The gap in the
provenance of
The Fountain of Indolence between 1834 and 1882 lends credence to the theory that it is identical with
The Fountain of Fallacy, a painting which Turner exhibited at the
British Institution in 1839, accompanied by four lines from his own poem entitled
Fallacies of Hope. Its Rainbow-dew diffused fell on each anxious lip, Working wild fantasy, imagining; First, Science in the immeasurable Abyss of thought, Measured her orbit slumbering. Contemporary descriptions of the
Fountain of Fallacy apply equally well to
The Fountain of Indolence. In 1839, the year it was exhibited, Turner wrote to a Mr. Marshall that
The Fountain of Fallacy was for sale for 400 guineas and that he had no other painting of that size for sale. No subsequent ownership history of
The Fountain of Fallacy is known and the only recorded references to it after its first exhibition are two comments by
John Ruskin. According to Turner expert
Martin Butlin, in the
catalogue raisonné The Paintings of J.M.W. Turner, the available evidence indicates "that in fact there was – and is – only one" picture. ==See also==