Thus easy-rob'd, they to the fountain sped
That in the middle of the court up-threw
A stream, high spouting from its liquid bed,
And falling back again in drizzly dew;
There each deep draughts, as deep he thirsted drew;
It was a fountain of nepenthe rare;
Whence, as Dan Homer sings, huge pleasaunce grew,
And sweet oblivion of vile earthly care;
Fair gladsome waking thoughts, and joyous dreams more fair.[2]
It shows an imaginary landscape with Classical buildings and ruins centred on the fountain, around and within which human and winged Cupid-like figures are grouped.
In 1958 Lord Beaverbrook was actively seeking a "first-rate" Turner painting for the Beaverbrook Art Gallery, which was to open the following year in Fredericton. He purchased The Fountain of Indolence from the dealers Leggatt Brothers of London.[6]: 87 The painting became central to a dispute that developed in 2004 between the Gallery and the Beaverbrook UK Foundation, which claimed ownership of 133 paintings that had been acquired by Lord Beaverbrook for the Gallery. The Foundation proposed to take back and sell The Fountain of Indolence, which Sotheby's had valued in 2002 at between $16.7 and $25 million in Canadian funds.[6]: 203 The Gallery denied that the Foundation owned the paintings, maintaining that they all belonged to the Gallery. Both sides agreed to submit to arbitration, which resulted in a 2007 ruling that 85 of the paintings, including The Fountain of Indolence, belonged to the Gallery, while the remaining 48 belonged to the Foundation. The Foundation appealed the ruling, but it was confirmed by an appeal panel in 2009.[7]
The Fountain of Fallacy
The gap in the provenance of The Fountain of Indolence between 1834 and 1882 lends credence to the theory that it is identical with The Fountain of Fallacy, a painting which Turner exhibited at the British Institution in 1839, accompanied by four lines from his own poem entitled Fallacies of Hope.[8]
Its Rainbow-dew diffused fell on each anxious lip,
Working wild fantasy, imagining;
First, Science in the immeasurable Abyss of thought,
Measured her orbit slumbering.
Contemporary descriptions of the Fountain of Fallacy apply equally well to The Fountain of Indolence. In 1839, the year it was exhibited, Turner wrote to a Mr. Marshall that The Fountain of Fallacy was for sale for 400 guineas and that he had no other painting of that size for sale. No subsequent ownership history of The Fountain of Fallacy is known and the only recorded references to it after its first exhibition are two comments by John Ruskin. According to Turner expert Martin Butlin, in the catalogue raisonnéThe Paintings of J.M.W. Turner, the available evidence indicates "that in fact there was – and is – only one" picture.[9]
^Mitchell, Sebastian (2011). "James Thomson's picture collection and British history painting". Journal of the History of Collections. 23 (1): 127–151. doi:10.1093/jhc/fhq017. Turner was the most prominent of many nineteenth-century painters to admire Thomson's verse.
^Thomson, James. "The Castle of Indolence Canto 1". RPO: Representative poetry online. University of Toronto Libraries. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
^Butlin, Martin; Joll, Evelyn (1977). The Paintings of J.M.W. Turner. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 185–186. The critics recognized that it was a work of imagination and thus were willing to allow Turner more license than normal in the use of colours.
^Wildman, Stephen (2002). "Fountain of Fallacy". The Electronic Edition of John Ruskin's Modern Painters I. The Ruskin Research Centre, Lancaster University. Retrieved 5 February 2014.
^Butlin, Martin; Joll, Evelyn (1977). The Paintings of J.M.W. Turner. New Haven: Yale University Press. pp. 206–207.