The Fighting Temeraire Tugged to Her Last Berth to Be Broken Up, 1838, oil painting created by English Romantic artist J.M.W. Turner in 1839. Turner loved this work and wrote: “No considerations of money or favour can induce me to loan my Darling again.” His scene is a poignant memorial to the graceful, tall-masted warships of the Royal Navy and a mourning for the great days of British naval power.
It shows the HMS Temeraire—famed for its heroic role in the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805—being towed up the River Thames to a shipyard to be broken up. In depicting the modern steam-powered tug pulling the ethereal sailing ship to its fate, Turner testifies to the massive technological changes ushered in during his lifetime. The techniques and colours are typical of the later works that were to make him arguably the most revolutionary of landscape painters.
This painting demonstrates Turner’s fascination with elemental subjects: water, air, and fire. The sun sets in flaming colours that are an homage to the ship’s former glories and also show Turner’s virtuoso skills. This was painted when the artist was in his 60s and was just about to move into his more abstract final phase. It is filled with the contrasts he loved: loose brushwork and thick paint on the sky versus detailed work on the sailing ship; the painting’s left side’s cool colour versus the boldly hot colours of the right side; the comments on the old world versus the new. Works like this show clearly how Turner began the breakdown of recognizable forms, the emphasis on light and colour, and the emotional brushwork that would mark the work of the Impressionists and of countless abstract painters.