A Disaster at Sea


A Disaster at Sea is a seascape painting by the British artist J.M.W. Turner. It depicts a ship floundering at sea with those on board clinging desperately to the sinking vessel. The painting was never exhibited in Turner's lifetime and is likely to be unfinished, although by the latter stages of Turner's carer his Romantic style became increasingly abstract and impressionist.
The work is generally held to be inspired by the loss of, a vessel carrying convicts being transported to Australia, off Boulogne in August 1833. It has also been suggested that it may have been based on, a ship that caught fire in the Atlantic Ocean with too few lifeboats on board.
Stylistically and the thematically the painting draws on the 1819 work The Raft of the Medusa by Théodore Géricault which Turner had seen when it was displayed in London in the early 1820s. The painting was part of the Turner Bequest to the United Kingdom in 1856. It is now part of the collection of the Tate Britain in Pimlico.