{'ObjectID' : '2434', 'ObjectCode' : 'N-0538-00', 'ObjectNumber' : 'NG538', 'ObjectDateBegin' : '1844-01-01', 'ObjectDateEnd' : '1844-12-31', 'ObjectDisplayDate' : '1844', 'ObjectDimensions' : '91 x 121.8 cm', 'ObjectMedium' : 'Oil on canvas', 'ObjectAlphaSort' : 'Turner, Joseph Mallord William', 'ObjectAuthor' : 'Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1775 - 1851', 'ObjectTitle' : 'Rain, Steam, and Speed - The Great Western Railway', 'ObjectShortTitle' : 'Rain, Steam, and Speed - The Great Western Railway', 'ObjectCreditLine' : 'Turner Bequest, 1856', 'ObjectString' : 'NG538: Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1775 - 1851, Rain, Steam, and Speed - The Great Western Railway, 1844, Oil on canvas, (91 x 121.8 cm), Turner Bequest, 1856.', 'ObjectLocation' : 'Room 34', 'ObjectPrivateLocation' : 'Gallery 34', 'ObjectPublicLocation' : 'Room 34', 'ObjectSchool' : 'British', 'ObjectCurator' : 'Susan Foister', 'ObjectDescription' : 'A steam train advances across a bridge in the rain. The bridge, designed by the engineer Brunel and completed in 1839, spans the Thames between Taplow and Maidenhead. The view is to the east, towards London. In front of the train a hare dashes for cover, to the right a ploughman is working in the field, and in the lower left people are boating on the river. It was suggested by a contemporary of the artist that the \'Speed\' of the title refers to the hare rather than the train.
NG 538 was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1844. According to an unverifiable anecdote its subject was inspired by a trip Turner made on the line during a storm. More reliably, the work can be associated with the so-called \'railway mania\' which swept across England in the 1840s.
Turner Bequest, 1856.
Davies 1959, pp. 99-100
Butlin 1977, pp. 232-3', 'ObjectStatusID' : '1', 'PublicAccess' : '1', 'GroupNumber' : '', 'GroupTitle' : '', 'GroupArtist' : '', 'GroupDate' : '', 'GroupParts' : '', 'ImageID' : '2374', 'ImageFile' : 'N-0538-00-000022-WZ-PYR.tif', 'ImageCode' : 'N-0538-00-000022-WZ', 'ImagePath' : '/pics/tmp/websiteimages/Website_Collection_Online/Web Zoom Images/WZ web NG Fronts/', 'ImageLevels' : '6', 'ImageXsize' : '6000', 'ImageYsize' : '4480', 'FileGroup_ID' : '14', 'impos' : '2421'} /* Array ( [0] =>
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2421 --> 2374 N-0538-00 Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1775 - 1851
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    [ObjectID] => 2434
    [ObjectCode] => N-0538-00
    [ObjectNumber] => NG538
    [ObjectDateBegin] => 1844-01-01
    [ObjectDateEnd] => 1844-12-31
    [ObjectDisplayDate] => 1844
    [ObjectDimensions] => 91 x 121.8 cm
    [ObjectMedium] => Oil on canvas
    [ObjectAlphaSort] => Turner, Joseph Mallord William
    [ObjectAuthor] => Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1775 - 1851
    [ObjectTitle] => Rain, Steam, and Speed - The Great Western Railway
    [ObjectShortTitle] => Rain, Steam, and Speed - The Great Western Railway
    [ObjectCreditLine] => Turner Bequest, 1856
    [ObjectString] => NG538: Joseph Mallord William Turner, 1775 - 1851, Rain, Steam, and Speed - The Great Western Railway, 1844, Oil on canvas, (91 x 121.8 cm), Turner Bequest, 1856.
    [ObjectLocation] => Room 34
    [ObjectPrivateLocation] => Gallery 34
    [ObjectPublicLocation] => Room 34
    [ObjectSchool] => British
    [ObjectCurator] => Susan Foister
    [ObjectDescription] => A steam train advances across a bridge in the rain. The bridge, designed by the engineer Brunel and completed in 1839, spans the Thames between Taplow and Maidenhead. The view is to the east, towards London. In front of the train a hare dashes for cover, to the right a ploughman is working in the field, and in the lower left people are boating on the river. It was suggested by a contemporary of the artist that the \'Speed\' of the title refers to the hare rather than the train.
NG 538 was exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1844. According to an unverifiable anecdote its subject was inspired by a trip Turner made on the line during a storm. More reliably, the work can be associated with the so-called \'railway mania\' which swept across England in the 1840s.
Turner Bequest, 1856.
Davies 1959, pp. 99-100
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