Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
ART CORRUPTED BY SUCCESS
How easily
art is corrupted by commercial success. How soon what began as a revolutionary
concept in art ends up as a crowd-pleasing commercial venture.
So
here is the PRB, or Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, in about 1848. Bright and
talented and ambitious young artists, John Everett Millais, William Holman
Hunt and Dante Gabriel Rossetti. They are tired of the conventional
landscapes British artists are producing in the dying wake of the genius
Turner. They are sick of canvases filled with groomed racehorses and
sentimental views of children. They want to break with current ideals of
composition by changing the focus of their canvases. They want to paint, with
hyper-realism, each blade of grass and each tooth of the bleating sheep. They
want to get back to the palette of the early Renaissance. And they want to make
revered and religious figures look like real human beings.
So John Everett Millais
paints painstakingly his Christ in the
House of his Parents, showing the boy Jesus as a real boy and Joseph’s
workshop as a real workshop and the Blessed Virgin Mary as a real and ageing
mother, comforting the boy after a mishap. Yes, of course it is filled with symbolism
that could readily be accessed by a Christian. The upright figures of Mary and
the boy Jesus bisect the door being made on the carpenter’s bench, clearly
making the centre of the painting a Cross. The blood on the boy Jesus’s hand,
dripping onto his foot, clearly prefigures the Crucifixion. The boy on the
right of the composition, dressed in animal skin and holding the bowl of water,
is clearly John the Baptist.
But none of this orthodoxy
prevents contemporary critics (including Charles Dickens) from being outraged
that the artist has dared to present these holy figures so naturalistically. In
both conception and execution this early product of the PRB is a revolutionary
work, especially in an England which hasn’t really experienced a revolution.
The PRB are upstarts. They are condemned in the press and in art-journals and
seen as another symptom of that disrespect for order that is causing upheavals
across the channel.
But then there is a swift
change in attitude. The over-influential critic John Ruskin praises the young
men of the PRB. One by one other critics come around. Within a few short years
the PRB (but especially Millais and Hunt) are receiving lucrative commissions.
Their canvases sell for big sums. They become highly respectable. They still
paint with technical skill, but their subject matter becomes less threatening,
more sentimental, more attuned to the tastes of the viewing, and especially the
buying, public. More comfortably middle-class and Victorian. Sure, Rossetti
gets into his quasi-medieval world of fair-skinned, big rosy-lipped and preferably
red-haired beauties, which influences and feeds into the insipid work of Edward
Burne-Jones. Sure, there are some paintings that still hold our attention.
But the real direction of the
old PRB can be measured by the distance from Millais’ early and revolutionary Christ in the House of his Parents to
his late and sentimental Bubbles
which, (now knighted and very respectable), he sold for a large sum to Pears’
soap company to use as advertising.
I was recently reminded of
this whole story by watching a good three-part BBC documentary series on the
Pre-Raphaelites narrated in a posh educated voice by, of all people, Nigel
Planer. (He is probably still best known as the lugubrious hippie Neil in the “cult”
1980s sitcom The Young Ones). The
series presented the journey from art to complacent commercialism much as I
have presented it here. It was a little too eager to keep telling us that the
early PRB anticipated by some decades the French Impressionists in the amount
of outdoors work they did and in their determination to be true to nature. One
expects even the best British documentaries to have at least a residue of
national chauvinism – and in this case to underestimate how much more
revolutionary the early Impressionists were than the early PRB. Even so, it was
no hatchet job and gave due credit to the real artistic achievements of the
PRB, even as it chronicled their decline.
After watching this series, I
then made the mistake of watching another four-parter on the Pre-Raphaelites
hosted by Andrew Lloyd-Webber. Oh dear! What a twee piece of work it was in
comparison. A very wealthy man on the back of his middlebrow musicals,
Lloyd-Webber is not only an enthusiast for the PRB and other Victorian art, but
he is wealthy enough to own some of the original canvases. Indeed he is wealthy
enough to get an Oxbridge college to construct an elaborate decorated gate,
which was designed by a Victorian artist but never constructed until
Lloyd-Webber fronted up with the money. Much of his series was taken up with
his asserting the greatness of the PRB and only briefly glancing at their
corruption by material and commercial success.
I feel a larger theme coming
upon me here.
The word “artist” still
carries overtones of somebody with a particular vision and the skill (or talent
or genius) to express it in a new way. Even if it is at least a century out of
date, there is still the image of an artist suffering poverty in a garret for
the sake of art.
May I suggest politely that,
while this image might once have had some limited validity, it no longer does.
The PRB did not merely “sell out”. They pioneered the course that most artists
now take. Patronage has always been a factor in art, but when was the scramble
more intense than it is now as art students at once scramble for grants, for
attention, for the support of gallery owners? The aim is to get established, to
get money, to sell. And what is wanted is what will provide a momentary shock
to the easily-bored, short-attention-span viewing public. Let us laugh at the
later, complacent, dishonest and purely commercial works of former PRB members,
produced for the market. And let us now try to conceive of the guffaws that
will greet, in the 22nd century, what now fills galleries.
Art and money and feeding the
market – it’s a bitch, innit?
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