putting an end at last to their money worries. But Maria's coughing worsened, she grew feverish at nights and throughout the summer she wasted away. Maria died on 23 November and was buried in Hampstead.
Constable told his brother Golding, "I shall never feel again as I have felt, the face of the world is totally changed to me". The marriage for which he had waited so long had lasted a mere 12 years.
He slowly picked up the threads of his professional life. Ironically, he was elected a full Academician the next February, though by only one vote. His great rival Turner brought the news, and stayed talking with him late into the night. In time, new projects began to interest him, notably the publication of engravings taken from his paintings and oil sketches. But the period of his greatest achievements was over.
In 1835 he painted The Valley Farm, another view of Willie Lott's cottage in Flatford, which appears in the The Hay Wain. This was his last major picture of Suffolk. The buyer wanted to know if it had been painted for anyone in particular. "Yes sir", Constable told him. "It is painted for a very particular person - the person for whom I have all my life painted". He died at night on 31 March 1837 and was buried beside Maria in Hampstead.

CONSTABLE GALLERY

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