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Laboratories of Creativity : The Alma-Tademas' Studio-Houses and Beyond PDF

77 Pages·2017·2.77 MB·English
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This is a repository copy of Laboratories of Creativity : The Alma-Tademas' Studio-Houses and Beyond. White Rose Research Online URL for this paper: http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/134913/ Version: Published Version Article: (2018) Laboratories of Creativity : The Alma-Tademas' Studio-Houses and Beyond. British Art Studies. 10.17658/issn.2058-5462/issue-09/conversation Reuse This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC) licence. This licence allows you to remix, tweak, and build upon this work non-commercially, and any new works must also acknowledge the authors and be non-commercial. You don’t have to license any derivative works on the same terms. More information and the full terms of the licence here: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/ Takedown If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by emailing [email protected] including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request. [email protected] https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/ British Art Studies Summer 2018 British Art Studies Issue 9, published 7 August 2018 Cover image: Jonathan Law, Pattern, excerpt from ilm, 2018.. Digital image courtesy of Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art with support from the staf of Leighton House Museum, The Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea. PDF generated on 7 August 2018 Note: British Art Studiesis a digital publication and intended to be experienced online and referenced digitally. PDFs are provided for ease of reading oline. Please do not reference the PDF in academic citations: we recommend the use of DOIs (digital object identiiers) provided within the online article. These unique alphanumeric strings identify content and provide a persistent link to a location on the internet. A DOI is guaranteed never to change, so you can use it to link permanently to electronic documents with conidence. Published by: Paul Mellon Centre 16 Bedford Square London, WC1B 3JA http://www.paul-mellon-centre.ac.uk In partnership with: Yale Center for British Art 1080 Chapel Street New Haven, Connecticut http://britishart.yale.edu ISSN: 2058-5462 DOI: 10.17658/issn.2058-5462 URL: http://www.britishartstudies.ac.uk Editorial team: http://www.britishartstudies.ac.uk/about/editorial-team Advisory board: http://www.britishartstudies.ac.uk/about/advisory-board Produced in the United Kingdom. A joint publication by Contents Laboratories of Creativity: The Alma-Tademas' Studio-Houses and Beyond, Elizabeth Prettejohn and Peter Trippi Laboratories of Creativity: The Alma-Tademas' Studio-Houses and Beyond Elizabeth Prettejohn and Peter Trippi Authors Professor of History of Art at the University of York Independent scholar and editor of Fine Art Connoisseurmagazine, New York Cite as Elizabeth Prettejohn and Peter Trippi, "Laboratories of Creativity: The Alma-Tademas' Studio-Houses and Beyond", British Art Studies, Issue 9, http://dx.doi.org/10.17658/issn.2058-5462/issue-09/conversation Introduction ThisConversation Piecehighlights the range of new research discoveries that are being -- and are still to be -- made about artists’ studio homes. This conversation was irst aired in a workshop at the Paul Mellon Centre in October 2017 when a group of invited curators, scholars, and students shared their research about the Alma-Tadema studio-houses, exploring how they were designed, used and re-used, unearthing many tantalising links to other studio-houses created or inhabited by artists of the previous, contemporary, and next generations. ThisConversation Pieceaims to recapture the sense of discovery that made that workshop so exciting, and also to make the speakers’ contributions available to wider audiences. It is coordinated byElizabeth Prettejohn and Peter Trippi, who have publishedan extended introduction to the topicin this issue. Response by Charlotte Gere, Independent Historian An Artistic Interiorby Jan Frans Verhas Living in Melbury Road, Holland Park, in 1958 was an education in aesthetic studio-houses at a time when they were quite unknown and unappreciated. The leases were coming to an end and the houses, many of them in a poor state, were threatened with demolition. They were lived in by old ladies and bedsitting tenants, often only three or so owners after the original inhabitants had departed. Getting an order to view the property when it was for sale was the way inside William Burges’ Tower House, and very grim it was, almost completely vandalized with the gilding dimmed and carvings littering the loors. Leighton House was all strip lighting and plasterboard, so there was no reason to visit. The ruinous Casa Tadema in St John’s Wood, carved up into lats, was still just about recognisable. In view of the wealth of surviving artists’ houses, choosing to discuss Lawrence Alma-Tadema’s former home in Regent’s Park, Townshend House, of which no trace remains, is little short of perverse. But, over time, an impressive quantity of evidence for its interiors has emerged. The painting by Jan Frans Verhas illustrated here was advertised for sale by the dealer Christopher Wood in 1990 as “An Artistic Interior”, signed and dated 1870 (Fig. 1). It compares closely with the illustration of the curtained opening to the two drawing rooms on the irst loor of Townshend House in Daniel Moncure Conway’s book Travels in South Kensington, published in 1882 (Fig. 2). Because both the painting and illustration repeat exactly the relative positions of the two layers of striped door hangings, a connection with some phase of Townshend House seemed indisputable. Figure 1. Jan Frans Verhas, An Artistic Interior, 1870, oil on panel, 59 x 85.7 cm. Private Collection, New York. Digital image courtesy of Kevin Noble Photography. Figure 2. Townshend House Interior, illustration in Daniel Moncure Conway, Travels in South Kensington(New York: Harper & Brothers, 1882). Figure 3. Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Woman and Flowers, 1868, oil on panel, 49.8 x 37.2 cm. Collection of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (41.117). Digital image courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The painting is dated 1870, but Alma-Tadema moved into Townshend House only upon his marriage to Laura Epps in the summer of 1871. So, although unarguably an Alma-Tadema interior, Verhas’ image poses more questions than it answers—and the workshop audience had many suggestions. There are diferences, most strikingly the itted patterned carpet in the painting and the dado, now topped by a miniature cast of the Parthenon frieze (a detail, much remarked, of the Townshend House décor) in Conway’s illustration. Although hardly legible here, the Parthenon cast is described in Conway’s text. The room in the painting must be at ground level because it leads to a conservatory. In 1870, the painting’s date, Alma-Tadema was living in Frederick Goodall’s house at 31 Camden Square with his two small daughters

Description:
artist's daughter Anna Alma-Tadema “for the Contrary Oracle” (Fig. 7). became the wife of Laura Alma-Tadema's oldest brother, Hahnemann, who.
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