This is one of my most favourite pictures.
Yes I know I love
modernism and 20
th century art, but in a round about way this
is the forerunner to those modernist pictures that we are all, now, so familiar with.
To my eye this may be a 19
th century work but it is as
fresh, and bright, as if it had been painted last year.
Why?
Because most of being an artist is not just about being able to
paint.
It is about being able to see.
You cant have one without the other.
I recall how after studying
of an evening with life drawing for over a year, and then one day, as
if by magic.
I could see where I was going wrong.
(I threw all my previous work away).
Now, that to me is more important than seeing where one is going
right.
Put into context I could suddenly see the shadows.
No not the light that is easy to see, but the shadows where light
does not fall.
This is a very important time for an aspiring artist, and only
studious practice will enable this talent to be captured on paper, or canvas.
Richard Parkes Bonington sees it all, in this small but beautiful
oil painting, arguably the best in Liverpool Museums collection.
Then he adds a little bit of extra colour, which as if a
magician, by slight of hand, he turns your gaze in a direction that
he wants it to go, with a little dab of red here and there.
A lot can be said against modern art and its excuses for talent.
But I still do not want to linger in the 19
th century for
too long.
A sheep on a hillside will mostly convey, well a sheep on a
hillside to me.
Though as long as masterpieces like this are around I may cancal my taxi back to the 20
th Century, till a later hour.
I first discovered it at the now, ruined Sudley Art Gallery in
Mossley Hill Liverpool.
http://waynecolquhoun.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/sudley-house-why-have-liverpool-museums.html
It was, at that time, hung next to a Turner and I was at
that age wondering what all the fuss about Turner was. (I went to see
the film Mr Turner a few weeks ago. Didn't it go on a bit.)
I know what how all the theory about Turner has been played out.
Usually written by people who couldn't emulsion a wall I may add.
But
where is all the fuss about Boningtons work.
Some of his work is a trifle sentimental, but its what he may have
achieved that this, one of my favorite things, portrays.
Yes a ship at anchor on a becalmed sea, the sort of whimsical
painting we all know.
But this to me has always touched me deeper
than that. The way the light falls on the water and the way the
composition is laid out is by the hands of a budding master. A
painter who is completely self motivated to discover his own personal
journey through light and shade.
Who knows where he would end up,
would he challenge Turner or be thought more highly than John
Constable, a national treasure. Or would he fizzle out to nothing.
Over 200 years later we are still talking about the brush master and
the small taste of what talent he had to offer in his short
existence. And his impressionistic style.
Richard Parkes Bonington was born 1802 in Nottingham.
His father was the governor of Nottingham Jail who had strong
political views and when he was arrested for riotous and disorderly
conduct he had to step down.
He set up a ladies school that did not succeed later he set up a
lace-making business. Nottingham of course was the countries lace
making capital.
The factory was smashed up by Luddites who saw the coming of the
industrial revolution as a risk to the way of life and saw the
machines as a direct threat to their livelihoods.
Bonington senior seemed to have more in common with French views
of life.
France had gone through its own Revolution and the family
headed there.
Richard Parkes Bonington began drawing at the age of six. At the
age of sixteen he was painting Bologne Harbour in a way that does not
show his young age and seems more from the hand of a mature artist
than a teenager.
He took lessons.Thomas Gerten was an influence, I was recently shown
an image of his water colour of Lindisfarne Priory. This was not a
common occurrance that an artist of that date would use, a water colour, as a way to show off his skill, as a finished work and not a sketch
that would be later used as a study for a oil painting.
In 1819 the Bonington family moved to Paris where Richard studied
with Jaque Loiuse De Bead . He had taught Grull and his
teaching was in the classical form.
Richard was off, here there and everywhere, it seems that every time
he had a chance he painted.
He painted Churches in Normandy and then
he would work them up in watercolour.
Bonnington made a brief return to England where its understood he
saw work by Turner and returned to France in 1818. He seemed restless after this visit and he recorded that he was arguing
with his tutors.
Around the same time Delacrioux.........who had also seen works by
Turner was painting in a romantic style. Jerico............who painted
The Raft Of The Medusa had seen The Fields Of Waterloo with Gods light
bathing the soldiers on the field of battle some of who had perished.
This was turning a painting into a beacon of emotion.
In 1824 Boningtons painting Fishermen Near Bologne was exhibited
at the Paris Salons.
Next to this work was a painting by John Constable entitled The
Haywain.
Both won Gold medals along with another British artist, Anthony Van Dyck
Copley Fielding. You could only be an artist with that name!!
One of my favorite things in the whole wide, is Richard Parkes Boningtons “Ships
At Anchor” a small oil once owned by George Holt and now owned by
Liverpool Museums, and on display at Sudley House.
Now a former shadow
of itself. It seems the more money NML spend, the worse job they do
under the leadership of its current director, this once hidden gem is now a pale shadow of its former self.
http://waynecolquhoun.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/sudley-house-why-have-liverpool-museums.html
It is known that Bonington and Turners lives were in paralell and
Richard went to Venice at 24 years of age where he seems to come
under the spell of Canalettos work.
His studies of The Rialto Bridge are not by a simple hand but an
accomplished and steady application of art.
He paints The Ducal palace with its religious procession but my
opinion He that this period he loses his freedom and freshness and
although he gains confidence of brush.
Though I would need to study
his art a bit more before making any definite decision on this.
He literally meets Eugene Delacroix in a gallery and they become
friends.
You can see the influence of both artists on each other.
In 1828 he gets sunstroke from working outside too often. John
Lang, his quack physician sends him to Britain to get some air
as this would be better for him than the south Of France.
He was not aware that he had tuberculosis and its in Britain
that he died at the age of 26 leaving behind a legacy of amazing work
and a real sense of what could he have achieved if life had not dealt
him such a cruel hand.
His influences are not always reported but for several decades later we would see the fashion of French painters depicting simple peasant
folk with the same degree of skill as great leaders and hero's.
The French Impressionists would unknowingly or unwillingly be
influenced by British Art. Boningtons legacy was great.
He at least that he helped to influence the seed change in France
that changed the world.
He died so young and like James Dean, or Marilyn Monroe, we always
wonder just what their talent could have achieved.
See it hanging in the hall at Sudley Art Gallery.