Stoke-by-Nayland

Description

“What say you to a summer morning?” John Constable wrote of this painting in a letter to a friend. Even after many years living in London, Constable continued to portray the countryside, dear to him from boyhood. Stoke-by-Nayland lies a few miles from his native village of East Bergholt in Suffolk. In this view, he divided the canvas between a brilliant, airy vista toward the hamlet on the left and a shady, tunnel-like country lane leading off to the right. Constable explained in his letter that the painting depicted a specific time, a morning in “July or August, at eight or nine o’clock, after a slight shower during the night, to enhance the dews in the shadowed part of the picture.” The artist emphasized the abundance of water through his painting technique, flecking the surface with white highlights to create an effect of sparkling wetness. Here, the whole scene appears dewy, with a stream and puddles in the foreground and a central tree that droops from the weight of rainwater, emphasizing the fertile land.

Painted as much with a palette knife as with brushes, Stoke-by-Nayland lacks the finish of pictures Constable exhibited publicly; it was meant as a full-scale sketch for a work that he never realized. Nonetheless, this canvas seems to capture Constable’s delight in freely scribbling and scraping the image into existence—what it lacks in detail it gains in atmosphere. The roughness of the surface evokes the textures of real landscape, and the coexistence of natural and built elements in the scene embodies an ideal of harmony indicative of Constable’s vision of rural England.

Provenance

Sold, the artist’s estate sale, Foster and Sons, London, May 16, 1838, lot 40 together with a sketch of the Opening of Waterloo Bridge to Joy [Graves 1918 and Day 1968]. Miss Morris; sold June 26, 1860 lot 108 to Cox [annotated sale cat. in the Nederlands Instituut voor Kunstgeschiedenisn, The Haag; copy in curatorial object file. See also Redford 1888]. Jonathan Nield (1790–1887), Dunster House, Rochdale, England; sold, Christie’s, London, May 3, 1879, lot 13 to Permain [annotated sale cat. in curatorial object file. See also Redford 1888, Graves 1918 and Day 1968]. Sir Frederick Thorpe Mappin (1821–1910); sold, his estate sale, Christie’s, London, June 17, 1910, lot 14 to Arthur J. Sulley & Company, London [this and the following according to Knoedler Stock Book 5, no. 12466, Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles; copy in curatorial object file. See also annotated sale cat. in curatorial object file ]; sold to Knoedler and Company, New York, May 1, 1911; sold to Mrs. William Wallace Kimball (died 1921), Chicago, July 11, 1911; given to the Art Institute of Chicago, 1922.

Stoke-by-Nayland

John Constable

1836

Accession Number

4758

Medium

Oil on canvas

Dimensions

126 × 169 cm (49 5/8 × 66 1/2 in.); Framed: 170.2 × 212.1 × 16.6 cm (67 × 83 1/2 × 6 1/2 in.)

Classification

oil on canvas

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Kimball Collection

Background & Context

Background Story

John Constable's Stoke-by-Nayland (1836) is an oil on canvas from the final year of the artist's life. Constable (1776-1837) was one of England's greatest landscape painters, known for his revolutionary approach to capturing the natural world. This painting depicts the village of Stoke-by-Nayland in Suffolk, with its prominent church tower rising above the trees. The composition is organized around the strong vertical accent of the tower, which anchors the landscape. The handling is free and expressive, with the paint applied in broad strokes that capture the movement of clouds and foliage. The palette is subdued but rich, with the greens and browns of the landscape set against the blues and whites of the sky. This late work shows Constable's style at its most freely expressive, the brushwork anticipating the achievements of the Barbizon School and the Impressionists. Stoke-by-Nayland was one of Constable's last paintings and stands as a testament to his unwavering commitment to the landscape of his native Suffolk.

Cultural Impact

Constable's late works are among the most freely painted landscapes of the 19th century, anticipating the achievements of the Barbizon School and Impressionism.

Why It Matters

This late view of Stoke-by-Nayland captures the essence of Constable's art: the deep love of the Suffolk landscape, expressed through a technique that grew ever freer and more expressive with age.