Helmingham Dell

Painting by John Constable From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Helmingham Dell is an 1830 landscape painting by the British artist John Constable featuring a view of a dell in the grounds of Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, with a young woman in red about to cross a bridge. It appears to have been based on a sketch made as early as 1800 when he first visited Helmingham.[1]

Year1830
Dimensions113.3 cm × 130.8 cm (44.62 in × 51.50 in)
Quick facts Artist, Year ...
Helmingham Dell
ArtistJohn Constable
Year1830
TypeOil on canvas, landscape painting
Dimensions113.3 cm × 130.8 cm (44.62 in × 51.50 in)
LocationNelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City
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In 1829 when Constable was elected to full membership of the Royal Academy in London he was required to provide a diploma work. He chose to present his 1826 landscape A Boat Passing a Lock which was owned by his friend the bookseller James Carpenter. In exchange for Carpenter giving up the work, Constable promised to produce another landscape for him featuring Helmingham.[2] As the work progressed Constable chose to keep it and instead paid Carpenter for the loss of his original painting.[3]

It was exhibited at Somerset House for the Royal Academy's Summer Exhibition of 1830.[4] Today the painting is in the collection of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, Missouri having been acquired in 1955.[5] Constable had produced an earlier, smaller version of the same view in 1826, a work now in the Philadelphia Museum of Art.[6] As well as being considerably larger, the 1830 work added a stag and a cow to the composition. Both paintings are unusual in his work for only featuring a small glimpse of sky.[7]

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