By Christopher Barr │POSTED ON FEBRUARY 12, 2015

“What you know you can’t explain, but you feel it. You’ve felt it your entire life, that there’s something wrong with the world. You don’t know what it is, but it’s there, like a splinter in your mind, driving you mad.”
- Morpheus, The Matrix
"My business is to paint what I see, not what I know is there."
- J. M. W. Turner
MR. TURNER is a fascinatingly masterful film by the
always brilliant English director Mike Leigh. The film is a look at the
life and work of the great British painter J. M. W. Turner. The film is
wonderfully acted by every single actor involved and the look of the film is
breathtaking. Mr. Turner is truly a work of art in its own right, which in
that regard lets its audience become aware of its respect for the artistry of
its subject.



Turner felt that there was something wrong with the world,
like The Matrix quote from above, Turner felt it like a splinter in his
mind. He articulated this feeling on his canvases. His marine
paintings were pushing toward the edge of reality itself, where the existential angst of the coming modern machine world made it on his canvas. Mankind at the time of Turner’s pivotal painting period was
losing its religious solidarity. Turner himself was at least agnostic
during his life, forgoing the presence of God for the reality he was searching
for in his paintings. God was in the foreground for many centuries
because people generally knew nothing about the natural world. During Turner's time science was beginning to
become just as much a part of life as religion.
For Turner and many other free thinking people, this started to push God
to the background and in some cases, out of the picture entirely. Instead of painting cathedrals he painted the
Industrial Revolution as it unfolded.
"It is necessary to mark the greater from the lesser truth: namely the larger and the more liberal idea of nature from the comparatively narrow and confined; namely that which addresses itself to the imagination from that which is solely addressed to the eye."
- J. M. W. Turner
The events leading up to the end of the film were at
their most existential. Death is coming for us all and as much rhyme or
reason we might want to apply to it, it’s still coming. This film sees us
in our most naked form, spinning thousands of miles per minute in the bleak
cold nothingness of the universe. Turner tried to paint his way behind
the curtain to see the truth like so many before him and so many after.
Like others though he became restricted by the very structure he was
trying to escape. The frames of his paintings were as far as he was
permitted to go, where the poet is limited by the length of his page, Turner
was only able to go so far. This limitation though is where great art is
born. It’s because of these restraints that ideas hidden in the abyss of
the mind can surface, and here the artist’s task is to diagnose them and articulate them in some form of creative expression. What Turner did do was pave the way for impressionism as well as abstract art, essentially launching Modern Art.
He not only painted beautiful landscapes and raging seas, he painted the wonders
of science and progress, not necessarily optimistic progress but never the less
progress. He saw that mankind was on a bifurcating precipice and the
times as he knew them would be changing forever. He was born in the age
of sail and died in the age of steam during the Industrial Revolution.




J. M. W. Turner lived during a precarious time, where his contemporary Soren Kierkegaard developed existentialism, postulating that the anxiety we feel is the result of our total freedom to choose. While the sodality of the church continued to proselytize people into believing what the church believes, many were looking to science for their answers about existence. Alessandro Volta built the first electric battery and Pompeii was discovered at the base of Mount Vesuvius, which put an end to the frivolity of the Rococo Era ushering in Neoclassicism, which was a return to sterile academic form. The Romantic Era followed as a philosophical and literary movement focused away from disciplines of the Neoclassics and more toward, feelings, emotions, introspection and atmosphere as mankind struggled against the forces of the natural world. Turner became a vital figure in the art world and in how we look at ourselves while we look toward the horizon searching for the nature of reality. Mr. Turner is a celebration of the artist's plight in life, the film is raw and as real as they come just as Turner would have wanted it.