Thursday, March 1, 2018

Artists in the Studio – Earlier Nineteenth Century

Pierre Baquoy after Jean-Michel Moreau le jeune
Atelier of an engraver
1806
etching, engraving
British Museum

William Heath
The artist in his studio
1812
hand-colored etching
British Museum

Bartolommeo Pinelli
An artist contemplating mortality
1818
watercolor
British Museum

Bouquet of Roses in Sunlight

Say that it is a crude effect, black reds,
Pink yellows, orange whites, too much as they are
To be anything else in the sunlight of the room,

Too much as they are to be changed by metaphor,
Too actual, things that in being real
Make any imaginings of them lesser things.

And yet this effect is a consequence of the way
We feel and, therefore, is not real, except
In our sense of it, our sense of the fertilest red,

Of yellow as first color and of white,
In which the sense lies still, as a man lies,
Enormous, in a completing of his truth.

Our sense of these things changes and they change,
Not as in metaphor, but in our sense
Of them.  So sense exceeds all metaphor.

It exceeds the heavy changes of the light.
It is like a flow of meanings with no speech
And of as many meanings as of men.

We are two that use these roses as we are,
In seeing them.  This is what makes them seem
So far beyond the rhetorician's touch.

– Wallace Stevens (1947)

Gerrit Lamberts
 Interior of the residence of artist Jan Hulswit
ca. 1822-25
watercolor
British Museum

Henry Bone
Artist in his studio
before 1832
etching
British Museum

Eugen Neureuther
Artist in medieval costume seated in front of easel
1840
etching
British Museum

John Richard Coke Smyth
Studio of wealthy amateur artist
ca. 1842-50
watercolor
British Museum

after Berthel Thorvaldsen
View of (top) the new Thorvaldsen Museum in Copenhagen
and (bottom) Thorvaldsen's sculpture studio in Rome
1846
wood-engravings
British Museum

Henri Baron
Sculptors in the studio
1853
lithograph
British Museum

Alexandre Bida
Andrea del Sarto and his model in the studio
ca. 1855-65
drawing
British Museum

Paul Musurus
Artist's studio
ca. 1855-65
drawing
British Museum

The Ultimate Poem is Abstract

This day writhes with what?  The lecturer
On This Beautiful World of Ours composes himself
And hems the planet rose and haws it ripe,

And red, and right.  The particular question – here
The particular answer to the particular question
Is not in point – the question is in point.

If the day writhes, it is not with revelations.
One goes on asking questions.  That, then, is one
Of the categories.  So said, this placid space

Is changed.  It is not so blue as we thought.  To be blue,
There must be no questions.  It is an intellect
Of windings round and dodges to and fro,

Writhings in wrong obliques and distances,
Not an intellect in which we are fleet: present
Everywhere in space at once, cloud-pole

Of communication.  It would be enough
If we were ever, just once, at the middle, fixed
In This Beautiful World of Ours and not as now,

Helplessly at the edge, enough to be
Complete, because at the middle, if only in sense,
And in that enormous sense, merely enjoy.

– Wallace Stevens (1947)

Paul Musurus
Interior of artist's studio and other studies
ca. 1855-65
drawing
British Museum

Paul Musurus
Studio of portrait painter George Richmond RA
ca. 1855-65
drawing
British Museum

Paul Musurus
Studio of portrait painter George Richmond RA
ca. 1855-65
drawing
British Museum