There
is no denying the fact that the National Lottery has helped make
gambling respectable. All those pound coins cast by millions of
dreamers into the great Fountain of Eternal Hope with the consolation
that, if you don't win a fortune, at least some worthwhile charity
or focus-of-need will benefit from that myriad of 'little
somethings' and get a cut of the proceeds!
Here
in Bristol lottery funds cushioned a fair wack of the £27 million it
cost to give the old Industrial Museum ( and former 1950's quay-side
warehouse) a very expensive make-over. Money well spent, says the
City Council, who point out that, less than a year after the new M
Shed opened, its already welcomed nearly three quarters of a million
visitors. This of course is latest the attraction to adorn their
watery residential 'pleasure park' and one which tells the story of
the city and its people in a fun and strikingly visual way.
Finding
novel and compelling ways of experiencing the past in the present is
big business at the moment as, increasingly, Western Society finds it
difficult to get excited about a fraught and uncertain future.
Bristol can pride itself on being rather good at re-inventing things
– although sometimes very reluctantly. Further along the Floating
Harbour – itself a major historical make-over from a once thriving
but rather grimey city dock – the award-laden ss Great Britain
rests on both its blocks and laurels. When it was floated up the
River Avon into Bristol - back in 1970 – it was a rusty old hulk
the City Fathers were convinced would sink and block this vital
artery to the sea.
Her
return was thanks to a few brave souls with enough foresight to see
that this Isambard Kingdom Brunel designed and Bristol-built,
ocean-going, propellor-driven, iron-clad steamer would one day
justify the expense of the longest marine tow in history. Back
across the ocean from its graveyard in the remote waters of the
Falkland Islands. The ship could be said to have kick-started the
steady transformation of what had been a watery slum. After years of
turning our backs on the deserted coal wharves and timber yards we
embraced the new-found joys of waterside living and socialising.
M-Shed
is also the latest in a cluster of satellite museums scattered
around the city. And a big financial gamble in these times of
frugality and irate council tax payers, maybe more concerned about
essentials like housing, education and public transport.There is
already a well-established City Museum and Art Gallery. The place –
two summers ago - that witnessed amazing queues as people waited for
up to six hours to view the exhibition by local-born,
graffiti-artist Banksy. Add to that the Blaise Castle Folk Museum,
the Red Lodge with its Tudor panelling, and the Georgian House.
Up
to ten years ago there was yet another 'satellite' in the Heritage
portfolio. This time an Ecclesiastical Museum – created out of
the Blitz-burned shell of St Nicholas Church. It closed in 1991 - a
victim, even then, of council cuts. However, while the church plate,
illuminated manuscripts and vestments were relatively easy to move
elsewhere, one rather large piece of Bristol's history is proving a
major embarrassment, and a big obstacle, to disposing of the
redundant church and – with the City maybe looking to make some
savings – wfforts to recoup some money.
Looking
down on the filing cabinets and bookshelves the building now contains
is a giant painted Altarpiece. Eight hundred square feet of canvas.
Three separate but linked monster-sized paintings from the brush of
one William Hogarth (1697-1764) – English artist, engraver,
satirist and social critic. A work commissioned originally for
another city church that may be the most unloved and unwanted
masterpiece in history! One wonders – 20 years after the Church
Museum closed whether anyone wants it or knows what to do with it.
But before l move on and attempt to answer that – I’d better
explain how Hogarth came to paint it and how its been moved around
the city over the centuries like a giant game of 'pass the parcel.'
He
was , of course, the artist who came up with an original way of
engaging with narrative art. The man who produced several series of
paintings – reading like a morality comic strip – that often used
humor and wit to illustrate the follies and vices of contemporary
society. Hogarth's prints and his portrait painting made his
reputation and gave him a living. However this painter had ambitions
in another direction, as a crusading Englishman who was determined to
give his Continental artistic counterparts a run for their money.
He
wanted to make his name as a history painter and prove that he, and
his countrymen, were just as talented when it came to working in the
European 'Grand Manner'. So when, in the summer of 1755, the Vestry
of St Mary Redcliffe Parish Church in Bristol invited him to paint a
large altar-piece for their church, he jumped at the chance.
Though
'history painting' was regarded as the highest form of the art, there
weren't many opportunities in England for gaining commissions.
Large-scale religious paintings weren't a popular way of inspiring
devotion in our more formal and Protestant-fuelled land. We had no
'native' school of history painting. In the mid 1730's Hogarth
decided to do his own 'advertising' and offered his services free of
charge to the governors of St Bartholomew's Hospital in London, in an
effort to stop the job being awarded to an Italian painter. Hogarth
produced two stunning religious murals, with figures seven feet high,
on the walls of a staircase leading to the hospital's Great Hall.
Ten years later he organized a gift of four 'home-produced' history
paintings to the Foundling Hospital, one of which he had created
himself.
But
his exercise in self-promotion met with limited success. Apart from
the Bristol altar-piece, he had only one more giant canvas to show in
support of his argument that English painters could achieve the same
qualities of intellectual dignity and greatness of style as those in
France or Italy. In 1748 he painted St Paul before Felix for the
Chapel of Lincoln's Inn – though it proved to be too big and was
hung in the Hall instead.
The
paintings for Bristol proved a little on the large size too when they
were eventually hung above the altar of the medieval parish church of
St Mary Redcliffe. Only the Ascension was visible from the nave –
hung under crimson draperies and slightly higher than the two side
panels – featuring The Three Marys at the Tomb and The Sealing of
the Sepulcher - placed at right angles to it and facing each other.
There
Hogarth's altarpiece stayed for a hundred years until changing tastes
in architecture and a huge bill for urgent restoration work sent it
off to wander around Bristol for 115 years. The Gothic Revival of the
mid-Victorian age had no place for such Georgian baroque
embellishments which many considered spoilt the appearance of so many
medieval churches. In Bristol, St Mary's wanted, amongst other
things, to re-build its spire - demolished during a storm in the
fifteenth century. It hoped the sale of the three giant canvasses
might contribute towards the £40,000 they needed.
Letters
were exchanged with the National Gallery and Christies Auction Rooms
( founded in 1766 - two years after Hogarth's death), and
advertisements placed in The Times and in local newspapers, but
without a buyer coming forward. Seems both the size of the canvasses
and their subject matter was working against them. Despite the fact
that Christies had sold Hogarth's series of satirical paintings
Marriage a la Mode in 1797 for 1,000 guineas. They now hang in the
National Gallery.
The
man who finally helped find the unwanted altarpiece its first new
home was Alderman Thomas Proctor – a local businessman and
churchwarden who owned a fertilizer manufacturing plant near St
Mary's – and who now chaired the church restoration committee to
which he donated two and a half thousand pounds of his own money. In
1858 he offered to buy the canvasses for a nominal £20 and present
them to the Royal Academy for the Promotion of the Fine Arts to look
after. A prestigious and private art establishment with at least one
gallery wall big enough to take Hogarth's giant canvasses.
But
this is not the end of our story. The Academy – now the RWA -
tried to sell the altarpiece in 1910 to raise cash for new building
work. The building was in need of restoration work and the Academy
preferred its walls covered with more contemporary and home-grown
art.
The
pictures were taken down, rolled up and put on show in London.
Bristol's local press lambasted the Academy for 'preferring hard cash
to art treasures' and public opinion saved the day. For lack of
display space and a refusal from St Mary's to have them returned, the
giant altar paintings went back into storage. The rolled canvasses
spent their war in the basement of the City Art Gallery. There they
lay forgotten – at least until 1953 when a former Sheriff of
Bristol suggested the paintings be installed in the city's impressive
new Council House on College Green. You've guessed it already. They
were just too big. By this time Hogarth's artwork was being stored in
a bonded tobacco warehouse. The biggest and most expensive 'roll-up'
in the building.
Two
years later and finally a deal was done for the altarpiece to hang
'in perpetuity' in the Bristol's Corporation's Art Gallery, that's
after first being sent to the National Gallery in London for
restoration and re-hanging. Incidentally, it happened to be the
first job for the newly-appointed chief restorer Arthur Lucas who
would go on to win fame and controversy for his work on Titian's
Bacchus and Ariadne. The altar paintings were re-erected as an
impressive backdrop in the Art Gallery's two-storey high Wills Hall
and – at an opening ceremony that coincided with the meeting of the
British Association in Bristol – a senior keeper from the British
Museum described the triptych as “the last great monument of
Baroque painting in the country, and surely one of the most splendid
pieces of religious art to have been executed by an Englishman since
the Reformation.''
There
had been post-war plans, meanwhile, to build a new museum and art
gallery complex on space cleared by enemy bombs in the historic
centre of the city and beside the River Avon. However, when rising
costs brought an end to this proposal, the Council re-kindled its
vague interest in using the old blitzed shell of St Nicholas Church,
at one end of the proposed site, as a church museum. Once more the
canvasses were taken down and sent for restoration. They were then
erected at the east end of the newly converted building – a rather
large reminder of the city's more flamboyant ecclesiastical past.
They are still there - looking down now on computer screens and
filing cabinets. The museum has become office space for museum
services.Very few people ring the door bell and ask to see them. For
the trickle of callers, there is a viewing platform - so as not to
disturb those now using the church floor as a workspace.
It
is my understanding the Council may be exploring ways of getting rid
of this unwanted real estate. They cannot demolish the building –
its listed - and the giant canvasses are a bit of a sticking point.
I have privately asked a London art dealer to place a value on them.
He was a student in Bristol and knows the work. Limited by its size
and genre he said he could see it raising no more than a million
pounds. Getting rid of the building may prove easier but who would
want it with Hogarth's canvasses still in situ?
Some
may ask whether the new harbourside museum should have found room for
it and acknowledged its place in the city's history? Who else has a
wall big enough to hang it? St Mary Redcliffe does not want it back
and nor does the RWA. Or maybe some people feel – with the opening
of M Shed and the transfer to it of artifacts from elsewhere, it may
have freed up space to put it back on display at the old City Museum
at the top of Park Street.
That,
according to Julie Finch, the City's Director of Museums, Galleries
and Archives, is now exactly what they have in mind. It seems the
Hogarth is now considered part of a wider plan for the redevelopment
of the City Museum and Art Gallery and they intend keeping the
paintings as part of the collection as they are 'important to
Bristol'.
Whatever
happens. Dismantling the canvasses and transporting and re-erecting
them once more is going to cost a great deal of money. However,
leaving them alone in a building that could be better used by someone
else offers no long-term solution. I'd welcome some other views on
the subject. After all – grand bank and insurance buildings in
Corn Street have been transformed into bars and pizza houses with
many original fittings still in situ. But if you feel that's a better
solution for this little 'problem' – just mind where you're shaking
that bottle of tomato sauce!
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