Sir Joshua Reynolds Self-portrait, 1776, lavishly dressed in fine period garb. |
Today, we don't necessarily think of one type of art as being somehow better than another--at least, not consciously. In art, as in many areas of life today, we have become, or are in the process of becoming, more and more tolerant of all things, tending to lump them together as opposed to making stereotypical value judgments. In the area of painting, if we want to see how far we've come along this line, we might recount the views of Sir Joshua Reynolds, the founder of the British Royal Academy (1768). As its first president, he ran the Academy as his own exclusive art club until his death in 1792. In his view, the greatest of all painting was history painting--grand historical or religious subjects, ennobling character, preferably lavishly dressed in fine period garb...or barring that, tastefully nude. Below that were domestic genre scenes followed by portraiture, landscapes, animals, still-lifes, and lastly, flowers. Quite a pecking order, and in effect, a ladder for would-be artists to climb as they studied, worked, and became more skilled.
George III, 1761, Sir Joshua Reynolds, the Grand Manner at its grandest. |
But two hundred years ago, there was very much a "ladder to climb" in terms of painted subject matter. Women and children started out painting flowers, still-lifes, then puppies and other pets; moving on, at some point, out into the landscape world around them. From there they'd then do portraits of those who inhabited their world, going about their daily lives; while their leaders "made history" and those artists at the top painted it. The would-be artist studied first from a local tutor, then attended a local university with an art department. Only then, if he (and a token few female artists) were deemed good enough, would they move on to the Royal Academy where they met and mirrored the demigod, Sir Joshua himself.
David Wilkie Self-portrait, 1804-05, approximately age 20. |
In 1785, in the small village of Cutts, Fife, in what is now Scotland, was born David Wilkie, the son of a Presbyterian minister and his wife. He was a talented lad, moving up Reynolds' proverbial "ladder" very quickly by studying the prints of van Ostade and Teniers, first making a name for himself in genre painting. The English love this type of work, and paintings such as his 1812 Blind Man's Bluff are rich with anecdotal glimpses of early 19th century British life. It's a pub scene with all the tables and chairs stacked against one wall so that a sort of organized chaos might reign minus the threat of ruining the interior décor. My son and his friends once played a similar game they called "Marco Polo" in our pool.
Chelsea Pensioners Reading the Gazette of the Battle of Waterloo, 1822, David Wilkie, genre poking holes in the pretentious Grand Manner. |
In 1822, Wilkie finished an extraordinary street scene, combining lower-middle class genre painting with a touch of history in Chelsea Pensioners Reading the Gazette of the Battle of Waterloo. When it was displayed, the painting met with such popular and favorable response from all levels of British society, the Royal Academy was forced, for the first time, to show it behind a barricade. The Duke of Wellington, who had defeated Napoleon at Waterloo and commissioned the painting, found himself paying the enormous sum of 1,200 guineas for it (roughly $1,900 today). He chose to compensate Wilkie in cash rather than by check so that his banker wouldn't think him a "...damned fool for paying such an outrageous sum for a painting."
Portrait of William IV, 1837, David Wilkie, Painter-in-Ordinary to the King. |
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