Art Books to Give and to Cherish
Art Unpacked by Matthew Wilson (Thames & Hudson, 240 pages, $39.95)
The Real & the Romantic by Frances Spalding (Thames & Hudson, 384 p., $50)
Velazquez by Richard Verdi (Thames & Hudson, 276 pages, $24.95)
By Ed Voves
The Morgan Library and
Museum is currently showing a special exhibition devoted to rare editions of
the Holy Bible collected by J.P. Morgan. While visiting the exhibit, my
attention focused on a first edition copy of the 1611 King James Version (KJV)
of the Holy Bible.
By a somewhat convoluted
thought process, the sight of this original KJV led me to compile a short list
of recommended art books, all published in 2023. These, as I hope to explain,
are books worthy to give and to cherish. But before I discuss these four titles, I would like to reflect a few moments more on the 1611 KJV on display
in Morgan’s Bibles.
The Morgan's copy of the KJV
has quite a personal history. It bears a hand-written list of biblical
commentaries by Laurence Chaderton, one of "God's secretaries" who
worked on the translation of the Bible at the command of King James I. On the binding
is the coat of arms of the Prince of Wales, denoting its ownership by the two
sons of King James, Prince Henry and Charles I.
It was the personal name,
signed with a bold flourish at the bottom of the title page, which was the most
intriguing feature of all: Jane Fisher.
Jane Fisher (1626-1689) was
the courageous Englishwoman who helped Charles II escape capture following the
defeat at the Battle of Worcester, 1651, during the English Civil War. Charles,
disguised as Jane Fisher’s servant, evaded capture by Oliver Cromwell’s troops,
eventually reaching safety.
In 1660, Charles II was restored to the throne of Great Britain. This magnificent KJV Bible, once owned by his father, should have been safeguarded as a sacred relic. Yet, at some point, this Bible became a treasured possession of Jane Fisher.
Did Charles II give this KJV Bible to Jane Fisher in appreciation for saving his life and his reign? If so, it could not have been a more appropriate gift.
Viewing this historic Bible was a great treat, but my attention did not linger on the bygone-era of Stuart kings. Instead, it nudged me to think about the importance of giving books as tokens of love and esteem.
The act of bestowing a gift involves giving a part of oneself. The money needed to buy a present represents the hours spent earning or saving the necessary funds to make the purchase. And of course, there is the time and energy involved in shopping, often the most difficult and frustrating part of the transaction.
Selecting a book as a gift
takes this process a step further. Along with sharing a bit of ourselves, we are
entering into a state of emotional/intellectual dialog with the recipient. Is the subject or author likely to appeal to the intended reader? Might the book become a favorite "read"? Could the book make a difference in their life?
With these considerations in
mind, here is a short-list of 2023 art books which hopefully will provide a
resounding “yes” to the questions above. None of the titles appearing below were the subject of previous Art Eyewitness reviews, although Martin Gayford's Venice: City of Pictures is certainly worthy of inclusion in any list of recent art books likely to stand the test of time.
My first selection includes works of art from just about every artistic genre and works from virtually every historical era and geographic locale. Art Unpacked, just published by Thames & Hudson, is precise in its focus, global in its scope.
Art Unpacked offers a "museum highlights" trajectory to appreciate art history. A list of fifty essential works of art is selected for study, beginning with a cave painting from Chauvet, ca. 30,000 BCE, and proceeding to contemporary works of art with social justice themes. Quite a number of the book's "highlights" will be familiar to many art enthusiasts.
At first glance, Art Unpacked appears to be a fairly standard survey of the visual arts. An impressive book, certainly, but one which we've seen previously in similar guises, the British Museum's History of the World in 100 Objects for one.
Look again at Art Unpacked - and again - at the double-spread pages of closely integrated illustrations and analysis for each of the selected works. The author, Matthew Wilson, has created a blue-print guide for understanding composition and construction, complemented with insights into the mindset and social milieu of the artist and acknowledgement of related works of art, ones that set the stage or were influenced in turn by the masterpiece under study.
The "star" treatment which Wilson accords Michelangelo's Studies for the Libyan Sibyl, 1510-11, is a excellent example of his methodology.
Aside from Mona Lisa, there is no work of art which has been so intensively studied as Michelangelo's frescoes for the Sistine Chapel. The same is true for the preliminary drafts, of which the Libyan Sibyl, a jewel of The Metropolitan Museum's collection, is one of the most familiar.
Yet, there are so many intriguing details in this "densely populated" drawing that when we get the rare opportunity to view it, information overload quickly sets in. That is exactly what I experienced at The Met's 2017 exhibit, Michelangelo: Divine Designer, where the Libyan Sibyl drawing was prominently displayed.
With a precise focus, Wilson succinctly deals with the major points of the Libyan Sibyl's composition. He focuses, point by point, on Michelangelo's masterful handling of tonal modeling to create a three-dimensional presence for this ethereal figure. Michelangelo's vigorous use of red chalk to create deep shadows, Wilson notes is "often compared to the way that a sculptor carves into the marble with a chisel."
As if that was not impressive enough, Wilson looks at the truly fine points, leaving readers astonished that they had missed these details before. Examining the Libyan Sibyl's torso, Wilson writes:
Michelangelo added lines that extend from the shoulders and end in a circle. A third line points toward the armpit. It is not known for certain what they represent, but he may have added them as notes to himself about the lightest to the darkest areas of shading, or to point out certain muscles to students or colleagues.
Never, in a hundred years of looking, would I have spotted these minute notations, but Wilson's sharp eye has opened a new window on Michelangelo's creative course.
Wilson extends the same masterful mix of analytical precision and perceptive commentary to works of art from non-Western societies. Dating to the same era as Michelangelo's Libyan Sibyl are superb studies of the Queen Mother Pendant Mask from the Kingdom of Benin, modern Nigeria, and The Concourse of Birds, an allegory of the Sufi search for spiritual enlightenment, painted by Habiballah of Sava (active, 1590-1610 in Persia).
One historical era overlooked in Art Unpacked is the twenty-year interlude in England between the First and Second World Wars. Many, indeed most, general surveys of art skip over English art, especially painting, between 1919 to 1939. In the era of Picasso and Matisse, Dada and Surrealism, English art appeared to be hopelessly retardataire.
Francis Spalding, the leading authority of twentieth British art, has rectified the omission with a magnificent narrative history which is likely to stand as the definitive treatment of the subject for many years to come.
A fitting estimate of Spalding's achievement world be to compare Real and Romantic with the first edition of John Rewald's History of Impression (1946). Amazingly, there was waning interest in Monet, Renoir, et al., until Rewald's book revived their reputation in the years after World War II. Spalding's book will, almost certainly, have the same effect.
In a key quotation from The Real and the Romantic, Spalding notes that:
Whereas the Italian futurists had wanted to
turn their backs on the past, to abandon it or destroy it, much English art
between the wars was motivated by a wholly different attitude, by a desire to
raid the past for ideas, subjects and methods that would challenge and enrich
the present. This took many forms, but behind them all can be heard an echo of
Laurence Binyon's words..."We cannot discard the past ... we must remold
it in the fire of our necessities, we must make it new and our own."
Of particular influence,
especially in the immediate aftermath of World War I, was the English landscape
tradition, not only Turner and Constable, but other artists from the 1700's and
1800's.
Algernon Newton (1880-1968) looked to Canaletto for inspiration. Others, including Graham Sutherland, found a role-model in the mystical landscape painter, Samuel Palmer.
It was. Ravilious was killed
in 1942 in an air rescue mission off the coast of Iceland. It was a noble
effort but an attempt which seems doomed from the start, so futile that one wonders how
Ravilious and his fellow air-crew had the courage to try. But try they did and
so did English artists during the "between the wars" period so
movingly described by Spalding.
Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights
reserved
Original photography by Anne Lloyd and Ed Voves, all rights reserved
Book cover art for Art Unpacked by Matthew Wilson (2023), The Real and the Romantic, English Art between Two World Wars by Frances Spalding (2023) and Velazquez by Richard Verdi (2023) Image credits: Thames & Hudson
Introductory image: Michelangelo’s Libyan Sibyl fresco from the Vatican’s Sistine Chapel. Image from https //commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sibila_Libica.jpg
Ed Voves,
Photo (2023 ) Gallery view the Morgan Library & Museum’s copy of the King James
Version (KJV), The Holy Bible, Conteyning the Old Testament and the New, Newly
Translate Out of the Original Tongues. Published in London by Robert Barker,
1611. On view at the Morgan’s Bible
exhibition.
Michelangelo (Italian, 1475-1564) Studies for the Libyan Sibyl, 1510-11. Red chalk drawing with accents of white chalk on the shoulder of the figure in the main study: 28.9 x 21.4 cm. (11 1/4 x 8 1/2 in.) Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Unknown artist (Present-day Nigeria) Queen Mother Pendant Mask, Kingdom of Benin, 16th century. Ivory sculpture, with iron and copper: 23.8 x 12.7 x 6.4 cm. (9 1/4 x 5 x 2 1/2 in.) Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Habiballah of Sava (Persian, active, 1590-1610) The Concourse of Birds, c. 1600. Ink, opaque watercolor, gold and silver on paper: 25.4 x 11.4 cm. (10 x 4 1/2 in.) Metropolitan Museum of Art.
John Sell Cotman (British, 1782-1842) Greta Bridge, c. 1805. Watercolor over graphite sketch: 22.7 x 32.9 cm. (8.9 x 12.9 in.) British Museum.
Eric Ravilious (British, 1903-1942) Wannock Dew Pond, 1923. Watercolor, pen and brown ink over graphite sketch: 27.8 x 38.6 cm. (10.9 x 15.2 in.) British Museum.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023 ) Gallery view the Juan de Pareja, Afro-Hispanic Painter exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2023 ) Diego Velazquez' Portrait of Juan de Pareja, 1650 (detail). Oil on canvas: 32 x 27 1/2 in. (81.3 x 69.9 cm.) Metropolitan Museum of Art.
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