Showing posts with label Wallace Collection. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wallace Collection. Show all posts

Sunday, 28 October 2012

Keeping up with Madame Perregaux: Sensation! The Art of Painting - Wallace Collection, London

*** update 27/11/2012

The next Sensation event will take place on 3rd January, 2013 and will be a seasonal celebration of the Christmas story with Bridget Crowley describing some paintings.  The link is here http://www.wallacecollection.org/collections/event/4759  .  Telephone the Wallace on 020 7563 9577 or email community@wallacecollection.org

*** end of update


24th October, 2012
 
The Wallace Collection holds these Sensation events from time to time and my first experience of one was on the subject of Illuminated Manuscripts, which opened a window in subjects I would have thought fairly inaccessible.   It sparked an interest in many related topics and how they are interconnected.   
(http://www.wallacecollection.org/visiting/access)

On this occasion, we gathered in the front of the entrance lobby and were guided down to the workshop area by Edwina Mileham and Jocelyn Clarke (Jos).  Although the session was from 1pm to 5pm we are encouraged to bring sandwiches, with the Wallace providing tea, coffee, chocolate biscuits and shortbread. I had spoken to Edwina prior to the workshop and learned that we would be mixing paint and that aprons would be provided. 

Edwina briefly introduced The Wallace Collection and the French pictures in the collection, saying we would be studying two works:  a portrait by Elisabeth-Louise Vigee Le Brun and a portrait by Jean-Baptiste Greuze.    Edwina also mentioned that Christoph Vogtherr, Director of the Collection, would be joining us to discuss art history in relation to the two pictures.

Vigee Le Brun’s portrait of Madame Perregaux is dated 1789 and has an interesting history, as does the painter herself.  Vigee Le Brun was the daughter of a painter and married into the art dealer trade, while keeping a position as a society painter of portraits.  She was well in with Marie Antoinette and had painted her in Vienna.  Vigee Le Brun had studied the techniques of the 17th Century artist Rubens and set out to paint a portrait with oil on wood rather than the follow the convention of her time, which was oil on canvas. 

The assembly of a wood panel had been quite a task of carpentry and in the time of Rubens the workshops of artists would have been full of workers engaged in carpentry, pigment preparation, manufacture of size, gesso and brushes.  All these steps were carried out by specialists of the time.  It was unusual, therefore, for a painting to be on wood as a cradle of 5 panels had to be assembled. 

The portrayal of the subject matter was also a bit of an anachronism.  Madame Perregaux is painted wearing Spanish costume of a century earlier, with predominantly black clothing set off with red highlights in the form of feathers in a hat and ribbons and piping on the dress.  White ruffs accentuate the face, and the body is framed with a curtain and a balustrade (probably not unlike the balustrade on the stairway in the Wallace Collection which came from the Banque de France).  The style of dress was familiar in the Spanish Netherlands or as part of Flemish Art. 

Jos described the painting of Madame Perregaux,  She is portrayed with a three quarter turning to the left of the painting.  Her left hand reaches towards curtains while her right hand holds on to a balustrade.  We had a discussion about the need for Vigee Le Brun to dress Madame Perregaux in a costume which was clearly of historic interest.  Christoph Vogtherr joined us and after finding where we had got to in the history of the painting, went on to describe the techniques used of the time. 

The Wallace Collection has had to relocate many of the paintings in the restoration programme of the Great Hall and we were given examples of how workshops and artists employed many skills in the production of a painting.  I hadn’t appreciated how long it took to make a painting in terms of allowing the oil to settle rather than dry out.  The number of layers in this painting is quite complex as the brush work involved in the drawing of the feathers and Madame’s hair is very fine.  We wondered about how often Madame would have actually sat for the painting.

Christoph then went on to introduce a painting by Greuze of Sophie Arnauld.  At first glance, this seemed very out of style until it was explained that the picture had been a sketch.  Artists in the 18th century would have made several sketches of their subject and it was important to get the face right in terms of the client’s wishes, with the other items such as the figure, dress and background being filled in at different times.  In the case of the Greuze painting, it had been bought and finished off years after Greuze.  On examination, the additions to this painting were removed revealing essentially the face of Sophie Arnauld without the conventional additions of the time. 

Christoph explained that much of the Wallace Collection has documentation regarding the sale documents and I asked how the Madame Perregaux came into the collection.  It turned out to have been sold by the family whose fortunes had declined and forced a sale.  Much of French art disappeared during the revolution and emerged in the sale rooms of the 19th century during the collecting period. 

Christoph also introduced the subject of different types of wood which were used in paintings.  Poplar wood is used in many Italian Renaissance paintings and in some cases has not aged well with considerable conservation interventions.  The northern European use of harder woods has made for more robust pictures, though painting surfaces can become abraded due to wear and tear of the wood through insect infestation, warping, lack of humidity control and temperature changes.  We were able to ask questions during Jos’s and Christoph’s explanations, and later in the workshop as they arose. 

We then had what I usually refer to as a Blue Peter moment where “something I prepared earlier” is passed round.  In this case it was a velvet hat with red plumes.  With little coaxing, I was able to model the said hat and pose in front of the picture itself for all to ‘see’. 
 
Professor Whitestick tries on a plumed velvet hat
thinking it was to do with the French Revolution! ;-)
 
We also passed round an intricate copy of the ruff worn by Madame Perregaux.  This has quite stiff (obviously starched) cotton with fine lace on the edges. 


Workshop


Edwina had prepared an example of a wooden surface, with the cradle structure showing the supports for the panels to prevent the warping of the wood through age.  (Tennis rackets when made of wood were kept in a press or frame to prevent warping) The surface of the wood had to be treated with special materials in order to get a really flat surface.  We passed around this cradle and this gave us a sense of what actually goes on behind the apparent first layer of a picture that is the wood itself.

Examples of linen canvas were also passed around and the texture of some of these fabrics could show through the finished picture without preparation.  Linen had to be sized with proprietary size made of animal bones boiled to make a gelatine or even a basic glue. Samples of crystallised size were passed around and sniffed; not much of a smell if any was the consensus. 

Jos described the application of gesso and even gesso grosso (I am afraid two of the Scottish contingent let the side down with this). Gesso is commonly known as gypsum or calcium sulphate and is described as whitening though not itself a white pigment.  The use of gesso allows controlled application of paint rather than have the paint colour bleed into the wood itself.  Jos said that even today many artists take a lot of time in preparing their working surface long before the application of any oil paint.   Commercially bought canvases are often primed in advance.

Next, Edwina passed round paint in the form of a roll of colours - we were to mix a yellow ochre oil paint later – from samples she had got for us from L.Cornelissen & Son.  Jos went through a list of colours and sources which could have been around at the time of the painting by Vigee Le Brun. These included carmine from cochineal beetle, azurite, ochres or earths, copper based colours such as malachite, verdigris (a common name for a green pigment), Rose madder (Alizirin), lamp black, Prussian blue (discovered in the early 1700s), vermilion (made from mercury or cinnabar), lead and tin oxides. 

There was a side discussion on the use of cow urine in the preparation of some colours.  This practice continued with a well-known producer of photographic film keeping a herd of cows for that purpose.  As sizing a canvas involved applying gesso or animal glue to the empty canvas, often old pieces of parchment or vellum were boiled up, essentially producing gelatine.  At this point, discussion veered into gelatine production problems on account of mad cow disease and the use of gelatine in photographic film. 

Various brushes were handed round including some using string to bind the hog bristles to a wooden handle, and ferrule brushes where the hair is clamped with a metal ferrule to the handle.  We also used a glass muller to mix pigments in an oil film on a marble surface.  Describing a figure of 8, the pigment is evenly distributed into the linseed oil and can be gathered with a palette knife or even picked up with a brush.  We had great fun doing this with various consistencies, and using brushes we painted our own ‘wooden’ panels. 

 
Prof Whitestick wearing a straw hat is seated with a muller (feels like a 3 cm curling stone) on a board
 and holding a palette knife in his right hand
 
One of the group thought that for an artist to take all this care and preparation, it must have been terrifying using the first brush stroke on the surface, though of course we realised that in a workshop studio, the preparation would be done by the apprentices. 

In conclusion, we thoroughly enjoyed four hours of art history and learned so much by being in front of the pictures, trying to compare our reproduction with the original, listening to the description history and techniques of the time and passing around a model of Madame Perregaux’s hat with the feathers and the ruff.  In the workshop afterwards, we learned and were able to handle a lot more to do with the actual painting procedures of the time.  In this instance, the Wallace Collection not only gave an audio description but we had the real bonus of handling examples of the costume and trying out some of the painting and processing techniques.  This wasn’t just a case of what the painting is, but a good example of how the painting works with a bonus of what makes the painting work. 

Many thanks to Christoph, Edwina and Jos for an interesting afternoon.
 

Professor Whitestick standing outside the Mary Weston Studio
within the Wallace Collection


 

Postscript


From a 1989 Wallace catalogue, Vigee Le Brun was said to have been “pleased with the likeness” in the Madame Perregaux portrait.  She was, however, dissatisfied with female dress of her own time and put all her efforts into making her paintings a little more ‘pittoresque’.  I had mentioned to Edwina about my visit to the Catherine the Great exhibition in Edinburgh during the summer and as Vigee Le Brun had spent sometime in St Petersburg, wondered if there was any mention of her in that catalogue.  Sure enough there was, I discovered when I got home. 
 
There was a painting titled “Daughters of the Emperor Paul I, the Grand Princesses Alexandra and Elena Pavlovna” dated 1796 (held in the State Hermitage Museum). However, according to the exhibition catalogue, Catherine the Great had not been impressed with the picture of her grandchildren, feeling that they looked like “pug dogs” or “repulsive little French peasant girls.” (p70)  Catherine ordered that the representation of the girls as “bacchantes” be removed, so that grapes were replaced with wreaths of flowers and bare arms were “concealed under their dresses.”  As the catalogue noted, Catherine the Great had rejected the baroque style at the start of her reign, and later also rejected any form of Sentimentalism and Romanticism.

Regarding the Greuze painting, the 1989 Wallace Catalogue states that “Cleaned by Lank in 1988 when overpainting in the lower area (summarily indicating the folds of a dress) was removed.”

Tuesday, 26 June 2012

Noble Art of the Sword - Study Day, Wallace Collection

On the 16th of June I attended a study day at the Wallace Collection. (http://www.wallacecollection.org/collections/event/4311 )  I arrived in good time to have my 3rd “view” of The Noble Art of the Sword exhibition.  ( http://www.wallacecollection.org/collections/exhibition/93 ) (Notes on my previous two visits can be found on: http://profwhitestick.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/noble-art-of-sword-exhibition-at.html )


Prof Whitestick at the entrance to
The Noble Art of the Sword exhibition
Wallace Collection
28 June 2012
© Prof Whitestick

One of the staff read out details of a Saxon silver sword with fine silversmith workings and I re-familiarised myself with a few more of the exhibits.  Sarah from the Wallace had sent me the information in text format used for the large print information booklet.  This was ideal and neatly complemented my first tour when my friend Jackie read out the captions on what I could make out or “see”.

There are a few specialist terms and foreign words and authors of fencing manuals which the exhibition explains.  Some of the terms can be checked for the correct spelling which makes further research easier.  I was able to work through items in advance of the study day so that I could follow the speakers.

Through my screenreader I had a virtual audio guide which provided a lot of information on the items in the exhibition.  My screenreader is set to American male voice (Jaws and you do get used to it) and when the cursor came across items in Italian, German and French the screenreader switched to the appropriate language though rather than revert back to my usual American chum it went to a rather plummy and sinister British English!

The programme was as follows and was linked in with the themes explored in the exhibition itself.  There were about 60 people in attendance.

“In the 16th-century it [the sword] became an essential part of civilian dress as well. This study day will examine the complex story of the sword in everyday life during the Renaissance, their role as weapons but also as status symbols, jewellery objects, and works of art. Topics will include the evolution of the rapier, its development, construction and decoration, and its use, which was illustrated in lavish fencing books published throughout the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.”



1.  Exhibition themes of The Noble Art of the Sword by Tobias Capwell


One of the most interesting aspects about coming to a subject about which one has had little knowledge is the enthusiasm and experience of listening to a curator of an exhibition or organiser of a conference.  Toby had been involved with the concept and preparation for this exhibition for several years (from 2006) so the insight into the subject and the fluency in the talk was stimulating.

The illustrations of the development of the rapier were suitable for my peripheral vision and the outline of a sword’s hilt and blade in a series of 8 was clear in my mind especially when combined with the descriptions and having just refreshed my memory of some of the swords.  Anecdotes are always worth hearing and I liked the story of when Toby was in Dresden and having picked his swords (he could pick 2), the Dresden authorities asked him if he would like the costume of Christian II, Elector of Saxony. It had been put away in 1942 and had rarely been uncovered since. This is one of the show stoppers for me.

Toby went through the design manuals by Orsoni (borrowed from V&A) which were followed by craftsmen.  The fencing manuals arose when an architect Camillo Agrippa wrote down some geometry with fencing.  Fight and Fencing Masters wrote, developed and rewrote manuals from mid 16th Century and characters such as Achille Marozzo, Camillo Palladini and Girard Thibault emerge.



Fencing according to Thibault
Wallace Collection
28 June 2012
© Prof Whitestick

 
The wider access of books on sword fighting allowed some type of Renaissance crowd sourcing to suggest that many masters were influenced by other fencing schools. Toby suggested some work on Camillo Palladini could be done.  For the exhibition the Wallace had gone through Milan archives tracking down the craftsmen involved in all aspects of swordsmithing, jewellery and trade.  Outside of the exhibition is a real-sized fight diagram from Girard Thibault and I positioned my cane on it during a break.

The issue of civilian sword and fashion accessory was raised.  Toby disliked the term accessory, as the rapier was an integral part of a gentleman or nobleman’s dress - as essential as underpants and shoes.  The hilt, dagger, belt, scabbard, doublet buttons and even shoe buckles were made to match.  Being fashionable items they had to match.  With unlimited budgets, the rapier set with costume said a lot.  The rapier then became a ceremonial or non fighting sword though there is much to be debated here.

The fencing manuals in the exhibition were difficult for me to discern and the large enlargements on the screen made the positions and the history of the collections of fencing manuals come alive.


2.  The De Walden Collection of Fight Manuals by Joshua Pendragon, Guest Assistant Curator, The Noble Art of the Sword


Toby and Joshua mentioned the difficulty in showing books in an exhibition as only 2 pages can be shown at once.

Joshua had old black and white film clips of fencing bouts and though far removed from Hollywood, there is still a mystique of the rituals employed.  Descriptions of the fight sketches can make these appear much as in a sketch by Picasso, a set with actors by Zoffany or the Furusiyya horse manuals as shown and described in the current British Museum exhibition.

Serendipity plays an important part in collections and the uncovering of the Howard de Walden Library was explained by Joshua.  George Silver was a writer in England in the 16th Century and had been critical of the craze for Italian fencing masters and some of their habits.  Joshua and Toby had worked on a collection of fencing manuals held in Glasgow forming part of a collection of the RL Scott Bequest.  Tracking down books and documents is part of an historian’s stock in trade and I found it interesting how this Howard de Walden Library is gradually being opened up.

3.  The Rapier and its Relation to Military Swords of the Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth Centuries by Keith Dowen, The Wallace Collection


Nomenclature is an area ripe for pedants and the distinction between a military sword and a fashion accessory was explained by Keith.  The definition of sword and rapier has been a cause of much discussion and Keith offered examples of rapiers which had been used in the field; but as battles had ceased being decided by the knights, the role of the sword/rapier gradually changed.  During questions, some members of the audience told of examples of their own.  One cited a Scottish clan chief taking his rapier to defend himself but as it was mainly a fashion item, it had little functionality!

James IV of Scotland has a mention of rapier in an inventory including Wallace swords.  The function of the sword was also discussed, whether to cut and slash or thrust.  The arms and armour go together and the protection afforded by the hilt, guards and gauntlets can give a clue to the precise use of the sword.  The theme of form, function and evolution during the Renaissance echoed the presentations.


4.  The Construction and Conservation of Renaissance Swords by David Edge, Head of Conservation, The Wallace Collection


Conservation topics were discussed by David who liaised with his opposite numbers in Vienna for the sword of the Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian II- a stand had to be made for the showing of this very richly decorated object.  With so much gold content and being purely for show, it was interesting when David put on enlargements of parts of the hilt decorations and they were held together much in the way of a Meccano set, with iron nuts and bolts.  The enlargements coupled with my being in the front allowed me to appreciate the fine filigree work on the gold pieces.

Issues of polishing and burnishing of Renaissance objects were discussed.  There were a lot of “Caveat Emptors” for any collector and the subject of forgery and the sword equivalent of Grangerism was not lost.  It is not uncommon for pieces of a rapier to be reassembled with newly fashioned pieces.

It was interesting to hear curators and the audience mentioning X-Ray Fluorescence as if it was routine, which it is.  David pointed out that XRF would just confirm that the sword blade was 99% iron (Fe).  Traces of mercury (Hg) and gold (Au) could be detected, proving that the hilt had some gilding in the past, though this had been lost through time, fashion and misuse.

Mercury had been used in the process, so other techniques had to be explored.  The Wallace has a microscopy section which can scan surfaces but the construction and internal sword details can only be used with fragments.  Many collectors in Victorian times had added brass embellishments and with a specified copper-zinc ratio investigation these could usually be detected.

Polishing and burnishing techniques were also discussed though these are no longer in use as nowadays a lacquer is applied rather than a continued removal of the surface.  David had investigated sword manufacture processes in Jodhpur, India and had visited a cache of unused blades which had been uncovered in Graz.  Many swords had steel plate applied to an iron core and these were prone to breaking as the welding gave way.  I could not believe it when David mentioned that they had access to neutron diffraction facilities!


5.  The Rapier – product of an advanced metallurgy by Alan Williams, Metallurgist, The Wallace Collection


Alan continued with some technical aspects from metallurgy.  Although I could talk a lot about some of the chemistry of iron, the properties of steel are quite vague in my mind.  Alan carefully went through measurable properties such as hardness and qualities such as being ductile.  Steel making in the 16th Century was a bit hit or miss as far as tempering and quenching steel with varying slag content. While it was possible to do some “destructive” testing on a few broken pieces of rapiers, for other pieces a non destructive method has to be found.  Step forward Neutron Diffraction!  The facilities at Didcot are being used and in discussion I found out that about 3 days is allocated to some Arts projects in a Charisma programme.  However, funding for large science facilities might also be at risk in government cutbacks.  Some twitter exchanges resulted and I was sent a link about this.


Prof Whitestick's cane meets ancestor at the Wallace Collection
28 June 2012
© Prof Whitestick

This Study Day was a wonderful experience.  At the Wallace Collection Anne and Sarah had made every facility accessible to me.  I had a front row seat and a recording of the lectures was made for me using my own recorder.  This shows that many subjects, even the more esoteric ones, can be made both interesting and accessible to visually impaired people.  I am lucky to have so many wonderful facilities within a short bus ride or train ride away.  Accessible education, leisure and transport give us all a chance to explore.

PS Within a few days I was talking to a silversmith, having a “copper” coin converted to silver, my cane was too big for the XRF facility, a photogram using silver technology was taken of my cane and I handled a solid belled saxophone.  Another collection at the Wellcome this time!   For more on gold, silver and bronze see my post:

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

The Noble Art of the Sword: exhibition at Wallace Collection

***Update 7/10/2012

Noble art of the sword – conclusion

The Wallace Collection held an event called Swordplay Saturday on 15th September 2012.  This concluded the Noble Art of the Sword exhibition and continued Renaissance themes with talks on items from the Wallace Collection featuring Titian’s Perseus and Andromeda, Italian Renaissance Painting, The Renaissance in France and Colourful crockery and Glorious glasses: high end entertaining in the Renaissance. 

I liked this exhibition very much and had attended a curator talk earlier in the week as I expected the exhibition to be busy by the weekend.  The day had many events running in parallel and with a little planning it was possible to join the programme and follow the various themes. 


 Historical Fencing Demonstration by The Sussex Sword Academy
at Wallace Collection
15th September 2012

There were two demonstrations of fencing which were provided by The Sussex Sword Academy in the morning and by The School of the Sword in the afternoon.  I found these demonstrations fascinating as the actions of the fencers mimicked many of the diagrams in the fencing manuals which I had heard been discussed during the sword study day which I attended, and the collection from the De Walden Library, now under the care of the Wallace Collection. 

It was also a chance to have a last look round the sword exhibition and it was possible to take a few good photographs of some of the items including: the sword of the future Maximillian II;

Rapier of the future Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian II


the rapier and parade costume of Christian II, Elector of Saxony;



Rapier and Parade costume of Christian II, Elector of Saxony




and a beautiful sword and dagger example of silver craftsmanship, where the silver has been cut as if it had been made from wax or even cheese – according to Tobias Capwell, the curator.


Rapier (detail) , Saxon, Dresden c1608


In the Great Hall upstairs there were performances of Work for Cutlers, or a Merry Dialogue between Sword, Rapier and Dagger.  This was performed by three actors taking the part dressed in costume of the time.   There was a lot of word play and even examples of wordsmithing at its finest.  In England, George Silver has spoken disparagingly of the rapier as a bird spit.  In the play, much was made of the reference to capons being roasted, presumably on a spit.  
  
I had noted in the demonstrations outside how much sword and duelling language is used, especially in debates.  For example, parry and riposte.  I had even heard the term contretemps, which is probably derived from the Italian.  In the fencing demonstrations, much was made of the assessment of time and distance regarding fencing, but also taking the measure.  I hadn’t realised that this was a fencing term.

Regarding the other items it was fascinating to hear how the Wallace conserved a fresco by Foppa, and a panel of a triptych by Cimma.  In the Renaissance crockery talk, Suzanne Higgot discussed the colour and glazes used in maiolica.  The Wallace has a large collection of interesting pieces and I was intrigued by the colours and the use of tin and some lead glazes.  I had bought a piece of Wemyss ware in Ceres in Scotland.  This was noted for its bright colours, though the original pieces had crazed.  Suzanne Higgot also showed us examples of Venetian glass and again I was intrigued when she mentioned the discolouration of some glassware due to a process known as solarisation.  Manganese dioxide had been used to remove other colours but through time a pink colour usually shows on exposure to sunlight. 

On a previous trip to the Wallace Collection, I had bought up old copies of the catalogues which, with black and white photographs, allow my peripheral vision to detect some of the patterns and engravings combined with the full description of the item in question.   This allows me to ask a sighted person to look up such items in the catalogues and together we found the ceramic and glassware from my description of the items I had heard. 

These themed days allow access to curators on the spot and an increased access to what may be a closed book to visually impaired people.

*** end of update

Update: 10/6/2012

For exhibitions, the Wallace Collection has large print guides for those with some vision for reading purposes.  If you would like an electronic version of this, you should contact the Education Department (020 7563 9549 or 020 7563 9527), who may be able to assist in advance of your visit.  The staff in attendance will happily read out a caption, if there is anything particular in the exhibition or in the permanent collection you want read.

*** end of update

Update: 7/6/2012


On 7th June, 2012 the Wallace Collection had a lunchtime talk about Elizabethan armour by Dr Tobias Capwell who curates the Noble Art of the Sword exhibition currently on.  These talks are on a first come first served basis and having arrived early I had time to go round the exhibition myself before being taken to the armour gallery. 

Toby explained that Elizabeth of England had not gone to war and had created an image of herself as both Gloriana and the Virgin Queen. Her father Henry VIII was a competent knight as had been his father. It was expected that an English King would lead an army into battle. As a woman Queen Elizabeth had to transmit her power through her courtiers and they were expected to fight. 

The suit of Sir Thomas Sackville is unique in being complete.  Suits of armour could be made on a bespoke basis by first getting a royal licence and then commissioning the Royal Workshops at Greenwich to make up a set. (http://wallacelive.wallacecollection.org/eMuseumPlus?service=ExternalInterface&module=collection&objectId=60553) At today’s prices, this could be £500,000 – a status symbol. Though much of the courtly love and medieval trappings had gone from the practical side of armour, the suit of armour nevertheless represented the status of the wearer. Metallurgical discoveries were still being made and the craftsmanship in a suit of armour was highly skilled even if the steel was of low quality when compared with today’s alloys.  Using microscopy it is possible to identify the workshop of a maker.  Tempering of steel can give a blue colour and some suits could be described as resembling peacocks. 

Questions from the audience were answered. One had asked if armour could protect from firearms at the time. Another asked about the imagery of Queen Elizabeth as a Joan of Arc character. Toby mentioned that the armour could offer protection against some of the firearms of the time but that mobility and protection had to be balanced in those times (1588) in the same way as modern tanks now have to consider. There was no evidence that Elizabeth ever wore any armour or that she was near an actual battle. The danger always lay at the hands of an assassin.

I mentioned to Toby that I had heard him on BBC Radio3 In Tune.  There was some renaissance battle music.  Toby also mentioned that he was doing a Midweek show on BBC Radio4. I was encouraged to attend a Study Day at the Wallace Collection and on checking in at the front desk with Michael I went back to the Dutch Galleries (It was raining cats and dogs!)  One of the staff described one of her favourite paintings to me and I could make out my Albert Cuyp painting.  Outside it was still raining so having been given more details about the Study Day by Michael I went to the gift shop and bought a few cards.  The rain had stopped and I decided to make for the bus stop in Portman Square. 

A very pleasant afternoon taking in a talk, the exhibition again and a viewing of the 17th Century Dutch Pictures. Many thanks to all and also to Sonia who recognised me from last summer!

Reports of the study day can be found on: http://profwhitestick.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/noble-art-of-sword-study-day-wallace.html 



*** end of update


I have just started walking again without a crutch, albeit only for a short time, but I felt it was appropriate to visit a museum or gallery.  My friend Jackie had thought the new exhibition at the Wallace Collection was suitable. It was a short bus run away and my cane and crutch would complement the ornate swords and accessories on show. 

Having viewed a display of weaponry in Edinburgh Castle, I was prepared for seeing how much my peripheral vision could make out of the Noble Art of the Sword.  For this exhibition the Wallace’s own collection of renaissance swords was supplemented by exhibits on loan from collections in the Staatliche Kunstsammlunger in Dresden (http://www.skd.museum/en/) and the Kunsthistorisches Museum (Hofjagd und Rustkammer) in Vienna (http://www.khm.at/en/collections/collection-of-arms-and-armour/) . 

I had been round the Dresden Albertinum and Grunes Gewolbe in the past and had seen many of the glories of Saxony in the 1980s. I had also been to the Hofburg in Vienna and seen many of the Holy Roman Emperor accessories on visits. There is a fascinating exhibit of the sword  of Christian II Elector of Saxony (c1605-7).  The costume of the Elector (c1601-9) is also on display and though I could not make out the colours, Jackie read out the captions. Both exhibits are on loan from the in Dresden ()

Fine silks coloured in Lapis Lazuli were used in doublet and breeches.  I could make out the silhouette of said monarch and commented that he was a bit well padded in the hip department!  The Wallace Collection and guest exhibits have objects with swords, accessories, fencing manuals and illustrations of fencing in the form of drawings and there is a portrait of Robert Dudley with rapier attached. 

There is a rapier of the future Holy Roman Emperor Maximillian II when the empire was in control of the Hapsburg dynasty. The Holy Roman Empire has cropped up before in this blog when the Elector Palatine was mentioned.  Indeed the costume of Elizabeeth Stuart is described with her portrait in the National Portrait Gallery, London.  One can imagine the artistry in making such objects. Gold and silver were used in clothing as well as in the intricate ornamentation of the rapiers themselves. 

We found many examples of swords, daggers and even a scimitar. I could recognise this by its crescent shape.  Some of the displays show a selection of rapiers with intricate blade shapes and one even seemed to resemble a saw with teeth.  Much of the vocabulary was new and though I knew the word hilt, I had never heard the word pommel used in relation to swords.  Pommel and cantle had been known from my pony trekking days. 

The swords are exhibited in glass cases and though the room is quite darkly lit I could make out the swords and the designs of the pommels and hilts.  Duelling, though forbidden, was not uncommon and fencing lessons and rules of engagement were made.  Gauntlets and bucklers are also on display.

On exiting the exhibition area which is in the basement there is also an interpretation centre with lots of imaginative objects to handle and even wear. There is a tunic and collar of chain mail. This is very heavy and I resisted putting on this for now but I did put on a breastplate and a helmet with 2 slits acting as a visor. 



Knight in shining armour!
Wallace Collection
19/5/2012


Having the helmet on produced a strange effect on my ears.  Though the origin of the sound is of the sea shell variety, it was very tinny and I felt as if I were wearing a dustbin and probably resembled a Dalek more than ever.  I could not see anything through the visor and this probably illustrates my lack of central vision. 
Assuming the rapier was used in right hand the free hand had to be protected in a different way from the sword hand.  There is also a mystery object which can be felt and I won’t disclose what it is.

There are exhibits of the craftsmanship involved in sword making.  The same skills in handling gold and silver would have been employed in those artisan workshops in the manufacture of illuminated manuscripts and reliquaries. Milan seems to have been a centre of excellence for sword making and Bruges is also mentioned.


The Wallace Collection has another interesting exhibition which brings some life to Shakespeares dramas such as Romeo and Juliet.  Christopher Marlow came up in discussion - he was killed in a brawl in Deptford. During the summer the Wallace Museum is organising events and more details can be found on :


BBC Radio3 In Tune (Tuesday 22nd May 2012) featured the Wallace Collection and music by Monteverdi ‘Tancredi and Clarinda’.  Monteverdi had set a battle scene to music and the exhibition came up in the discussion about the piece.

TIP

For the time being, many buses have returned to familiar routes in the Portman Square area, though there is still some construction work in Baker Street.  Diversions along Wigmore Street seem to have stopped.

Wednesday, 11 April 2012

17th Century Dutch Paintings : Golden Age- Part 1 National Gallery and Wallace Collection

***Update 19/9/2012

Tweet exchange on Ask a Curator Day on Twitter

@rijksmuseum #askacurator How many of your Albert Cuyp pictures in collection feature cows, number + %

@ProfWhitestick I count 32 Albert Cuyp works featuring cows. But correct me if I’m wrong ;) http://bit.ly/UnCfPt

***end of update

Update 6/5/2012


A conversation on Twitter with the Wallace Collection:



new Post: Rediscovering an interest in 17th Century Dutch Paintings - at a gallery near you http://profwhitestick.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/17th-century-dutch-paintings-golden-age.html Tot ziens!

Wallace Collection
@profwhitestick Very pleased you enjoyed it - do you have a favourite art work in there?

@WallaceMuseum There is an Albert Cuyp painting with an avenue of trees and a view of Dordrecht and a group in the avenue.

@profwhitestick Brilliant choice!

*** end of update


I have always admired those 17th Century paintings that would fit nicely in a suitcase and could fit in quite well at home.  It may be that growing up near the sea in Edinburgh gave one a sense of sharing the North Sea with European neighbours.  It may be the light or the detail but I still find much enjoyment in the style of landscapes, seascapes, town scenes and genre paintings such as the The Lacemaker, which strikes an impression of gloom, dark clothes and possibly dour Scottish themes.  Perhaps that’s what draws me to these paintings.  As they used to say in the Lace making towns of Ayrshire (Galston, Newmilns and Darvel): there is a lot going on behind the lace curtain!


The Lacemaker by Caspar Netscher
(taken at the Wallace Collection on 7th April 2012)

 
I was in the Netherlands in 1966 on a school cruise and the students were rioting at the time.  We had to travel through Amsterdam on a waterbus and the closest place to the centre we could visit on dry land was the Rijksmuseum.  Memories of endless gables of Amsterdam have remained with me and I can still “spot” Dutch influences in Scotland at Culross, Preston Mill and the East Neuk of Fife.  Similarly the trade between East Anglia and the Low Countries has an influence on landscapes and buildings.  On 10th April BBC Radio3 Nightwave discussed landscape with Alexandra Harris contributing similar thoughts about Dutch influence on landscape culture in England.  http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01fjtls#synopsis

Just as my peripheral vision can pick up the Shard in London, it can also pick up lines in a painting of steeples, ship masts, avenues of trees and bridges over a canal or river.  Soon after starting this blog I attended an Art Through Words talk about Dutch painter Gerrit Berckheyde ‘Groote Kirke in Harlem’.  This is a painting of a large church and town centre scene in Harlem in the Netherlands.  This is where we have a problem in the Dutch language and the variants in spelling and for that matter the way that a screenreader will pronounce the names.  Sometimes a search will be unsuccessful but the predictor can be lucky.  I tried to get Bergheide right and was often “corrected”.  Here is the link to the National Gallery for this painting. 


Indeed a search in the National Gallery website is accessible and many of the paintings, once found, have a description.  The National Gallery owes much of the collection to King George IV and Robert Peel. http://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/

The Gallery also has a trail round some of the Dutch paintings where it is possible to zoom into some of the images.  This can make some paintings more accessible depending on the type of vision you may have. 


Many of us with sight loss can make out something and these finely drawn paintings of the 17th Century allow me, with my peripheral vision, to get some idea of the painting while those with “tunnel vision” can often identify much of the detail.  I have written down some names, but be careful in copying and pasting into searches on the internet. There are a few lists on the Internet but with Dutch names both the first name and the surnames have changed over the years.

Johannes Vermeer

Rembrandt van Rijn

Esaias van de Velde

Frans Hals

Jan van der Heyden

Jacob van Ruisdael

Jan Steen

Pieter de Hooch

Willem van de Velde the Younger

Caspar Netscher

Gerard ter Borch

Aelbert Cuyp

Adam Frans van der Muelen

David Teniers the Younger

Ludolf Backhuyzen

Meindert Hobbema

Johannes Lingebach

Hendrick ten Oevers

Adrian van de Velde


Some of the problems in resolving the Dutch, Flemish, French and English search terms can be avoided with this very useful website for those interested in Dutch and Flemish Art.  It copes with the language divide in Belgium: http://www.codart.nl/index/

However, there is another problem with some art definitions.  Netherlandish is the term often used (see my post on Hieronymus Bosch) then Flemish Art is used for the period of Spanish occupied South Netherlands or Flanders.  Dutch is often used for North Netherlands, especially the Calvinist provinces which went on to gain independence and form the Kingdom of The Netherlands. 

It may be helpful to check out a list of Dutch artists and spellings.  Also, if you have access to some collections on the internet, it is worth searching for a Facebook gallery and trying to enlarge the image.  This sometimes works with a high resolution image.  For a history of Dutch Painting I have found this link to the famous Boijmans museum in Rotterdam -  http://collectie.boijmans.nl/en/theme/golden-age/

A few days after the National Gallery talk, I visited Kenwood House in Hampstead, London.  This is a beautiful Robert Adam House, though is closed till 2013 due to a major refurbishment. There is a fine collection of Dutch paintings including a Vermeer - Lady with Guitar - and some Rembrandts. The Rembrandt has gone on tour, though the Vermeer stays in the UK.   

This shows a scene in Dordrecht and on enquiring at the bookshop if there was a postcard of the painting I was told that there was a book of paintings with the Cuyp painting in it under the Phaidon Label.  These books are large format and are handy for having at home.  The pages are large enough for me to notice something and a friend can often be persuaded to go with you and “see” others in the book which covers paintings in the National Gallery, Wallace Collection, Kenwood House, Buckingham Palace, National Gallery of Scotland as well as institutions in Frankfurt, Amsterdam, Rotterdam and New York.

Wallace Museum

I mentioned to my friend Jackie as we made our first visit to the newly refurbished Wallace Collection galleries that optics was a new technique for painters to use in art and sharp lines were just about discernible to me.  Sure enough the gallery notes at the Wallace mentioned that some painters used lenses to fine tune details!

The refurbishment of the Wallace Collection gallery of Dutch Paintings is worth visiting with an hour or so to spare.  There are 3 rooms on the first floor and a lift is available if needed. I am still “scanning” the huge Boucher paintings on the stairway and remembered that Zoffany had copied the style early in his career. In each of the galleries there are notes and if a friend, or even another person, is around to read out these notes, they describe the painting if you can make out the detail. 


Me by View of the Westerkerk, Amseterdam by Jan van der Heyden
(taken at the Wallace Collection on 24th March 2012)


It is important to realise that viewing the collection is not the same as in a conventional gallery. This is quite literally a collection - as the painting of Zoffany (Lawrence Dundas) shows.  We asked one of the attendants if it was OK to take a photograph and having been told that it was (No flash), Jackie took one of me with a painting on either side and a view of the paintings on their own.  I even took my first photograph since I lost my sight. Jackie politely told me that she must have moved, but I treated the phone as a viewfinder and must have moved myself but I am thinking of getting a camera so that I can snap my own things.


Me standing by Ships in a Calm by Willem van de Velde
(taken at the Wallace Collection on 24th March 2012 )

We had a short discussion with the attendant on duty and I must have been talking about the paintings of Cuyp in Dordrecht when we were told that van de Velde was in the next room. With about half of the paintings at about head height, I found I could make quite a lot of many of them. 

Two weeks later I took another friend to visit the Wallace collection and we spent more time on the Dutch Galleries and had a more detailed look at the larger Dutch pictures in the Great Hall.  In walking back via the Bonington pictures of French scenes with boats and harbours, I admired these as much as when I first noticed them.  In the bookshop a selection of the black and white catalogues are on sale. These are a bargain as the monochrome photographs often give a clearer and sharper image of the painting.  The text does indicate the colours used and provides a more academic study of the genre.  I have often found that some descriptions are not easily matchable with a colour image. 

TIP: There is a lot of construction in London’s West End.  Many buses are on diversion and it may be easier if taking a bus going south bound from the north to get off in Wigmore Street and get to Machester Square.  If a bus is diverted in the north direction then Portman Square is navigable, though take care in crossing Baker Street at any time, any place and anywhere!

Books mentioned:

Dutch Painting by Christopher Brown, Phaidon (1993) (ISBN 978 0 7148 2865 7)

Van Dyck at the Wallace Collection by Jo Hedley (1999) (ISBN 0900 785 64 0)

The Wallace Collection – Catalogue of Pictures Volume IV - Dutch and Flemish (1992) (ISBN 0900 785 38 1)

Aelbert Cuyp Edited by Arthur K Wheelock Jr. (2002) (ISBN 0 89468 286 5)

Dutch Landscapes by Desmond Shawe-Taylor (2010) (ISBN 978 1 905686 25 4)