Translate

Showing posts with label Royal Academy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Royal Academy. Show all posts

Tuesday, 30 January 2018

Charles I - King and Collector



Anthony van Dyck, Charles I in Three Positions

One of the last things that King Charles I saw on January 30 1649 as he made his way through the Banqueting House to the scaffold outside was the glorious ceiling painting he had commissioned in honour of his father, King James. The work of Peter Paul Rubens, it was one of some 2000 works of art in Charles’s collection, and one of the few not sold off after his execution by Oliver Cromwell. This sumptuous exhibition at the Royal Academy reunites 140 of them, including more than 90 pieces rescued and returned to the Royal Collection by subsequent monarchs. Charles acquired a taste for art when in 1623 he visited Madrid to pay court to a Spanish princess. He returned to England without his prospective bride but with a number of paintings, including some by Titian and Veronese. Bitten by the collecting bug, he went on to acquire works amassed by the Gonzaga family of Mantua, who had fallen on hard times. Among them were paintings by Leonardo and Raphael, as well as many from Northern Europe, and some antique sculptures, including this Crouching Venus (2nd c AD).
By now he had married Henrietta Maria, sister of King Louis XIII of France. She had grown up in a court surrounded by art, and her sophisticated tastes are thought to have influenced her husband.
Anthony van Dyck, Queen Henrietta Maria with Sir Jeffrey Hudson, 1633
She commissioned van Dyck to paint the triple portrait of Charles (top) that graces the first room of the exhibition. It was to be the basis of a marble bust of the king by Bernini, and was sent to him in Rome. (He was too busy to travel to England.) Sadly, the sculpture was destroyed in a fire in 1698, but the portrait remains.
Anthony van Dyck, Charles I in the Hunting Field c 1636
Three other van Dycks are reunited to form the core of this exhibition – two equestrian portraits of the king, and the celebrated one of him hunting, on loan from the Louvre and back in England for the first time since the seventeenth century. (It’s thought that Queen Henrietta Maria took it with her when she went into exile in France after her husband’s death.)
Interestingly, not all the works reflect the king’s personal taste – many were gifts from ambassadors or other nobles. Mantegna’s monumental series, The Triumph of Caesar c 1484 – 92, which fills a dedicated gallery (below), might have been seen as somewhat old-fashioned when it arrived; it was displayed at Hampton Court, rather than Whitehall Palace.
It also seems Rembrandt was not held in the esteem he is today, which was reflected in the price fetched by an exquisite portrait of an elderly woman, probably his mother, in Cromwell's sale - just £4. However Titian's Supper at Emmaus, (below) went for £600, while Raphael's La Perla, now in the Prado, was valued at £2000.
Titian, The Supper at Emmaus, c.1530
The works the Stuart monarch amassed have been described as “the finest collection of pictures ever assembled in this country,” and are credited with changing the appreciation of art in England. It’s taken five years of planning and international negotiations, aided by the support of the Prince of Wales, to stage this exhibition. As well as the Royal Collection, major lenders include the National Gallery, London, the Musée du Louvre, Paris, the Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid, and Mobilier National, Paris.


Among the treasures from Paris are the Mortlake tapestries of Raphael’s Acts of the Apostles, perhaps the most spectacular set of tapestries ever produced in England (above). The curators have been helped in understanding the importance to the king of various items by a working draft of a 1639 inventory (below) by Abraham van der Doort, the first Surveyor of the King’s Pictures.
In it, he describes the works and where they were hung. It reveals that the van Dyck painting in the background, showing the King and Queen with Prince Charles and Princess Mary, was known as the "Greate Peece" and was in the Long Gallery at Whitehall Palace. Sadly, around 1600 of the items listed have disappeared, lost, destroyed, or perhaps lanquishing unrecognised in private collections or archives. The curators are hoping that the interest created by the exhibition might prompt a closer look at works in storage, to see if they bear the tell-tale 'C' and crown.
Charles I, King and Collector. Royal Academy, London, until April 15 2018. £20 (concessions available)

www.royalacademy.org.uk

Tuesday, 15 August 2017

Matisse in the Studio




Henri Matisse, Safrano Roses at the Window, 1925
Oil on canvas, 80 x 65 cm 
Private collection
Photo © Private collection
© Succession H. Matisse/DACS 2017

What inspires an artist? For Van Gogh, it ranged from sunflowers to the village of Auvers-sur-Oise, where his life ended. Constable loved Flatford Mill and the Suffolk countryside, Degas had his dancers while Cezanne painted Mont Sainte Victoire many times. Matisse, we discover in this Royal Academy exhibition, loved what might be called bric-a-brac - items mostly with little material worth, but which had caught his eye. This innovative presentation brings together thirty-five of the objects he owned, many not publicly seen outside France before, and pairs them with sixty-five of the works in which they appear. Matisse once described his collection as a ‘working library’, suggesting they functioned as a resource to which he regularly returned. He took them with him from studio to studio, rearranging and studying them. “These objects keep me company ..... I am not alone”, he wrote to his wife.

Vase, Andalusia, Spain, early 20th century
Blown glass, 28.5 x 21 cm
Former collection of Henri Matisse. Musée Matisse, Nice. Bequest of Madame Henri Matisse, 1960, 63.2.195
Photo © François Fernadez, Nice
At the start of the exhibition is a simple blue Andalusian glass vase, bought in 1912. He painted it several times, (top) usually filled with flowers. In one painting on display, it is shown in a soft light that filters through the window and a lace curtain. In another, sharper light makes it seem heavier and more opaque. “A good actor can have a part in ten different plays; an object can play a role in ten different pictures,” he explained.

Unknown, Coffee Pot, France, early 19th Century
Silver, handle in wood, 14 x 10.9 x 10.9 cm
Musée Matisee, Nice
Photo © François Fernandez, Nice  
Perhaps the most famous ‘actor’ in his cast of treasured items was a wedding present, a silver pot for making chocolate. It is included in various still-lifes, occasionally even serving as a vase. The shape must have really appealed to him - he bought a second one and many years later featured it as a cutout in Still Life with a Shell.

Henri Matisse, Still Life with Shell, 1940
Gouache, coloured pencil, and charcoal on cut paper, and string, pinned to canvas, 83.5 x 115 cm
Private collection
Photo © Private collection
© Succession H. Matisse/DACS 2017
The exhibition also explores Matisse’s fascination with African artefacts. In 1908 he bought his first African sculpture from a dealer in Paris. He showed it to Picasso, and later remarked that “it was then when Picasso noticed negro sculpture”.

Muyombo mask, Pende region, Democratic Republic of the Congo, 19th-early 20th century 
Wood, fiber and pigment,  49 x 19.3 cm
Former collection of Henri Matisse. Private collection
Photograph by Jean-Louis Losi
As he began acquiring masks, admiring their simplification and freedom of expression, his art took a new direction. On display is a series of five sculptures of a friend, Jeanette Vaderin, each progressively more abstract. An Italian woman, possibly a refugee, also captured his imagination. He painted her almost 50 times in less than a year, her mask-like features suggesting a detached, enigmatic presence.

Henri Matisse, The Italian Woman, 1916
Oil on canvas, 116.7 x 89.5 cm
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. By exchange, 1982, 82.2946
Photo © The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation/Art Resource, NY
© Succession H. Matisse/DACS 2017
Another section of the exhibition is entitled The Studio as Theatre. In 1910 Matisse travelled to Germany for an exhibition, Masterpieces of Mohammedan Art. It included tapestries, reliefs, metalwork and other decorative arts produced in the near East. He loved their intricate and colourful decoration, and was inspired to take trips to southern Spain and North Africa. Using the embellished fabrics and elaborate furniture he collected, he transformed his studio into a theatrical set.

Haiti, North Africa, late 19th-early 20th century 
Cotton plainweave cut and appliquéd to bast fiber cloth, 217 x 212 cm 
Former collection of Henri Matisse. Private collection, on loan to Musée Matisse, Nice
Photo © François Fernandez, Nice 
The visitor can see the original perforated wall hanging, a ‘haiti’ (above) that, in a painting of an interior with his daughter, Marguerite and a model, becomes a Moorish screen.

Henri Matisse, The Moorish Screen, 1921
Oil on canvas, 91 x 74 cm
Philadelphia Museum of Art. Bequest of Lisa Norris Elkins, 1950 
Photo © Philadelphia Museum of Art/Art Resource, NY
In 1941, an operation for cancer left Matisse weak and mostly confined to his bed or a wheelchair. Unable to paint, he began experimenting with cut paper on a large scale. The shapes were fixed to the studio walls, having more in common with an installation or mural than an easel painting. His wife gave him a Chinese calligraphy panel for his 60th birthday and he was fascinated by the connection between form and meaning. Later, almost at the end of his career, he described his cut-outs as a summation of his life-long struggle to represent meaning in the least complicated way possible. The panel is featured in the exhibition’s final section, The Language of Signs, surrounded by cut-out elements. Looking at them, and the other items brought together for this illuminating exhibition, you really do see Cezanne’s mind at work.

Matisse in the Studio. Royal Academy of Arts, until Nov 12 2017 Admission £15.50 (concessions available)