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Trees at Hampstead
John Constable·1829
Historical Context
Trees at Hampstead, painted in 1829 and held at the National Gallery, is a late study of the mature trees that lined the paths and fields of the Heath. The vigorous brushwork and dark, rich palette characterize Constable’s late style, which became increasingly expressive and emotionally charged after Maria’s death in 1828. The trees’ massive forms are rendered with an energy that suggests not just botanical observation but emotional projection—the artist finding in the ancient trees’ endurance a counterpoint to his own grief. These late Hampstead paintings mark Constable’s transition from naturalistic recorder to expressionist, using the landscape as a vehicle for inner states.
Technical Analysis
The vigorous, spontaneous brushwork captures the movement of foliage in wind with remarkable freshness. Constable's varied greens, applied with palette knife and loaded brush, create a tactile surface that conveys the physical presence of the trees.
Look Closer
- ◆The foliage is built from varied strokes of green, creating a richly textured surface suggesting the movement of leaves in wind.
- ◆The confident, bold handling belongs to Constable's mature style — direct, assertive, unafraid of visible brushwork.
- ◆The 1829 date places this in the period following Maria Constable's death, grief and artistic ambition intensifying together.
- ◆The vertical format emphasizes the trees' height and the upward thrust of trunks growing toward the light.
Condition & Conservation
This tree study from 1829 is in the Tate collection, London. The painting dates from a difficult period following the death of Constable's wife Maria in 1828. The canvas has been cleaned and restored. The vigorous brushwork is well-preserved. The bold handling of the foliage demonstrates Constable's increasingly expressive approach in his late works.

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