Newly Discovered Study for John Constable's 'The Cornfield' Emerges from a Texas Museum

Heritage Auctions will auction a previously unknown oil study by John Constable on June 5. Rediscovered in a Texas museum and scientifically authenticated, this work is a historic find that redefines the creation process of Constable's masterpiece, 'The Cornfield'.
その他NQ 91/100出典:PR Times

📋 Article Processing Timeline

  • 📰 Published: May 28, 2026 at 17:00
  • 🔍 Collected: June 1, 2026 at 02:13 (81h 13m after Published)
  • 🤖 AI Analyzed: June 1, 2026 at 02:17 (4 min after Collected)
A previously unknown, full-scale oil study by John Constable, created for his masterpiece 'The Cornfield' (currently housed in the National Gallery, London), will be presented at Heritage Auctions' (headquartered in Texas, USA) Signature Auction 'Important European Art Auction' on June 5. Following extensive academic and conservation research, the work has been authenticated as a genuine work by Constable.

This study was held for many years at the Jefferson Historical Museum in Texas. Its discovery fundamentally changes the understanding of how Constable’s representative masterpiece, 'The Cornfield,' was created.

Regarded as one of the definitive masterpieces of British landscape painting alongside 'The Hay Wain,' this work holds a special place in British art history. Exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1826, the painting depicts a shepherd boy drinking from a stream along Fen Lane near East Bergholt in Suffolk—a location where Constable spent his childhood. After the artist's death in 1837, the painting was purchased by supporters and donated to the National Gallery, becoming the first work by Constable acquired by the institution.

Marianne Berardi, Senior Fine Arts Specialist at Heritage Auctions, states: 'This is one of the most important Constable rediscoveries in decades. It is an unknown autograph work that not only ties directly to 'The Cornfield' but also greatly deepens our understanding of how Constable crafted the images that represent British art.'

This subject was deeply personal to Constable. During his student years, he walked this landscape daily while traveling between East Bergholt and neighboring Dedham. It was inseparable from his self-perception as an artist. He once wrote, 'To me, painting is but another word for feeling,' and spoke of the banks of the River Stour and the memories of his 'innocent boy-hood' as the source of his artistic vision.

'The Cornfield' has long been lauded for its serene rural landscape and autobiographical sentiment. However, the process by which Constable reached the final composition had not been fully unraveled until now. This rediscovered study completely changes that understanding. Most importantly, it reveals that Constable did not move directly from small-scale sketches to the finished work. While previously assumed otherwise, this work confirms he produced full-scale preparatory studies in parallel with finished works even during his maturity.

Extensive research by leading Constable scholar Anne Lyles and Sarah Cove, a conservator and founder of the Constable Research Project, suggests that this newly authenticated work was painted in Constable's London studio in the winter of 1826, alongside the finished painting. Technical investigation confirmed that the materials and techniques used were perfectly consistent with Constable's work, and evidence was found that the artist worked on the canvas in two distinct periods. This suggests the conception of 'The Cornfield' may have begun years earlier than previously thought.

Infrared reflectography, pigment analysis, and cleaning tests revealed a multi-layered production process beneath the surface. Differences in paint application and evidence of the work resuming after initial layers had completely dried suggest that Constable returned to the work after a long hiatus. Anne Lyles and Sarah Cove speculate the work may have begun around 1823 as an incomplete project, eventually developing into a large-scale study for the final 1826 'The Cornfield.'

Marianne Berardi (Heritage Auctions) noted: 'Technical evidence has completely changed our understanding of this work. Infrared research, pigment analysis, and the structure of the paint layers all demonstrate that this is not merely a copy, but a study produced by Constable himself while constructing 'The Cornfield.' Discoveries of this caliber are extremely rare.'

FAQ

今回発見されたジョン・コンスタブルの作品は何ですか?

ロンドン・ナショナル・ギャラリー所蔵の代表作『トウモロコシ畑』のために制作された、これまで未確認だった実寸大の油彩習作です。

この作品はどこで発見されましたか?

長年、米国テキサス州のジェファーソン歴史博物館に所蔵されていました。

この習作がコンスタブルの真筆であるとどのように証明されましたか?

アンヌ・ライルズやサラ・コーヴらによる広範な学術調査、および赤外線反射法や顔料分析などの技術的調査により、制作技法や材料がコンスタブルの特徴と完全に一致することが確認されました。

この発見はなぜ美術史的に重要ですか?

コンスタブルが成熟期においても完成作と並行して実寸大の準備習作を制作していたことを示し、『トウモロコシ畑』の成立過程やコンスタブルの制作手法に関する理解を根本から変えるためです。

この作品はいつ、どこで競売にかけられますか?

ヘリテージ・オークションズ(米国テキサス州)が6月5日に開催する「Important European Art Auction」に出品されます。