Art Knowledge News
"The Conversation Piece: Scenes of Fashionable Life" opens at Buckingham Palace |
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| Written by Rachel Woolen |
| Friday, 30 October 2009 04:36 |
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This form of group portraiture reached the height of its popularity in Georgian England, and the exhibition includes outstanding paintings by the greatest exponents of the Conversation Piece, Johan Zoffany, William Hogarth and Thomas Gainsborough. To complement the selection of royal Conversation Pieces, the exhibition shows examples of the genre acquired by members of the royal family over the past four centuries. For the merchants of the new Dutch Republic, the Conversation Piece was a way of celebrating their large families and prosperous lifestyle. They sought to imitate the manners and customs of the French aristocracy and commissioned artists to paint them on their country estates and in their extensive gardens, as seen in Ludolf de Jongh’s A Formal Garden: Three Ladies surprised by a Gentleman and Family Group by Barent Graat. Charles I brought Netherlandish artists to England to promote the values of his family, and the good order and dignity of his court. Hendrick Pot’s Charles I, Henrietta Maria and Charles, Prince of Wales shows the king and queen presenting their son, the future Charles II, to the public, while in A View of Greenwich the royal couple stroll through the park with members of their court. In the 18th century the art of England was still largely dominated by foreign talent. The French artist Marcellus Laroon injected the Conversation Piece with an element of satire. In A Dinner Party and A Musical Tea-Party he pokes fun at the extravagance and affectation of the contemporary elite. The German-born French painter Philippe Mercier shows Frederick, Prince of Wales and his sisters playing music together in an image of domestic harmony and refinement. In a work attributed to Joseph Nickolls, the prince appears in a panoramic crowd scene in The Mall, then the most fashionable resort in 18th-century London. Here the Conversation Piece serves to demonstrate the prince’s popularity and his ability to mingle with people from all walks of life.
Queen Victoria and Prince Albert used art to present to the public an image of the ideal family. In Sir Edwin Landseer’s Windsor Castle in Modern Times the queen is shown as the contented wife, with her eldest child and family pets, giving her young husband a posy of flowers on his return from the hunt. In another work by Landseer, she is seen with her sketchbook enjoying the beauty of the highlands with her children. She acts and dresses as a middle-class mother, so much so, that a passing ghillie looks amazed when he realises that he has met the queen. Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |
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