'Sickert in Venice' on View at The Dulwich Picture Gallery

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Written by rubin   
Wednesday, 15 April 2009 14:15

Walter Sickert - St Mark’s Venice, c.1896-7 - Oil on canvas, 1005 x 1510 mm. - British Council, © Estate of Walter R. Sickert. All rights reserved, DACS 2008

London - Everything that was new in British art a hundred years ago came from Walter R. Sickert and he is known as the father of modern British art. Sickert was one of the most important British artists of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. A pupil of Whistler, friend of Degas and acquaintance of Manet, he introduced Impressionism and Post-Impressionism to a younger generation of British painters. On exhibition at The Dulwich Picture Gallery through 31 May, 2009.

This is the first ever exhibition devoted to Sickert's pictures of Venice, where he found his identity as an artist. He made repeated visits starting in 1895 and Venice inspired some of his most ravishing impressionist work. He painted - among many other Venetian scenes - St Mark's Basilica under different lighting conditions, and later moved indoors, experimenting with figures in interiors - the subject matter that would become his trademark.

Walter R. Sickert - The Rialto Courtesy of H H-HVenice marked a watershed location in his personal and professional life. It was here that he evolved a mature approach to the subject that was to bring him fame and success in his subsequent career. In the winter of 1895 Sickert’s wife Ellen arranged to meet him in Venice to try to resolve their troubled marriage. It was an unsuccessful reconciliation and, aged thirty-five, and with little critical or financial success in his art, Sickert stayed on in Venice to face an uncertain future. It became the inspiration and background to his reinvention, and the point from which his unique experimentation with figures in interiors began.

The first pictures Sickert made in Venice are highly impressive vidutti of St Mark’s and the Rialto, painted in his own rich version of impressionism. Painting the city’s architecture, he adopted Degas’s practice of cropping compositions to make them visually more exciting. But during subsequent visits Sickert moved the object of his attention first into alleyways, and then indoors. He started experimenting with the concept of ambiguous figures in interiors, which forced the viewer to speculate about the nature of what they were looking at. Through his pairing of female figures – the Venetian prostitutes, La Giuseppina and La Carolina, sometimes dressed, sometimes nude – Sickert discovered an approach to the subject that formed the basis of his art for his remaining career.

The exhibition is divided into a number of themes to demonstrate the range and development of Sickert’s Venetian pictures. There will be Views and Vistas, Nocturnes, Figures and Groups and Painting the Nude. The exhibition is curated by Robert Upstone, Curator of Modern British Art at Tate Britain

Dulwich Picture Gallery, Gallery Road, London SE21 7AD
T: 020 8693 5254 F: 020 8299 8700
www.dulwichpicturegallery.org.uk


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