The Chain Pier, Brighton | |
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Artist | Joseph Mallord William Turner |
Year | 1828 |
Type | Oil on canvas, landscape painting |
Dimensions | 136.5 cm× 71.1 cm(53.7 in× 28.0 in) |
Location | Tate Britain, London |
The Chain Pier, Brighton is an 1828 landscape painting by the British artist J.M.W. Turner featuring a view of the sea at the restort town of Brighton in Southern England, dominated by the Royal Suspension Chain Pier which had opened five years earlier. [1] [2] The work was originally produced for the art collector Earl of Egremont's property at Petworth House where it was designed as one of four landscapes intended to fit under full-length portraits, explaining its unusual width. Egremont had been one of the investors in the construction of the pier. [3]
The work was part of the Turner Bequest of 1856 and was in the National Gallery until 1906 before it was transferred to the Tate Britain. [4] Turner's contemporary John Constable had produced his own painting Chain Pier, Brighton the previous year, which is also now in the Tate. [5]