Showing posts with label Delaware Art Museum. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Delaware Art Museum. Show all posts

Sunday, July 28, 2024

"Botticelli's Studio: The First Visit of Simonetta presented by Giuliano and Lorenzo de' Medici," 1922 by Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale (1872 - 1945)

 The Delaware Art Museum is possibly my favorite regional art museum.  What it may lack in breadth it more than makes up for in depth.  It is home to one of the finest collections of 1) Pre Raphealite Art, 2) the works of John Sloane (1871 - 1952), and 3) American Illustrators (Circa 1890 - 1940).  Add to this a nice selection of works of 19th Century American Artists and a growing collection of Modern and Contemporary Art.


I'm quite familiar with the layout and highlights of the collection, so when I go now, I try to latch onto particular works and spend quality time with them.  Then research their artist and continue to contemplate them after the visit.  One of the trends that the Delaware Art Museum has really embraced is elevating the works by marginalized artists: women and men of color.  I find this very exciting in my desire to extend my experience of art beyond the patriarchal canon.

On my most recent visit, I was captivated by this work with the crazy long title: "Botticelli's Studio: The First Visit of Simonetta Presented by Giuliano and Lorenzo de' Medici".  The work was painted in 1922 by the British artist Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale (1872 - 1945).  I begin by comparing what I know against what I want to know, and what I see in the work itself.


What the placard on the wall tells me:

"In this historical scene, the Renaissance beauty Simonetta Vespucci visits the studio of Sandro Botticelli.  Giuliano (bowing) and Lorenso de' Medici escort her.  At left, Botticelli stands in front of one of his most famous paintings, the Madonna del Magnificat.

"Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale was a late Pre-Raphaelite painter who began exhibiting at the Royal Academy in 1899.

"Botticelli is not only the subject of the painting, but also a source of inspiration for Brickdale and the Pre-Raphaelites."


What do I want to know?  First of all, more about the life of the artist.  Second, more about the subjects of the work--especially Simonetta Vespucci: is she related to Amerigo?  (She is--a distant cousin.)

What I discovered: 1) Eleanor was born in an educated family with a father who was a successful barrister (lawyer).  His success provided her with the means to pursue her artistic predilections.  Her means and her talent gave her access to influential people who provided the necessary introductions that led to her entry as a student in the Royal Academy at the age of 24 in 1896.  She was mentored by artists who drew their academic experience from influential Pre Raphaelite artists like John Everett Millais, which shore up her pedigree.  She was an accomplished artist in multiple mediums: Oil, watercolor, and later in life, stained glass.  To manage her fiscal needs, she accepted an invitation to teach art.  Looking at her body of works, she often chose to highlight the presence of women in her paintings.  In 1919, an entire book full of her paintings featuring women was published under the title "Eleanor Fortescue Brickdale's Golden Book of Famous Women."

2) Simonetta Vespucci was a Genoan noblewoman who was considered the super model of her age.  She is speculated to be the inspiration for many of Botticelli's most famous paintings; most notably Venus in his monumental work "The Birth of Venus" a.k.a. Venus on a Half Shell.  

In choosing this subject, she has conspired to present us with one of the great introductions of the era of Renaissance Art.  Now the picture becomes even more interesting, no?

It is a theatrical moment.  The actors are playing roles with ramifications beyond this instance.  And where is the power dynamic?  The de' Medici's?  They are confident in their status, but ultimately bit player.  Botticelli?  A young man making his future and seeing in this beautiful woman an inspiration.  Vespucci?  Ah, she placed in the center of the painting for a reason.  Everything else rests with her.  Therein is the magic.  Without her, would there ever be "A Birth of Venus"?

Some details and references for your consideration.





Botticelli's "The Birth of Venus" circa 1485.

Monday, August 21, 2023

Wilmington, Delaware: The Delaware Art Museum, coda

 Leaving the Delaware Art Museum on such a lovely day demanded that I delay my trip home long enough to tour it's amazing a familiar sculpture gardens.
















Wilmington Delaware: Delaware Art Museum, part 5


Gallery 10 on the ground floor is a space used to house temporary exhibitions. It is also the last gallery that I visited on this trip.  It was getting late, and my back was starting to bother me.  What I encountered in Gallery 10 was sublime and reinvigorating.  The space is dedicated to a retrospective of the works of Christian Robinson an African American Children's book illustrator.  

Over a dozen of his works were featured with a sample of the original artwork in each.  There was also a video on a loop of the artists leading an art lesson from a series of online zoom sessions he hosted during the pandemic.  I walked away have discovered a new artist who's ethos and aesthetic felt like a new chamber in my heart.  Without further ado, some images from the exhibition: "What Might You Do?  Christian Robinson"











Christian Robinson teaching an art lesson on video

Gaston and Antoinette are a pair of books that trace the adventures of a French Bulldog and a French Poodle.  They are companion books.



"The Dead Bird" is a classic of children's literature by Margaret Wise Brown.  This is a re-interpretation of the original.  It was one of the undisputed classic masterworks of primary children's literature.  The tale of a group of friends who discover a dead bird in the park and how they respond.



We end by giving the artist the final word.

Wilmington, Delaware: The Delaware Art Museum, part 4

 From the Green Gallery to the Orange, and an expanded look at the Collection of Illustrations.  The tale is told from the point of view of it's greatest proponent: Howard Pyle.  The Gallery is divided to tell a series of tales: The life and major works of Howard Pyle; The art and processes of illustration; The works of the illustrators that Howard Pyle taught and their legacy.  Featured prominently are the works of several woman illustrators, too.  In the parlance of Equity education, who is missing for the story and how do we elevate their voices in a broader, more inclusive, conversation?

I entered the exhibit from the exit unwittingly, and so I will take you through some of the highlights in the same order.

A gallery featuring the works of Howard Pyle's most prominent students

"Cover and Frontispiece," 1924 (Hans Brinker and Silver Stakes, by Mary Mapes Dodge
Frank Earle Schoonover (1877 - 1972)

The image as it appeared on the book cover in 1924

A pair of magazine covers from the collection in context with a period photograph

"Cover," 1937 (Romance Range magazine)
Gayle Porter Hoskins (1887 - 1962)

"The Mountain Pony has the Climbing Ability of the Goat," 1907
Alan Tupper True (1881 - 1955)


"Cream of Wheat for 'Sail'," 1912
Katharine Richardson Wireman (1878 - 1966)

"More Books in the Home!," 1924
Jessie Wilcox Smith (1862 - 1935)

"Lady of the 1870's," circa 1917
Anna Whelan Betts (1873 - 1959)

"Anthony van Corlaer, The Trumpeter of New Amsterdam," 1893 - 1894
Howard Pyle (1853 - 1911)

From painting to illustration in a book.

"A Wolf Has Not Been Seen at Salem for Thirty Years," 1909
Howard Pyle (1853 - 1911) 

More views of the route from drawing to book illustration.

"The Buccaneer Was a Picturesque Fellow," 1905
Howard Pyle (1853 - 1911)

"The Mermaid," 1910
Howard Pyle (1853 - 1911)

Artifacts from Howard Pyle's studio.
"Project your mind into the subject until you actually live in it.  Throw your heart into the picture and then jump in after it." ~ Howard Pyle (1853 - 1911)