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John Martin (painter)

John Martin (19 July 1789 – 17 February 1854) was an English painter, engraver, and illustrator. He was celebrated for his typically vast and dramatic paintings of religious subjects and fantastic compositions, populated with minute figures placed in imposing landscapes. Martin's paintings, and the prints made from them, enjoyed great success with the general public, with Thomas Lawrence referring to him as "the most popular painter of his day". He was also lambasted by John Ruskin and other critics.[1][2]

John Martin
Martin by Henry Warren, 1839
Born(1789-07-19)19 July 1789
Died17 February 1854(1854-02-17) (aged 64)
MovementRomanticism
Spouse
Susan Martin
(m. 1818)

Early life edit

Martin was born in July 1789, in a one-room cottage,[3] at Haydon Bridge, near Hexham in Northumberland, the fourth son of Fenwick Martin, a one-time fencing master. He was apprenticed by his father to a coachbuilder in Newcastle upon Tyne to learn heraldic painting, but owing to a dispute over wages the indentures were cancelled, and he was placed instead under Boniface Musso, an Italian artist, father of the enamel painter Charles Muss.

With his master, Martin moved from Newcastle to London in 1806,[4] where he married at the age of nineteen, and supported himself by giving drawing lessons, and by painting in watercolours, and on china and glass—his only surviving painted plate is now in a private collection in England. His leisure was occupied in the study of perspective and architecture.

His brothers were William, the eldest, an inventor; Richard, a tanner who became a soldier in the Northumberland Fencibles in 1798, rising to the rank of Quartermaster Sergeant in the Grenadier Guards and fought in the Peninsular War and at Waterloo; and Jonathan, a preacher tormented by madness who set fire to York Minster in 1829, for which he stood trial.

Beginnings as artist edit

Martin began to supplement his income by painting sepia watercolours. He sent his first oil painting to the Royal Academy in 1810, but it was not hung. In 1811 he sent the painting once again, when it was hung under the title A Landscape Composition as item no.46 in the Great Room. Thereafter, he produced a succession of large exhibited oil paintings: some landscapes, but more usually grand biblical themes inspired by the Old Testament. His landscapes have the ruggedness of the Northumberland crags, while some authors claim that his apocalyptic canvasses, such as The Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, show his familiarity with the forges and ironworks of the Tyne Valley and display his intimate knowledge of the Old Testament.

In the years of the Regency from 1812 onwards there was a fashion for such ‘sublime’ paintings. Martin's first break came at the end of a season at the Royal Academy, where his first major sublime canvas Sadak in Search of the Waters of Oblivion had been hung—and ignored. He brought it home, only to find there a visiting card from William Manning MP, who wanted to buy it from him. Patronage propelled Martin's career.

This promising career was interrupted by the deaths of his father, mother, grandmother and young son in a single year. Another distraction was William, who frequently asked him to draw up plans for his inventions, and whom he always indulged with help and money. But, heavily influenced by the works of John Milton, he continued with his grand themes despite setbacks. In 1816 Martin finally achieved public acclaim with Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still upon Gibeon, even though it broke many of the conventional rules of composition. In 1818, on the back of the sale of the Fall of Babylon for £420 (equivalent to £30,000 in 2015),[5] he finally rid himself of debt and bought a house in Marylebone, where he came into contact with artists, writers, scientists and Whig nobility.

Painter of repute edit

 
Belshazzar's Feast (1820). Oil on canvas, 90.2 x 130.2 cm. Yale Center for British Art, New Haven

Martin's triumph was Belshazzar's Feast, of which he boasted beforehand, "it shall make more noise than any picture ever did before... only don't tell anyone I said so." Five thousand people paid to see it. It was later nearly ruined when the carriage in which it was being transported was struck by a train at a level crossing near Oswestry.

In private Martin was passionate, a devotee of chess—and, in common with his brothers, swordsmanship and javelin-throwing—and a devout Christian, believing in "natural religion". Despite an often cited singular instance of his hissing at the national anthem, he was courted by royalty and presented with several gold medals, one of them from the future Russian Tsar Nicholas I, on whom a visit to Wallsend colliery on Tyneside had made an unforgettable impression: "My God," he had cried, "it is like the mouth of Hell." Martin became the official historical painter to Prince Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, later the first King of Belgium. Leopold was the godfather of Martin's son Leopold, and endowed Martin with the Order of Leopold. Martin frequently had early morning visits from another Saxe-Coburg, Prince Albert, who would engage him in banter from his horse—Martin standing in the doorway still in his dressing gown—at seven o'clock in the morning. Martin was a defender of deism and natural religion, evolution (before Charles Darwin) and rationality. Georges Cuvier became an admirer of Martin's, and he increasingly enjoyed the company of scientists, artists and writers—Charles Dickens, Michael Faraday and J. M. W. Turner among them. Martin took a home near Turner in Chelsea, London.[6]

Martin began to experiment with mezzotint technology, and as a result was commissioned to produce 24 engravings for a new edition of Paradise Lost—perhaps the definitive illustrations of Milton's masterpiece, of which copies now fetch many hundreds of pounds. Politically his sympathies are not clear; some claim he was a radical, but this is not borne out by known facts, although he knew William Godwin, the ageing reformed revolutionist, husband of Mary Wollstonecraft and father of Mary Shelley; and John Hunt, co-founder of The Examiner.

At one time the Martins took under their wing a young woman called Jane Webb, who at twenty produced The Mummy! a socially optimistic but satirical vision of a steam-driven world in the 22nd century. Another friend was Charles Wheatstone, professor of physics at King's College, London. Wheatstone experimented with telegraphy and invented the concertina and stereoscope; Martin was fascinated by his attempts to measure the speed of light. Accounts of Martin's evening parties reveal an astonishing array of thinkers, eccentrics and social movers; one witness was a young John Tenniel—later the illustrator of Lewis Carroll's work—who was heavily influenced by Martin and was a close friend of his children. At various points Martin's brothers were also among the guests, their eccentricities and conversation adding to the already exotic flavour of the fare.

Paintings edit

His first exhibited subject picture, Sadak in Search of the Waters of Oblivion (now in the St. Louis Art Museum), was hung in the Ante-room of the Royal Academy in 1812, and sold for fifty guineas. The piece depicts a scene from the Tales of Two Genii" It was followed by the Expulsion (1813), Adam's First Sight of Eve (1813), Clytie (1814), Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still upon Gibeon (1816) and The Fall of Babylon (1819). In 1820 appeared his Belshazzar's Feast, which excited much favourable and hostile comment, and was awarded a prize of £200 at the British Institution, where the Joshua had previously carried off a premium of £100. Then came The Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum (1822), The Creation (1824), the Eve of the Deluge (1840), and a series of other Biblical and imaginative subjects. The Plains of Heaven is thought by some to reflect his memories of the Allendale of his youth.

Martin's large paintings were closely connected with contemporary dioramas or panoramas, popular entertainments in which large painted cloths were displayed, and animated by the skilful use of artificial light. Martin has often been claimed as a forerunner of the epic cinema, and there is no doubt that the pioneer director D. W. Griffith was aware of his work."[7] In turn, the diorama makers borrowed Martin's work, to the point of plagiarism. A 2,000-square-foot (190 m2) version of Belshazzar's Feast was mounted at a facility called the British Diorama in 1833; Martin tried, but failed, to shut down the display with a court order. Another diorama of the same picture was staged in New York City in 1835. These dioramas were tremendous successes with their audiences, but wounded Martin's reputation in the serious art world.[8] The painting The Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, 1852 is currently at the Laing Art Gallery in Newcastle upon Tyne.

Engravings edit

In addition to being a painter, John Martin was a mezzotint engraver. For significant periods of his life, he earned more from his engravings than his paintings. In 1823, Martin was commissioned by Samuel Prowett to illustrate John Milton's Paradise Lost, for which he was paid 2000 guineas. Before the first 24 engravings were completed he was paid a further 1500 guineas for a second set of 24 engravings on smaller plates. Some of the more notable prints include Pandæmonium and Satan Presiding at the Infernal Council, remarkable for the science fiction element visible in the depicted architecture, and arguably his most dramatic composition Bridge over Chaos. Prowett issued 4 separate editions of the engravings in monthly instalments, the first appearing on 20 March 1825 and the last in 1827. Later, inspired by Prowett's venture, between 1831 and 1835 Martin published his own illustrations to accompany the Old Testament but the project was a serious drain on his resources and not very profitable. He sold his remaining stock to Charles Tilt who republished them in a folio album in 1838 and in a smaller format in 1839.

Engravings and mezzotints edit

Works on paper edit

Later life edit

His profile was raised further in February 1829 when his elder brother, non-conformist Jonathan Martin, deliberately set fire to York Minster. The fire caused extensive damage and the scene was likened by an onlooker to Martin's work, oblivious to the fact that it had more to do with him than it initially seemed. Jonathan Martin's defence at his trial was paid for with John Martin's money. Jonathan Martin, known as "Mad Martin", was ultimately found guilty but was spared the hangman's noose on the grounds of insanity.

Martin from about 1827 to 1828 had turned away from painting, and became involved with many plans and inventions. He developed a fascination with solving London's water and sewage problems, involving the creation of the Thames embankment, containing a central drainage system. His plans were visionary, and formed the basis for later engineers' designs. His 1834 plans for London's sewerage system anticipated by some 25 years the 1859 proposals of Joseph Bazalgette to create intercepting sewers complete with walkways along both banks of the River Thames. He also made plans for railway schemes, including lines on both banks of the Thames. The plans, along with ideas for "laminating timber", lighthouses, and draining islands, all survive.

Debt and family pressures, including the suicide of his nephew (Jonathan's son Richard) brought on depression which reached its worst in 1838.

From 1839 Martin's fortunes recovered and he exhibited many works during the 1840s. During the last four years of his life Martin was engaged in a trilogy of large paintings of biblical subjects: The Last Judgment, The Great Day of His Wrath, and The Plains of Heaven, of which two were bequeathed to Tate Britain in 1974, the other having been acquired for the Tate some years earlier. They were completed in 1853, just before the stroke which paralysed his right side. He was never to recover and died on 17 February 1854, on the Isle of Man. He is buried in Kirk Braddan cemetery. Major exhibitions of his works are still mounted.

Legacy edit

 
View in Richmond Park (1850). Oil on paper, 50.8 x 91.5 cm. Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge

Martin enjoyed immense popularity and his influence survived. One of his followers was Thomas Cole, founder of American landscape painting. Others whose imaginations were fired by him included Ralph Waldo Emerson and the Brontës – a print of Belshazzar's Feast hung on the parlour wall of the Brontë parsonage in Haworth, and his works were to have a direct influence upon the writings of Charlotte and her sisters, who as children played with a model of him. Martin's fantasy architecture influenced the Glasstown and Angria of the Brontë juvenilia, where he himself appears as Edward de Lisle of Verdopolis.

Martin enjoyed a European reputation and influence. Heinrich Heine wrote of the music of Hector Berlioz that "It makes me see visions of fabulous empires and many a cloud-capped, impossible wonder. Its magical strains conjure up Babylon, the hanging gardens of Semiramis, the marvels of Nineveh, the mighty constructions of Mizraim, as we see them in the pictures of the English painter Martin."[9]

Martin's work influenced the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood – especially Dante Gabriel Rossetti, and several generations of movie-makers, from D. W. Griffith, who borrowed his Babylon from Martin, to Cecil B. DeMille and George Lucas. Writers like Rider Haggard, Jules Verne, and H. G. Wells were influenced by his concept of the sublime. The French Romantic movement, in both art and literature, was inspired by him. Much Victorian railway architecture was copied from his motifs, including his friend Brunel's Clifton Suspension Bridge. A number of Martin's engineering plans for London which included a circular connecting railway, though they failed to be built in his lifetime, came to fruition many years later. This would have pleased him inordinately – he is known to have exclaimed to his son, Leopold, that he would rather have been an engineer than painter.[10]

Like some other popular artists, Martin fell victim to changes in fashion and public taste. His grandiose visions seemed theatrical and outmoded to the mid-Victorians, and after Martin died his works became neglected and gradually forgotten. "Few artists have been subject to such posthumous extremes of critical fortune, for in the 1930s his vast paintings fetched only a pound or two, while today they are valued at many thousands."[8]

 
Twilight in the Woodlands (1850). Oil on canvas, dimensions unknown. Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge

A number of Martin's works survive in public collections: the Laing Art Gallery in Newcastle – which also holds his famous "black cabinet" of projects in progress; Tate Britain, the Victoria & Albert Museum, the Louvre, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., Yale Center for British Art, Saint Louis Art Museum and elsewhere in the USA. The RIBA holds many of his engineering pamphlets. There are letters in private collections and at Queen Mary College in London. John Martin wrote two autobiographies, the first an article in The Athenaeum of 14 June 1834, page 459 and the most extensive in The Illustrated London News, 17 March 1849, pp. 176–177. A major source for his life is a series of reminiscences by his son Leopold, published in sixteen parts in the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle in 1889. There are a number of surviving letters and reminiscences by, among others, B.R. Haydon, John Constable, Ralph Waldo Emerson, the Rossettis, Benjamin Disraeli, Charlotte Brontë and John Ruskin – a persistent critic who, even so, admitted Martin's uniqueness of vision. The first full biography was that by Mary L. Pendered whose chief source, Martin's friend Sergeant Ralph Thomas, wrote a diary – now lost – of their friendship. Thomas Balston then wrote two biographies on the artist, the first in 1934, and the second (still the leading biography) in 1947. Christopher Johnstone produced an introductory book on Martin 1974, and in 1975 the art critic William Feaver was author of an extensively illustrated work on Martin's life and works. Since 1986, Michael J. Campbell has produced a number of publications on John Martin, including the leading publication on his work as an original printmaker, published by the Royal Academy of Arts, Madrid, in 2006.

In 2011–12 Tate Britain and Newcastle's Laing Art Gallery co-curated a major retrospective exhibition of Martin's work in all genres -"John Martin – Apocalypse" – including his contribution as a civil engineer.[11] Featured in the exhibition was the fully restored The Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum, 1822. Recorded as lost in the disastrous Tate Gallery flood of 1928, the painting was rediscovered by Christopher Johnstone, a research assistant at the gallery, when he was researching his book John Martin (1974). Its restoration by Tate conservator Sarah Maisey, reveals that the original paintwork was in near pristine condition; a large area of missing canvas has been repainted by Maisey using techniques that were not available in 1973 as she describes on page 113 of the exhibition catalogue John Martin: Apocalypse (2011). When rediscovered the painting was rolled up inside the missing Paul Delaroche painting The Execution of Lady Jane Grey which was returned to the National Gallery, London.

Family edit

Wife and children edit

 
John Martin on his Death-Bed (1854). Black chalk, 58.5 x 45.5 cm, by his son Charles Martin (1820-1906). Laing Art Gallery, Newcastle upon Tyne

With his wife Susan, née Garrett, who was nine years older than him, Martin had six children who survived to adulthood: Alfred (who worked with his father as a mezzotint engraver and later became a senior tax official), Isabella, Zenobia (who married the artist Peter Cunningham), Leopold (who became a clerk), Charles (1820–1906), who was trained as a painter by his father, copying a number of his father's works – he later became a successful portrait painter and lived in America – his last exhibit at the Royal Academy was in 1896 and Jessie (who married Egyptologist Joseph Bonomi). Leopold was the godson of the future King Leopold I of Belgium, who had met and befriended Martin when they shared lodgings on Marylebone High Street in about 1815. Leopold later wrote a series of reminiscences of his father, published in the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle Supplement in 1889. Leopold accompanied his father on many walks and visits, and his anecdotes include encounters with J. M. W. Turner, Isambard Kingdom Brunel, William Godwin and Charles Wheatstone. Leopold married the sister of John Tenniel, later famous as the cartoonist of Punch and illustrator of Alice's Adventures in Wonderland.

Martin's brothers edit

Martin's eldest brother, William (1772–1851) was by turn a rope-maker, soldier, inventor, scientist, writer and lecturer, who attempted to develop a rival philosophy to "Newtonian" science, allowing for perpetual motion, and denying the law of gravity. Despite undoubted elements of "quackery and buffoonery", William had a great talent for inventing. In 1819 he produced a miner's safety lamp which was said to be better and more reliable than that of Sir Humphry Davy. The only recognition he achieved in this field was a silver medal from the Royal Society for the invention of the spring balance. The second eldest brother, Richard, was a quartermaster in the guards, serving throughout the Peninsular War, and was present at Waterloo. Jonathan, the third eldest brother, (1782–1838) achieved notoriety by setting fire to York Minster in February 1829. He was subsequently apprehended, tried and found not guilty on the grounds of insanity. He was confined to St Luke's Hospital for Lunatics in London, where he remained until his death.[12]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Martin, John" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 794.
  2. ^ Gayford, Martin (15 March 2011). "John Martin: the Laing Gallery, Newcastle" – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
  3. ^ "End of the world visions Viewspaper 14–15". The Independent. London. 19 September 2011. Archived from the original on 13 June 2022.
  4. ^ "John Martin 1789–1854". Tate.
  5. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved 11 June 2022.
  6. ^ "Settlement and building: Artists and Chelsea Pages 102-106 A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 12, Chelsea". British History Online. Victoria County History, 2004. Retrieved 21 December 2022.
  7. ^ Wood, Christopher (1999). Victorian Painting. Boston: Little, Brown & Co. p. 19. ISBN 0-8212-2326-7.
  8. ^ a b Lambourne, Lionel (1999). Victorian Painting. London: Phaidon Press. p. 160. ISBN 0714837768.
  9. ^ Heine, "Lutetia", quoted in the memoirs of Berlioz, translated and edited by David Cairns, 1970. See [1] for the German.
  10. ^ Reminicences of John Martin, the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle, Supplement, 1889.
  11. ^ Mark Brown, arts correspondent (4 March 2011). "John Martin makes a dramatic come-back". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 25 April 2013.
  12. ^ Goodwin, Gordon (1893). "Martin, John (1789-1854)" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 36. London: Smith, Elder & Co. pp. 282–4.

References edit

Further reading edit

  • Adams, Max. The Prometheans: John Martin and the generation that stole the future . London, Quercus, 2010. ISBN 978-1-84916-173-2
  • Balston, Thomas "John Martin, 1789–1854,. Illustrator and Pamphleteer" (The Bibliographical Society, London, 1934).
  • Balston, Thomas "John Martin, 1789–1854. His Life and Works" (Duckworth & Co. Ltd., London, 1947).
  • Baronnet, M. John Martin. Nancy, Lulu, 2010. ISBN 978-1-4452-7931-2
  • Campbell, Michael J. John Martin – Visionary Printmaker (Campbell Fine Art / York City Art Gallery, 1992). The primary catalogue raisonne on the prints of John Martin. ISBN 0-9519387-0-3
  • Campbell, Michael J. John Martin, 1789–1854. Creation of Light (Calcografia Nacional, Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando, Madrid / Museo de Bellas Artes de Bilbao, 2006) Published by the Royal Academy of Fine Arts, Madrid, Spain in 2006, this is by far the most extensive publication ever issued on John Martin and is the most comprehensive publication on his prints. Printed in both English and Spanish. ISBN 84-96406-05-9
  • Campbell, Michael J. & J. Dustin Wees. Darkness Visible. The Prints of John Martin (Sterling & Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts, 1896) ISBN 0-931102-20-0
  • Feaver, William. The Art of John Martin. Oxford University Press, 1975. ISBN 0-19-817334-2
  • Johnstone, Christopher. John Martin. London, Academy Editions, 1974. ISBN 0-85670-175-0
  • Morden, Barbara C. 'John Martin: Apocalypse Now!' (2010, 2015, 3rd reprint 2019) McNidder & Grace, ISBN 978-1-904794-99-8

External links edit

  • 43 artworks by or after John Martin at the Art UK site
  • On John Martin and Cities
  • Archives of John Martin held by Queen Mary, University of London Archives
  • An engraving by W. Wallace of 'Gaius Marius Mourning over the Ruins of Carthage' in the Keepsake, 1833, together with a poetical illustration   Marius at the Ruins of Carthage. by Letitia Elizabeth Landon.

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For other people with the same name see John Martin disambiguation This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations August 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message John Martin 19 July 1789 17 February 1854 was an English painter engraver and illustrator He was celebrated for his typically vast and dramatic paintings of religious subjects and fantastic compositions populated with minute figures placed in imposing landscapes Martin s paintings and the prints made from them enjoyed great success with the general public with Thomas Lawrence referring to him as the most popular painter of his day He was also lambasted by John Ruskin and other critics 1 2 John MartinMartin by Henry Warren 1839Born 1789 07 19 19 July 1789Haydon Bridge Northumberland EnglandDied17 February 1854 1854 02 17 aged 64 Isle of ManMovementRomanticismSpouseSusan Martin m 1818 wbr Contents 1 Early life 2 Beginnings as artist 3 Painter of repute 4 Paintings 5 Engravings 5 1 Engravings and mezzotints 5 2 Works on paper 6 Later life 7 Legacy 8 Family 8 1 Wife and children 8 2 Martin s brothers 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEarly life editMartin was born in July 1789 in a one room cottage 3 at Haydon Bridge near Hexham in Northumberland the fourth son of Fenwick Martin a one time fencing master He was apprenticed by his father to a coachbuilder in Newcastle upon Tyne to learn heraldic painting but owing to a dispute over wages the indentures were cancelled and he was placed instead under Boniface Musso an Italian artist father of the enamel painter Charles Muss With his master Martin moved from Newcastle to London in 1806 4 where he married at the age of nineteen and supported himself by giving drawing lessons and by painting in watercolours and on china and glass his only surviving painted plate is now in a private collection in England His leisure was occupied in the study of perspective and architecture His brothers were William the eldest an inventor Richard a tanner who became a soldier in the Northumberland Fencibles in 1798 rising to the rank of Quartermaster Sergeant in the Grenadier Guards and fought in the Peninsular War and at Waterloo and Jonathan a preacher tormented by madness who set fire to York Minster in 1829 for which he stood trial Beginnings as artist editMartin began to supplement his income by painting sepia watercolours He sent his first oil painting to the Royal Academy in 1810 but it was not hung In 1811 he sent the painting once again when it was hung under the title A Landscape Composition as item no 46 in the Great Room Thereafter he produced a succession of large exhibited oil paintings some landscapes but more usually grand biblical themes inspired by the Old Testament His landscapes have the ruggedness of the Northumberland crags while some authors claim that his apocalyptic canvasses such as The Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah show his familiarity with the forges and ironworks of the Tyne Valley and display his intimate knowledge of the Old Testament In the years of the Regency from 1812 onwards there was a fashion for such sublime paintings Martin s first break came at the end of a season at the Royal Academy where his first major sublime canvas Sadak in Search of the Waters of Oblivion had been hung and ignored He brought it home only to find there a visiting card from William Manning MP who wanted to buy it from him Patronage propelled Martin s career This promising career was interrupted by the deaths of his father mother grandmother and young son in a single year Another distraction was William who frequently asked him to draw up plans for his inventions and whom he always indulged with help and money But heavily influenced by the works of John Milton he continued with his grand themes despite setbacks In 1816 Martin finally achieved public acclaim with Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still upon Gibeon even though it broke many of the conventional rules of composition In 1818 on the back of the sale of the Fall of Babylon for 420 equivalent to 30 000 in 2015 5 he finally rid himself of debt and bought a house in Marylebone where he came into contact with artists writers scientists and Whig nobility nbsp Ruins of an Ancient City 1810 Oil on paper mounted on canvas 95 6 x 118 6 cm Cleveland Museum of Art Ohio nbsp Arcadian Landscape 1810 14 Oil on canvas Museum of the Shenandoah Valley nbsp Sadak in Search of the Waters of Oblivion 1812 Oil on canvas 76 2 63 5 cm Saint Louis Art Museum Missouri nbsp Moonlight Chepstow Castle 1815 Watercolour with gum arabic Art Gallery of South Australia Adelaide nbsp Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still upon Gibeon 1816 Oil on canvas 150 x 231 cm National Gallery of Art Washington D C nbsp The Bard c 1817 Oil on canvas 127 x 101 6 cm Yale Center for British Art New Haven ConnecticutPainter of repute edit nbsp Belshazzar s Feast 1820 Oil on canvas 90 2 x 130 2 cm Yale Center for British Art New HavenMartin s triumph was Belshazzar s Feast of which he boasted beforehand it shall make more noise than any picture ever did before only don t tell anyone I said so Five thousand people paid to see it It was later nearly ruined when the carriage in which it was being transported was struck by a train at a level crossing near Oswestry In private Martin was passionate a devotee of chess and in common with his brothers swordsmanship and javelin throwing and a devout Christian believing in natural religion Despite an often cited singular instance of his hissing at the national anthem he was courted by royalty and presented with several gold medals one of them from the future Russian Tsar Nicholas I on whom a visit to Wallsend colliery on Tyneside had made an unforgettable impression My God he had cried it is like the mouth of Hell Martin became the official historical painter to Prince Leopold of Saxe Coburg later the first King of Belgium Leopold was the godfather of Martin s son Leopold and endowed Martin with the Order of Leopold Martin frequently had early morning visits from another Saxe Coburg Prince Albert who would engage him in banter from his horse Martin standing in the doorway still in his dressing gown at seven o clock in the morning Martin was a defender of deism and natural religion evolution before Charles Darwin and rationality Georges Cuvier became an admirer of Martin s and he increasingly enjoyed the company of scientists artists and writers Charles Dickens Michael Faraday and J M W Turner among them Martin took a home near Turner in Chelsea London 6 Martin began to experiment with mezzotint technology and as a result was commissioned to produce 24 engravings for a new edition of Paradise Lost perhaps the definitive illustrations of Milton s masterpiece of which copies now fetch many hundreds of pounds Politically his sympathies are not clear some claim he was a radical but this is not borne out by known facts although he knew William Godwin the ageing reformed revolutionist husband of Mary Wollstonecraft and father of Mary Shelley and John Hunt co founder of The Examiner At one time the Martins took under their wing a young woman called Jane Webb who at twenty produced The Mummy a socially optimistic but satirical vision of a steam driven world in the 22nd century Another friend was Charles Wheatstone professor of physics at King s College London Wheatstone experimented with telegraphy and invented the concertina and stereoscope Martin was fascinated by his attempts to measure the speed of light Accounts of Martin s evening parties reveal an astonishing array of thinkers eccentrics and social movers one witness was a young John Tenniel later the illustrator of Lewis Carroll s work who was heavily influenced by Martin and was a close friend of his children At various points Martin s brothers were also among the guests their eccentricities and conversation adding to the already exotic flavour of the fare Paintings editHis first exhibited subject picture Sadak in Search of the Waters of Oblivion now in the St Louis Art Museum was hung in the Ante room of the Royal Academy in 1812 and sold for fifty guineas The piece depicts a scene from the Tales of Two Genii It was followed by the Expulsion 1813 Adam s First Sight of Eve 1813 Clytie 1814 Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still upon Gibeon 1816 and The Fall of Babylon 1819 In 1820 appeared his Belshazzar s Feast which excited much favourable and hostile comment and was awarded a prize of 200 at the British Institution where the Joshua had previously carried off a premium of 100 Then came The Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum 1822 The Creation 1824 the Eve of the Deluge 1840 and a series of other Biblical and imaginative subjects The Plains of Heaven is thought by some to reflect his memories of the Allendale of his youth Martin s large paintings were closely connected with contemporary dioramas or panoramas popular entertainments in which large painted cloths were displayed and animated by the skilful use of artificial light Martin has often been claimed as a forerunner of the epic cinema and there is no doubt that the pioneer director D W Griffith was aware of his work 7 In turn the diorama makers borrowed Martin s work to the point of plagiarism A 2 000 square foot 190 m2 version of Belshazzar s Feast was mounted at a facility called the British Diorama in 1833 Martin tried but failed to shut down the display with a court order Another diorama of the same picture was staged in New York City in 1835 These dioramas were tremendous successes with their audiences but wounded Martin s reputation in the serious art world 8 The painting The Destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah 1852 is currently at the Laing Art Gallery in Newcastle upon Tyne nbsp Macbeth 1820 Oil on canvas 86 x 65 1 cm Scottish National Gallery Edinburgh nbsp The Destruction of Pompei and Herculaneum c 1821 Oil on canvas 161 6 x 253 cm Tate Britain London nbsp Seventh Plague of Egypt 1823 Oil on canvas 144 1 x 214 cm Museum of Fine Arts Boston nbsp The Deluge 1834 Oil on canvas 168 3 x 258 4 cm Yale Center for British Art New Haven Connecticut nbsp The Coronation of Queen Victoria 1839 Oil on canvas 238 1 x 185 4 cm Tate Britain London nbsp The Eve of the Deluge 1840 Oil on canvas 143 x 218 cm Windsor Castle London nbsp The Assuaging of the Waters 1840 Oil on canvas 143 5 x 219 1 cm California Palace of the Legion of Honor San Francisco nbsp Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still c 1840 Oil on canvas 47 9 x 108 3 cm National Gallery of Art Washington D C nbsp Destruction of Tyre 1840 Oil on canvas 83 8 x 109 5 cm Toledo Museum of Art Ohio nbsp Pandemonium 1841 Oil on canvas 123 x 185 cm Louvre ParisEngravings editIn addition to being a painter John Martin was a mezzotint engraver For significant periods of his life he earned more from his engravings than his paintings In 1823 Martin was commissioned by Samuel Prowett to illustrate John Milton s Paradise Lost for which he was paid 2000 guineas Before the first 24 engravings were completed he was paid a further 1500 guineas for a second set of 24 engravings on smaller plates Some of the more notable prints include Pandaemonium and Satan Presiding at the Infernal Council remarkable for the science fiction element visible in the depicted architecture and arguably his most dramatic composition Bridge over Chaos Prowett issued 4 separate editions of the engravings in monthly instalments the first appearing on 20 March 1825 and the last in 1827 Later inspired by Prowett s venture between 1831 and 1835 Martin published his own illustrations to accompany the Old Testament but the project was a serious drain on his resources and not very profitable He sold his remaining stock to Charles Tilt who republished them in a folio album in 1838 and in a smaller format in 1839 Engravings and mezzotints edit nbsp Satan Presiding at the Infernal Council 1824 Mezzotint and engraving size unknown Victoria and Albert Museum London nbsp Joshua Commanding the Sun to Stand Still 1827 Mezzotint and etching plate 57 1 x 77 8 cm National Gallery of Art Washington D C nbsp The Evening of the Deluge 1828 Mezzotint and engraving 59 7 x 81 7 cm Victoria and Albert Museum London nbsp Eve s Dream Satan Aroused from Paradise Lost 1824 1827 mezzotint plate 14 20 2 cm Museum of Fine Arts Houston nbsp Paradise Adam and Eve the Morning Hymn from Paradise Lost 1824 1827 Mezzotint plate 14 3 20 5 cm Museum of Fine Arts Houston nbsp The Creation of Light from Paradise Lost 1824 1827 Mezzotint plate 13 3 19 7 cm Museum of Fine Arts Houston nbsp Satan Tempting Eve from Paradise Lost 1824 1827 Mezzotint plate 14 3 20 cm Museum of Fine Arts Houston nbsp Bridge of Chaos from Paradise Lost 1824 1827 Mezzotint plate 14 3 21 cm Museum of Fine Arts HoustonWorks on paper edit nbsp The Destruction of Pharaoh s Host 1836 Pencil watercolour with gum arabic 58 4 x 85 7 cm J Paul Getty Museum Los Angeles nbsp The Country of the Iguanodon 1837 Watercolour on paper 30 2 x 42 4 cm Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa Wellington nbsp Manfred and the Alpine Witch 1837 Watercolour 38 8 x 55 8 cm The Whitworth Manchester nbsp Manfred On The Jungfrau inspired by Byron s Manfred 1837 Watercolour gouache and gum arabic dimensions unknown Birmingham Museums Trust BirminghamLater life editHis profile was raised further in February 1829 when his elder brother non conformist Jonathan Martin deliberately set fire to York Minster The fire caused extensive damage and the scene was likened by an onlooker to Martin s work oblivious to the fact that it had more to do with him than it initially seemed Jonathan Martin s defence at his trial was paid for with John Martin s money Jonathan Martin known as Mad Martin was ultimately found guilty but was spared the hangman s noose on the grounds of insanity Martin from about 1827 to 1828 had turned away from painting and became involved with many plans and inventions He developed a fascination with solving London s water and sewage problems involving the creation of the Thames embankment containing a central drainage system His plans were visionary and formed the basis for later engineers designs His 1834 plans for London s sewerage system anticipated by some 25 years the 1859 proposals of Joseph Bazalgette to create intercepting sewers complete with walkways along both banks of the River Thames He also made plans for railway schemes including lines on both banks of the Thames The plans along with ideas for laminating timber lighthouses and draining islands all survive Debt and family pressures including the suicide of his nephew Jonathan s son Richard brought on depression which reached its worst in 1838 From 1839 Martin s fortunes recovered and he exhibited many works during the 1840s During the last four years of his life Martin was engaged in a trilogy of large paintings of biblical subjects The Last Judgment The Great Day of His Wrath and The Plains of Heaven of which two were bequeathed to Tate Britain in 1974 the other having been acquired for the Tate some years earlier They were completed in 1853 just before the stroke which paralysed his right side He was never to recover and died on 17 February 1854 on the Isle of Man He is buried in Kirk Braddan cemetery Major exhibitions of his works are still mounted nbsp The Plains of Heaven c 1851 Oil on canvas 198 x 306 cm Tate Britain London nbsp The Great Day of His Wrath 1851 Oil on canvas 196 5 x 303 cm Tate Britain London nbsp The Last Judgment 1853 Oil on canvas 196 x 325 cm Tate Britain London nbsp The Destruction Of Sodom And Gomorrah 1852 Oil on canvas 136 3 x 212 3 cm Laing Art Gallery Newcastle upon TyneLegacy edit nbsp View in Richmond Park 1850 Oil on paper 50 8 x 91 5 cm Fitzwilliam Museum CambridgeMartin enjoyed immense popularity and his influence survived One of his followers was Thomas Cole founder of American landscape painting Others whose imaginations were fired by him included Ralph Waldo Emerson and the Brontes a print of Belshazzar s Feast hung on the parlour wall of the Bronte parsonage in Haworth and his works were to have a direct influence upon the writings of Charlotte and her sisters who as children played with a model of him Martin s fantasy architecture influenced the Glasstown and Angria of the Bronte juvenilia where he himself appears as Edward de Lisle of Verdopolis Martin enjoyed a European reputation and influence Heinrich Heine wrote of the music of Hector Berlioz that It makes me see visions of fabulous empires and many a cloud capped impossible wonder Its magical strains conjure up Babylon the hanging gardens of Semiramis the marvels of Nineveh the mighty constructions of Mizraim as we see them in the pictures of the English painter Martin 9 Martin s work influenced the Pre Raphaelite Brotherhood especially Dante Gabriel Rossetti and several generations of movie makers from D W Griffith who borrowed his Babylon from Martin to Cecil B DeMille and George Lucas Writers like Rider Haggard Jules Verne and H G Wells were influenced by his concept of the sublime The French Romantic movement in both art and literature was inspired by him Much Victorian railway architecture was copied from his motifs including his friend Brunel s Clifton Suspension Bridge A number of Martin s engineering plans for London which included a circular connecting railway though they failed to be built in his lifetime came to fruition many years later This would have pleased him inordinately he is known to have exclaimed to his son Leopold that he would rather have been an engineer than painter 10 Like some other popular artists Martin fell victim to changes in fashion and public taste His grandiose visions seemed theatrical and outmoded to the mid Victorians and after Martin died his works became neglected and gradually forgotten Few artists have been subject to such posthumous extremes of critical fortune for in the 1930s his vast paintings fetched only a pound or two while today they are valued at many thousands 8 nbsp Twilight in the Woodlands 1850 Oil on canvas dimensions unknown Fitzwilliam Museum CambridgeA number of Martin s works survive in public collections the Laing Art Gallery in Newcastle which also holds his famous black cabinet of projects in progress Tate Britain the Victoria amp Albert Museum the Louvre the National Gallery of Art in Washington D C Yale Center for British Art Saint Louis Art Museum and elsewhere in the USA The RIBA holds many of his engineering pamphlets There are letters in private collections and at Queen Mary College in London John Martin wrote two autobiographies the first an article in The Athenaeum of 14 June 1834 page 459 and the most extensive in The Illustrated London News 17 March 1849 pp 176 177 A major source for his life is a series of reminiscences by his son Leopold published in sixteen parts in the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle in 1889 There are a number of surviving letters and reminiscences by among others B R Haydon John Constable Ralph Waldo Emerson the Rossettis Benjamin Disraeli Charlotte Bronte and John Ruskin a persistent critic who even so admitted Martin s uniqueness of vision The first full biography was that by Mary L Pendered whose chief source Martin s friend Sergeant Ralph Thomas wrote a diary now lost of their friendship Thomas Balston then wrote two biographies on the artist the first in 1934 and the second still the leading biography in 1947 Christopher Johnstone produced an introductory book on Martin 1974 and in 1975 the art critic William Feaver was author of an extensively illustrated work on Martin s life and works Since 1986 Michael J Campbell has produced a number of publications on John Martin including the leading publication on his work as an original printmaker published by the Royal Academy of Arts Madrid in 2006 In 2011 12 Tate Britain and Newcastle s Laing Art Gallery co curated a major retrospective exhibition of Martin s work in all genres John Martin Apocalypse including his contribution as a civil engineer 11 Featured in the exhibition was the fully restored The Destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneum 1822 Recorded as lost in the disastrous Tate Gallery flood of 1928 the painting was rediscovered by Christopher Johnstone a research assistant at the gallery when he was researching his book John Martin 1974 Its restoration by Tate conservator Sarah Maisey reveals that the original paintwork was in near pristine condition a large area of missing canvas has been repainted by Maisey using techniques that were not available in 1973 as she describes on page 113 of the exhibition catalogue John Martin Apocalypse 2011 When rediscovered the painting was rolled up inside the missing Paul Delaroche painting The Execution of Lady Jane Grey which was returned to the National Gallery London Family editWife and children edit nbsp John Martin on his Death Bed 1854 Black chalk 58 5 x 45 5 cm by his son Charles Martin 1820 1906 Laing Art Gallery Newcastle upon TyneWith his wife Susan nee Garrett who was nine years older than him Martin had six children who survived to adulthood Alfred who worked with his father as a mezzotint engraver and later became a senior tax official Isabella Zenobia who married the artist Peter Cunningham Leopold who became a clerk Charles 1820 1906 who was trained as a painter by his father copying a number of his father s works he later became a successful portrait painter and lived in America his last exhibit at the Royal Academy was in 1896 and Jessie who married Egyptologist Joseph Bonomi Leopold was the godson of the future King Leopold I of Belgium who had met and befriended Martin when they shared lodgings on Marylebone High Street in about 1815 Leopold later wrote a series of reminiscences of his father published in the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle Supplement in 1889 Leopold accompanied his father on many walks and visits and his anecdotes include encounters with J M W Turner Isambard Kingdom Brunel William Godwin and Charles Wheatstone Leopold married the sister of John Tenniel later famous as the cartoonist of Punch and illustrator of Alice s Adventures in Wonderland Martin s brothers edit Martin s eldest brother William 1772 1851 was by turn a rope maker soldier inventor scientist writer and lecturer who attempted to develop a rival philosophy to Newtonian science allowing for perpetual motion and denying the law of gravity Despite undoubted elements of quackery and buffoonery William had a great talent for inventing In 1819 he produced a miner s safety lamp which was said to be better and more reliable than that of Sir Humphry Davy The only recognition he achieved in this field was a silver medal from the Royal Society for the invention of the spring balance The second eldest brother Richard was a quartermaster in the guards serving throughout the Peninsular War and was present at Waterloo Jonathan the third eldest brother 1782 1838 achieved notoriety by setting fire to York Minster in February 1829 He was subsequently apprehended tried and found not guilty on the grounds of insanity He was confined to St Luke s Hospital for Lunatics in London where he remained until his death 12 See also editPaintings by John Martin Fantastic art Benjamin Hick 1790 1842 patron and collectorNotes edit Martin John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed 1911 p 794 Gayford Martin 15 March 2011 John Martin the Laing Gallery Newcastle via www telegraph co uk End of the world visions Viewspaper 14 15 The Independent London 19 September 2011 Archived from the original on 13 June 2022 John Martin 1789 1854 Tate UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark Gregory 2017 The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain 1209 to Present New Series MeasuringWorth Retrieved 11 June 2022 Settlement and building Artists and Chelsea Pages 102 106 A History of the County of Middlesex Volume 12 Chelsea British History Online Victoria County History 2004 Retrieved 21 December 2022 Wood Christopher 1999 Victorian Painting Boston Little Brown amp Co p 19 ISBN 0 8212 2326 7 a b Lambourne Lionel 1999 Victorian Painting London Phaidon Press p 160 ISBN 0714837768 Heine Lutetia quoted in the memoirs of Berlioz translated and edited by David Cairns 1970 See 1 for the German Reminicences of John Martin the Newcastle Weekly Chronicle Supplement 1889 Mark Brown arts correspondent 4 March 2011 John Martin makes a dramatic come back The Guardian London Retrieved 25 April 2013 Goodwin Gordon 1893 Martin John 1789 1854 In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 36 London Smith Elder amp Co pp 282 4 References edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Martin John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 794 Further reading editAdams Max The Prometheans John Martin and the generation that stole the future London Quercus 2010 ISBN 978 1 84916 173 2 Balston Thomas John Martin 1789 1854 Illustrator and Pamphleteer The Bibliographical Society London 1934 Balston Thomas John Martin 1789 1854 His Life and Works Duckworth amp Co Ltd London 1947 Baronnet M John Martin Nancy Lulu 2010 ISBN 978 1 4452 7931 2 Campbell Michael J John Martin Visionary Printmaker Campbell Fine Art York City Art Gallery 1992 The primary catalogue raisonne on the prints of John Martin ISBN 0 9519387 0 3 Campbell Michael J John Martin 1789 1854 Creation of Light Calcografia Nacional Real Academia de Bellas Artes de San Fernando Madrid Museo de Bellas Artes de Bilbao 2006 Published by the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Madrid Spain in 2006 this is by far the most extensive publication ever issued on John Martin and is the most comprehensive publication on his prints Printed in both English and Spanish ISBN 84 96406 05 9 Campbell Michael J amp J Dustin Wees Darkness Visible The Prints of John Martin Sterling amp Francine Clark Art Institute Williamstown Massachusetts 1896 ISBN 0 931102 20 0 Feaver William The Art of John Martin Oxford University Press 1975 ISBN 0 19 817334 2 Johnstone Christopher John Martin London Academy Editions 1974 ISBN 0 85670 175 0 Morden Barbara C John Martin Apocalypse Now 2010 2015 3rd reprint 2019 McNidder amp Grace ISBN 978 1 904794 99 8External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Martin 43 artworks by or after John Martin at the Art UK site On John Martin and Cities Phryne s list of pictures by Martin in accessible UK collections Archives of John Martin held by Queen Mary University of London Archives An engraving by W Wallace of Gaius Marius Mourning over the Ruins of Carthage in the Keepsake 1833 together with a poetical illustration nbsp Marius at the Ruins of Carthage by Letitia Elizabeth Landon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Martin painter amp oldid 1187749861, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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