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Turner: Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Moonlight, 22'' Canvas Print, Framed
This print of Joseph Mallord William Turner's Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Moonlight (1835) is part of our Masterworks collection of reproductions, specially created using the Gallery's finest quality digital imaging. The image was printed to Gallery specifications and the frame was selected as a style appropriate to the period.
This print of Joseph Mallord William Turner's Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Moonlight (1835) is part of our Masterworks collection of reproductions, specially created using the Gallery's finest quality digital imaging. The image was printed to Gallery specifications and the frame was selected as a style appropriate to the period.
Here Turner brings the great force of his romantic genius to a common scene of working-class men at hard labor. Although the subject of the painting is rooted in the grim realities of the Industrial Revolution, in Turner's hands it transcends the specifics of time and place and becomes an image of startling visual poetry.
An almost palpable flood of moonlight breaks through the clouds in a great vault that spans the banks of the channel and illuminates the sky and the water. The heavy impasto of the moon's reflection on the unbroken expanse of water rivals the radiance of the sky, where gradations of light create a powerful, swirling vortex.
- 22 x 16.25 inches (print), 24.25 x 18.5 inches (framed)
- Artist grade canvas with UV topcoat
- Archival pigment inks
- Antiqued wood frame with distressed finish
- Ready to hang
- More size and finish options available at NGA Custom Prints
Description | This print of Joseph Mallord William Turner's Keelmen Heaving in Coals by Moonlight (1835) is part of our Masterworks collection of reproductions, specially created using the Gallery's finest quality digital imaging. The image was printed to Gallery specifications and the frame was selected as a style appropriate to the period. Here Turner brings the great force of his romantic genius to a common scene of working-class men at hard labor. Although the subject of the painting is rooted in the grim realities of the Industrial Revolution, in Turner's hands it transcends the specifics of time and place and becomes an image of startling visual poetry. An almost palpable flood of moonlight breaks through the clouds in a great vault that spans the banks of the channel and illuminates the sky and the water. The heavy impasto of the moon's reflection on the unbroken expanse of water rivals the radiance of the sky, where gradations of light create a powerful, swirling vortex.
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