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Showing posts with label rohlfs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rohlfs. Show all posts

Friday, 25 September 2020

Church Times: Christian Rohlfs review

My latest review for Church Times is of 'Christian Rohlfs' at The Red House, Aldeburgh:

'with the post-war rehabilitation of German artists, Rohlfs’s work was exhibited once again and gained new admirers, in part through the advocacy of his widow, Helene. It was her advocacy that led to this exhibition. In 1959, a friend of Helene’s, Margaret Hesse, became President of the Aldeburgh Festival, which had been founded by Benjamin Britten, Peter Pears, and Eric Crozier in 1948. Through her friend, Helene came to know and develop an affectionate friendship with Pears and Britten ...

those who love Expressionism would be well advised to visit this beautiful corner of Suffolk with all that it offers at Aldeburgh and Snape Maltings near by, though mostly to encounter Rohlfs’s radiant images of light-infused beauty and Christ-like compassion.'

Other of my pieces for Church Times can be found here.

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Fleet Foxes - Shore.

Saturday, 22 August 2020

The Red House, Aldeburgh






The Red House is a place to explore Benjamin Britten’s music and visitors to site can find out more about his and Peter Pears’ lives together. The House, with its classic 1950s/60s interiors, is a mix of formal and cosy, with an eclectic range of books, art, and furniture. The large gardens are ideal for wandering around and enjoying the peace and quiet of this corner of Suffolk. The home Britten and Pears shared for nearly two decades has been carefully re-presented as it was, based on a room inventory and recollections from people who knew the house at that time.

The Library was built on the site of a disused barn to the west of The Red House in 1963. The architect Peter Collymore transformed the space into a room that would hold Britten and Pears’ large book and music collection and also function as a rehearsal space.

Today the Library is used for talks and recitals and an annual display from the Britten Pears art collection. In the Library currently are eight portraits of Pears: not only the source of inspiration to Britten, but the model for many renowned artists, including David Hockney, Francis Newton Souza and Mary Potter.

The 2020 exhibitions at The Red House explore the rich and fascinating theme of ‘inspiration’. In 1974, Britten wrote a letter to Pears expressing his gratitude for what Pears had given him over the decades: “What have I done to deserve such an artist and man to write for?”. Pears was not, however, only a ‘muse’, but a true collaborator. The gallery exhibition this year examines in detail the powerful effect Pears’ artistry had on Britten’s entire career: from the sheer amount of music he inspired in him, to their professional recital partnership, to even the notes on the page. Pears was the person for whom Britten composed the most; but Britten nearly always wrote for particular performers, many of whom spurred him on to explore new musical landscapes. This exhibition pays tribute to the remarkable talents of Mstislav Rostropovich, Julian Bream and Janet Baker among many others.

In the former kitchen of the Red House, now an intimate exhibition space, is a display of works by the German Expressionist artist Christian Rohlfs, all taken from Britten and Pears’ personal art collection. The works in the exhibition demonstrate two of the most significant turning points in a long and mainly successful career: his encounters with the radical Expressionist artists of Die Brücke in the early twentieth century; and the effects of his marriage in 1919 at the age of 70 to a much younger wife. This remarkable collection of works originated in Helene Rohlfs’ acquaintance with Peter Pears through a mutual friend, ‘Peg’ (Margaret) Hesse, who became President of the Aldeburgh Festival in 1959. An affectionate friendship grew up between Helene, Pears and Britten. Over the years prints, watercolours and sketches were given as donations and as personal gifts, building into the rich and varied collection held today.

Britten and Pears entertained guests, cultivated vegetables, and even played croquet and tennis in their much-cherished gardens. There were many important social occasions which took place here, such as the celebration of Britten’s life peerage in 1976. Today the garden has evolved into a wildlife-friendly environment that retains some of the original planting and reflects their taste in flowers and plants.

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Benjamin Britten - Libera Me.

Wednesday, 2 April 2014

Beyond Airbrushed from Art History: Oxford Dictionary of Christian Art and Architecture

For some time I have been arguing on this blog that, as Daniel A. Siedell suggested in God in the Gallery, "an alternative history and theory of the development of modern art" is needed, "revealing that Christianity has always been present with modern art, nourishing as well as haunting it, and that modern art cannot be understood without understanding its religious and spiritual components and aspirations." In my Airbrushed from Art History series of posts I have highlighted some of the artists and movements (together with the books that tell their stories) that should feature in that alternative history when it comes to be written.

Books such as The Image of Christ in Modern ArtArt, Modernity & Faith, Beyond Belief, Christian ArtGod in the Gallery and On the Strange Place of Religion in Contemporary Art, have all, to some extent, surveyed aspects of an alternative history of modern art revealing "that Christianity has always been present with modern art." However, the Second Edition of The Oxford Dictionary of Christian Art and Architecture delivers a more comprehensive telling of this alternative history than any previous publication has managed.

The Reverend Tom Devonshire Jones, the editor of this Second Edition, has been aided by over a dozen expert contributors, fully updating the text for the 21st century. Areas that have been expanded upon include the artwork, artists, and innovations of the 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries (such as the relationship between Christianity and film). Coverage includes art from around the world, with new entries upon the Christian art of North America, Latin America, Australasia, and of the non-Western world, as well as Christian artistic interactions with other religions, including Judaism and Islam.

The story told primarily involves the influence of Christianity on the artworks produced (as with the influence of icons on the work of Kasimir Malevich), the commissioning of artists by the Church or the contribution to the development of modern art by artists who were Christians. The story is told here mainly on a country by country basis and tends to focus on individual artists but nevertheless does cover most of the major movements within which the influence of Christianity was felt - Post-Impressionism, Expressionism, Futurism, Abstraction and Abstract Expressionism. Also included are excellent descriptions of art from the non-Western world where the focus is rightly on individual artists rather than movements. These descriptions are accurate, comprehensive and concise with insights into the issues faced and the approaches used by those artists included. 

Despite this, there are occasional instances where artists and movements which could have been included are absent. Cubism, for example, is neglected because the work of Albert Gleizes is overlooked in the section on France, although his tutees Mainie Jellett and Evie Hone do feature in relation to the art of  Ireland. Expressionism gets a brief mention in the section on Germany but without mention of work by artists like Emil Nolde and Christian Rohlfs which contains significant engagement with Biblical topics. The decoration of churches in Switzerland (led by Alexandre Cingria) is also overlooked, except in relation to the work of Gino Severini. Folk or Outsider Art is also absent and this has significance because, in the North American context, Outsider Art represents an engagement with the visual arts by the Protestant traditions of the Church and also because in periods within the West where Christianity seems to have lost the intellectual imagination there remain in Folk Art signs that it has retained the Folk imagination. For me, perhaps the most glaring omission is in relation to Eastern Europe where, other than a significant entry on Russia, most modern Eastern European art is overlooked. The influence of the Nazarenes and Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in Hungary and the sacrum period in Poland are both, I think, worthy of mention, while mention of artists like Kondor BélaMarian Bohusz-Szyszko, Walter Navratil and Jerzy Nowosielski would have given a greater sense of the influence of Expressionism on modern Christian Art.    

To explore the Christian contribution to modern and contemporary art in the way which is undertaken in The Oxford Dictionary of Christian Art and Architecture is important because the story of modern and contemporary art is often told primarily as a secular story. To redress this imbalance has significance in: encouraging support for those who explore aspects of Christianity in and through the Arts; providing role models for emerging artists who are Christians; and enabling appreciation of the nourishment and haunting which can be had by acknowledging the contribution which Christianity has made to the Arts.  

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Robert Plant and Band of Joy - Angel Dance.

Sunday, 13 September 2009

Airbrushed from Art History (13)

The expressive element in art, Paul Tillich believed, was able to represent directly the ultimate (i.e. “an original encounter with reality below its surface”) and, as a result, is “adequate to express religious meaning directly, both through the medium of secular and through the medium of traditional religious subject matter.”

The reason for this situation Tillich wrote was easy to find:

“The expressive element in a style implies a radical transformation of the ordinarily experienced reality by using elements of it in a way that does not exist in the ordinarily encountered reality. Expression disrupts the naturally given appearance of things … That which is expressed is the “dimension of depth” in the encountered reality, the ground or abyss in which everything is rooted.”

For Tillich this explained two important facts:

“the dominance of the expressive element in the style of all periods in which great religious art has been created and the directly religious effect of a style which is under the predominance of the expressive element, even if no material from any of the religious traditions is used.”

Therefore, he wrote in 1957, that “the rediscovery of the expressive element in art since about 1900 is a decisive event for the relation of religion and the visual arts” as it “has made religious art again possible.” The “predominance of the expressive style in contemporary art” did not mean that we already had a great religious art but did provide “a chance for the rebirth of religious art.”

Tillich thought that, looking at painting and sculpture, we found that under this predominance of the expressive style over the first fifty years of the twentieth century, “the attempts to re-create religious art have led mostly to a rediscovery of the symbols in which the negativity of man’s predicament is expressed.” So, the “symbol of the Cross has become the subject matter of many works of art – often in the style that is represented by Picasso’sGuernica”” and that this is the “Protestant element in the present situation.” Tillich considered ‘Guernica’ to be the outstanding example of “an artistic expression of the human predicament in our period” and, as such, “a great Protestant painting.”

Tillich’s views are based on much that is standard art criticism, although the conclusions he draws from them are less so. Horst Uhr in Masterpieces of German Expressionism at the Detroit Institute of Arts, for example, states that:

German Expressionism was less a unified style than an attitude, a state of mind that in the early years of the twentieth century existed among young artists in a number of different places – in Dresden, Berlin and Munich, as well as in various cities in the Rhineland and Northern Germany. Profoundly critical of the materialism of modern life, these artists probed man’s spiritual condition in search of a new harmonious relationship between him and his environment … they were less concerned with resemblance than with artistic vision, and sought to penetrate appearances in order to lay bare what they perceived to be the inner essence of things.”

Uhr notes that the “term expressionism and the concept of self-expression in art, however, originated not in Germany but in France.” In particular, in the atelier of Gustave Moreau, one of the chief proponents of Symbolism, who encouraged “his students to express themselves according to their individual sensibilities” and from whose atelier came the key artists in the group which came to be known as the Fauves.

Most prominent among these were Henri Matisse and Georges Rouault. Sarah Whitfield, in George Rouault: The Early Years 1903 – 1920, writes that:

“In one sense Rouault’s aims were not dissimilar from those of Matisse … [as] he identified art with expression … When Rouault compiled his replies to the Mercure de France questionnaire in 1905, he ended by saying: ‘Art, the art I aspire to, will be the most profound, the most complete, the most moving expression of what man feels when he finds himself face to face with himself and with humanity’ … Compare that to the crucial paragraph of Matisse’s ‘Notes of a painter’ published in La Grande Revue some three years later, in December 1908, which begins: ‘What I am after, after all, is expression’, and ends with the celebrated declaration: ‘Expression, for me, does not reside in passions glowing in a human face or manifested by violent movement. The entire arrangement of my picture is expressive: the place occupied by the figures, the empty spaces around them, the proportions, everything has its share.’

Rouault, like Matisse, was unable to distinguish between his feelings about life and his way of translating them into paint, which is why both painters give great weight to the word ‘expression’. But, whereas Matisse assimilates the human presence into the overall composition, makes it subordinate, Rouault puts it in charge. In this sense it could be said of him that his means of expression are the exact opposite of Matisse’s in that they do, most emphatically, ‘reside in passions glowing in a human face’. The wretchedness that emanates from the colossal head of The Accused, or the furious indignation exploding from the eyes and the mouth of The Speaker, or the heavy bloated stare of Monsieur X, enforce the point that the key image in Rouault’s art is the human head …

Like Van Gogh, Ensor, Munch, Kirchner, Beckmann and Dix, all painters who have been labeled expressionist or Expressionist, Rouault belongs to the ranks of the artists who have in them something of the preacher. They appeal to the spectator by making him a witness to human fraility and suffering. The Expressionist painter, or indeed the Expressionist writer, selects characters who can be counted upon to elicit a powerful emotional response, hence the choice of anonymous archetypes invariably picked from society’s outcasts, such as ‘the whore’, ‘the drinker’ and ‘the accused’.”

William Dyrness contends, Rouault: A Vision of Suffering and Salvation, that “Rouault’s faith was the personal and emotional expression of his painful vision of human depravity and suffering. It was an emotional refuge rather than a reasoned apologetic. And it was precisely this lived-through quality of his faith that gave his paintings their tender, sympathetic profundity.” In his book Dryness examines the themes that we have already heard preoccupied Rouault with prostitutes, clowns, judges, the poor and miserable “painted as penetrating types of the misery of human existence” but with grace also seen as “divine meaning is given to human life by the continuing passion of Jesus Christ.”

Uhr notes, that of “the French, only Georges Rouault revealed in his work a comparably serious, indeed tragic, view of life” to that of German Expressionism:

“Evident in the art of many Expressionists and their associates is a … disenchantment with material values and sympathy for the alientated and downtrodden, often combined with an idealistic plea for the transformation of the existing social order. This informs the proletarian themes of Kollwitz, the joyless dancers of Heckel, and Kirchner’s anxiety-ridden city views, inhabited by men and women whose stylish appearance is matched only by their soulless indifference to each other.

Accompanying the Expressionist criticism of modern industrialized society was a conscious effort to become uncivilized, a yearning for an unspoiled form of existence originating in Neitzsche’s vision of a Dionysian return to the wellsprings of nature …

as the open countryside became an antidote to urban life for the Expressionists, they increasingly invested nature with a transcendental significance reminiscent of the nineteenth-century German Romantic tradition … Kirchner’s coastal landscapes from Fehmarn and grandiose mountain views from Switzerland are … subjective projections of empathy with the mysterious forces of nature, as are Nolde’s luminous seascapes and flower pictures from the north German plain. Marc and Klee also developed pictorial parallels to the rhythm they perceived flowing through all of nature. While the former found accord between living beings and their environment in his animal pictures, the latter combined colour and form into poetic metaphors of the very processes of organic growth …

Interestingly, many Expressionists were drawn to religious subjects at various points in their careers, motivated not by any conventionally orthodox considerations, but by the sense of disaffection which, according to Worringer, had given rise to Gothic art. For Nolde, biblical themes offered a refuge from rational existence, and Ernst Barlach’s religious imagery stemmed from an intense longing for a new relationship between man and God. Especially during the bitter years of World War I and the period following immediately thereafter, when questions of life and death touched millions and – if humanity were to survive – man’s spiritual re-orientation became more urgent than ever, themes of guilt and atonement through suffering took on a universal significance. In Christ’s Passion, Beckmann found a surrogate for his own anguish. Schmidt-Rottluff, Pechstein, and Christian Rohlfs turned to the Old and New Testaments in search of symbols with which to express their sympathy for their fellowmen.”

Uhr writes that:

“During World War I religious subjects occupied Rohlfs’s imagination again and again and virtually dominated his graphic output … his biblical paintings and prints provided him not only with a spiritual refuge from the distressing events of the time but also a means to translate his compassion for his fellowmen into universal symbols of human suffering and redemption. Entirely in keeping with Rohlfs’s warm and gentle personality, however, nowhere in these works is there a sign of bitterness, hatred or anger. Only rarely are such Old Testament subjects as the Flood or the Expulsion from Paradise allowed to interrupt the sequence of more conciliatory themes, like the Return of the Prodigal Son, a paradigmatic motif of love and forgiveness Rohlfs treated repeatedly during these years in paintings, drawings, and prints.”

Rohlfs has been encouraged by Emil Nolde to paint with greater expressive force and Nolde was also an artist who, as Felicity Lunn writes in Emil Nolde, “regarded his religious works as central to his art” saying that “he experienced both a greater struggle and a more intense pleasure in the making of them than in any other area of his subject matter”:

“The group of paintings that Nolde made in 1909, in particular The Last Supper and Pentecost, demonstrate the artist’s attempts to portray Christian themes “with spiritual content and innerness” through a radical stylistic change … “the transformation from optical external charm to an experienced inner value”, asserted Nolde in his autobiography …

The momentum that began with these two paintings continued for three years until 1912, a period in which 24 works were produced, including The Life of Christ, stories from the New Testament, particularly events from the life of Christ and their effect on others, miracles He performed and parables …

The tour de force of Nolde’s religious painting, if not of his entire artistic output, is the nine-part work The Life of Christ. The idea of making a polyptych first came to Nolde in 1912 when he happened to place next to each other three religious paintings from the previous year. The remaining six were painted in 1912, and due to a change in Nolde’s approach during this period the polyptych is stylistically heterogeneous …

At the time Nolde was painting The Life of Christ he was experiencing great stress, caused partly by the serious illness of his wife, Ada, but also by emotional extremes of despair and optimism. The spirituality that radiates from the biblical figures in Pentecost and The Last Supper seems to have been replaced here by exaggerated, almost caricatured features often distorted by aggression and anger. Nolde was currently plagued by doubts concerning Christianity …

The third period of Nolde’s religious painting came in 1915, following his return from the Southern Seas, and was accompanied by a dramatic simplification of both form and colour. One of the most important of the seven paintings he made on religious themes was Entombment … Nolde described the work as “the most beautiful … that I was able to produce for a long time … a painting handled in light silver blue, opposite yellowish gold, and in terms of content in inner religious feeling.” Other paintings made in the same year, such as Legend: Saint Simeon and the Woman and The Tribute Money are also characterized by simpler structures, gentler and more lyrical than the passion of earlier work. Although reduced in palette, the colours are saturated and intense.”

Nolde’s religious works were recognized as significant by his supporters but “in contrast, however, were the reactions of more academic artists on the one hand, and the Church and the general public on the other.” His “religious paintings were accused of being “destructive and vandalising” and full of “clumsiness and brutality” as well as “mockery and blasphemy” and, as a result, were on several occasions removed from exhibitions. Eventually The Life of Christ was prominently displayed in the Nazi organized ‘Degenerate Art’ exhibition which sought to hold the work of many of the Expressionists and other Modernist artists up to ridicule but instead drew large and fascinated crowds.

The reaction of the Church to Nolde’s work was typical institutionally (although not, as we have seen, of a theologian like Tillich) of its response to most of the artists we have mentioned here. Dryness notes that “Waldemar George, in the October-December, 1937, issue of La Renaissance, wondered aloud why the Church had so ignored Rouault.” An answer came in an article written by Pére Couturier in the review L’Art Sacré. Couturier argued that Rouault placed “material objects in the way of spiritual appreciation” as his “dark and fierce style sometimes blurred the profundity.” Couturier was arguing that modern art revived “deeper values at the expense of secondary factors such as literal realism” and later was able to assist in windows by Rouault being incorporated in the scheme of works for the Church at Assy.

Possibly the most infamous rejection of expressionist works in a Church setting was the commission in 1919 of Stations of the Cross by Albert Servaes for the church of the Discalced Carmelites in Luythagen, a suburb of Antwerp. When they were hung, they caused such an uproar that, despite there being support from many including Father Titus Brandsma who wrote articles about and meditations on the Stations, the Roman authorities ordered them removed from the chapel. The Stations were eventually purchased by a private collector and passed through several hands before being presented to Koningshoeven Abbey in Tilburg where they were hung in the cloister as a “work of art.” Their story, and those of Servaes and Brandsma, are well told in Ecce Homo.

More positive responses to the work of Expressionist artists can, happily, be found in the UK through the welcome afforded Ernst Blensdorf and Hans Feibusch, both fleeing Nazi prejudice and denigration of their work. Feibusch found a great patron and friend in George Bell, Bishop of Chichester, and went on to become probably the greatest muralist of his day (including the decoration of many churches) while also producing easel paintings, gouaches, drawings, lithographs and sculpture. Feibusch was a prodigious artist of great passion and energy.

Blensdorf too received support from Bell’s initiatives but settled in Somerset where “the beauty and availability of Somerset Elmwood persuaded and enabled him to develop a whole new style of simple, flowing shapes.” His Centenary Exhibition catalogue records sculptures for Hanham Methodist Church Bristol, Long Ashton Church Bristol, Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral, Salisbury Cathedral, St Edward’s Catholic Church Chandlers Ford, St Johns Glastonbury, and St Marys Bruton. He “believed in using art to express the artist’s emotional responses and spiritual values” and “his most frequent motifs were the family, women, Biblical themes, dancers, seabirds or birds of prey, all moulded into shape by an extraordinarily complete mental grasp of three-dimensional form.”

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Tribe of Judah - Thanks for Nothing.

Thursday, 12 June 2008

Sociality & spirituality - reassociating the Arts & the Church (2)

Bell’s achievement, complemented and continued as it was by Walter Hussey, set the standard for Anglican engagement with the Arts but needs to be set in this context of the remarkable flowering of Christian culture that also occurred across Europe in the same period. Three recent exhibitions – Maurice Denis: Earthly Paradise, Piety and Pragmatism: Spirituality in Futurist Art and From Russia have shed new light on this phenomenon.

France incubated a flowering of Catholic culture which developed firstly through a literary revival spearheaded by the development of the Modern Catholic Novel. The movement blossomed when fervent young Catholics like Émile Bernard, Paul Sérusier, Maurice Denis and Georges Rouault played key roles in the development of Post-Impressionism, the Nabis, and Fauvism. Denis founded the Ateliers de l’Art Sacré or Studios of Sacred Art and went on to exert a particular influence on the development of religious art in Belgium, Italy and Switzerland. Denis became a major reference among Russian Symbolist painters within which the expression of a Russian Orthodox spirituality was most apparent. In the expressive abstraction of Kandinsky and the minimalist abstraction of Malevich, Russian spirituality for a short period led the Modernist stampede towards new artistic movements.

A later recruit to the Nabis, Jan Verkade, linked both Denis and Sérusier with the Beuron monastery in Southern Germany where Father Desiderius Lenz was the Benedictine theorist anticipating ideas associated with twentieth-century art. Sérusier and Denis were joined by Alexei von Jawlensky and Alphonse Mucha in admiring the theories of the Beuron School, while Verkade became an artist-monk at Beuron. Religious themes also featured strongly in the work of German Expressionist artists such as Emil Nolde and Christian Rohlfs.

Rouault helped theologian Jacques Maritain with the formulation of the ideas published in 1920 as Art and Scholasticism and, at their home in Meudon, Jacques and Raissa Maritain created a Thomistic study circle that influenced an increasing number of artists, writers, philosophers and theologians. Maritain played a significant role in the conversion to Catholicism of the futurist Gino Severini, the Dadaist Otto Van Rees and abstract art promoter Michel Seuphor.

Through Severini’s contact with the Futurist Fillia, Maritain’s movement for a renewal of sacred art influenced the development of Futurist Sacred Art while Severini, himself, left a legacy of sacred art in Swiss churches. In England, those involved with the establishment at Ditchling of the Guild of St Joseph and St Dominic, a Catholic community of work, faith and domestic life which included Desmond Chute, Eric Gill, David Jones and Hilary Pepler, were strongly influenced by Maritain.

A further Catholic artistic community formed around the cubist artist Albert Gleizes who tutored an international selection of artists and was hailed by some as having laid out the principles for a renewal of religious art. Two of Gleizes’ pupils, Evie Hone and Mainie Jellett, played a significant role in introducing Modern Art to Ireland and in produced a major body of Irish sacred art.

From the Ateliers d’Art Sacré came the Dominican, Father Marie-Alan Couturier, with a mission to revive Christian art by appealing to the independent masters of his time. Churches, he argued, should commission the very best artists available, and not quibble over the artists' beliefs.

Couturier put this belief into practice by attracting major artists such as Fernand Léger, Georges Braque, Henri Matisse, Marc Chagall, Jacques Lipchitz and others for the decoration of a new church of Assy in the south of France before going on to work with Matisse on the chapel for the Dominican nuns at Vence. In the years which followed, with Father Pie Régamey in the pages of the journal Art Sacré, he explained and further encouraged the breakthrough of twentieth century art that had been initiated in the decoration of Assy and Vence.

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Robert Plant & Alison Krauss - Sister Rosetta Goes Before Us.