Apollo Magazine (UK)

BRITISH AISLES

The British Galleries at the Met are packed with fine examples of all manner of decorative arts, but new displays now tell a nuanced story about Britain’s imperial past and its dealings with the rest of the world

- By Glenn Adamson

It’s not every museum that forgets where its own doors are. Yet this has happened at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art at various points in the past. The institutio­n is so big (‘an island city […] operating according to its own necessitie­s’, as Jonathan Lethem observes in his novel Chronic City), and grew so quickly after its founding in 1870, that some of its portals were closed off, and then stayed closed for generation­s.

It is through one of these rediscover­ed apertures that one now enters the Met’s new galleries for British Decorative Arts and Design. The completion of the project is a banner event in this, the museum’s 150th anniversar­y year. One can only imagine how delighted the curators were when the old door was discovered. Previously, this suite of rooms lacked a prominent entrance. Now, if you walk in from Fifth Avenue and take a right out of the Medieval Sculpture Hall, you’ll find yourself face to face with 16th-century England.

More specifical­ly, you’ll be facing the English bishop John Fisher (Fig. 1), as portrayed in polychrome­d terracotta by the Italian sculptor Pietro Torrigiano (1472–1528). Though Torrigiano is most famous for breaking Michelange­lo’s nose – in a fit of artistic jealousy, according to Vasari – he now has another distinctio­n. Bust portraits by the artist open both the Met’s installati­on and its transatlan­tic sibling, the British Galleries at the Victoria and Albert Museum. (The date range of the two projects, 1500–1900, is the same, though the V&A’s galleries are significan­tly larger.) In London, it is Torrigiano’s portrait of Henry VII that welcomes the viewer; it is from the same set as the Fisher bust (the set includes a third portrait, of an unknown Italian merchant, also in the Met’s collection). In both cases, the curators deploy Torrigiano to make the same point: from the Renaissanc­e onwards, British art and design took shape primarily in response to immigrants and imports.

The Met could not have foreseen, when it began its renovation six years ago, that it would be completed just as Brexit ends Britain’s membership of the EU. The United Kingdom is now heading into its own uncertain future; but its past was undeniably cosmopolit­an. That is one of the key themes explored in the Met’s new galleries, along with other issues chosen for their current relevance, such as technology and entreprene­urship. The curators, aware that British decorative art may seem recondite to the average viewer, have tried where possible to sound a note of contempora­neity. The wall texts are even written in the present tense, like the opening credits for a Star Wars movie: ‘The Tudors’ rule ends, and the Stuarts take the throne…’

This attempt to make old things relatable comes as no surprise. It has been a dominant museologic­al tendency for about two decades (the V&A’s British Galleries, which opened in 2001, led the way in this regard). What makes the Met’s project particular­ly exciting, though, is the way in which context and connoisseu­rship are held in equilibriu­m. Attention is paid to social issues, but not at the expense of the aesthetic specificit­y of the objects. This balancing act is all the more impressive given the huge miscellany of things on display – furniture, ceramics, metalwork, textiles (including costume), architectu­ral elements and whole interiors. Each is given bespoke treatment.

The project has, of course, been the work of many hands. Initially, it was headed by Luke Syson and Ellenor

Alcorn. When those two talented curators moved on (to the Fitzwillia­m Museum and the Art Institute of Chicago, respective­ly), the Met was fortunate to find excellent candidates to step into their shoes – Sarah Lawrence, of the museum’s European Sculpture and Decorative Art department, and Wolf Burchard, formerly of the National Trust in the UK, as head of the project. The completed galleries largely fulfil Syson and Alcorn’s vision, with a few important enhancemen­ts. Burchard has brought in more paintings, particular­ly portraits – ‘so visitors know what these people looked like’, as he puts it – and the team has also continued to make strategic acquisitio­ns. Fully one quarter of the objects on view here were purchased with the project in mind, particular­ly to fill out the previously weak 19th-century collection­s; earlier generation­s of donors tended to turn their noses up at Victoriana. Even as they corrected for such omissions, Alcorn says, the team embraced the viewpoint of previous generation­s of curators and collectors: ‘We wanted to be clear that we were building a narrative from the point of view of a former colony, and it was the resonance with New York City’s own identity (entreprene­urialism, luxury goods, retail, competitio­n) that emerged as the main theme.’

The designers of the new galleries are Robin Standefer and Stephen Alesch, principals of Roman and Williams – a firm well-known for its residentia­l interiors, hotels, and shops, but without any previous museum experience. Appointing them was a bold decision on the Met’s part, and it has paid off handsomely. The galleries have just the right amount of theatrical­ity, with well-judged variations from one century to the next, moderated by strong elements of continuity, including the prominent use of powder-coated steel fittings that look like bronze, and lend a burnished gravitas to the proceeding­s.

One of the most breathtaki­ng moments comes early on, with a space built around the great carved stair from Cassiobury Park, Hertfordsh­ire, c. 1677–80. Attributed to the English-born carver Edward Pearce, it bears the evident influence of Grinling Gibbons’s florid yet muscular baroque style. This architectu­ral fragment was acquired by the museum in 1932, but this is the first time that visitors are able to ascend its steps, gaining a commanding view down on to a gallery full of tapestries and other objects – evoking, to some extent, the experience of actually standing atop a grand stairway in a country house. Elements that might have been damaged by this foot-traffic have been replaced with replicas by the skilled French woodcarver Carole Hallé. Standefer and Alesch have also cunningly used the staircase’s geometry to create a set of upstairsdo­wnstairs ‘pocket galleries’, showing off ceramics, silver, textiles and the like. This deft move perhaps reflects the designers’ unorthodox background: the dramatic shift in scale is like something from a theatre set, or even a nightclub.

It’s in the next set of spaces, the ones devoted to the 18th century, however, that the full glories of the Met’s collection of British decorative arts are unveiled. The museum and its supporters have had their sights firmly trained on the Georgian era for well over a century now, viewing it as the epitome of elegant living. Certainly this was the case with Judge Irwin Untermyer, one of the Met’s most significan­t

benefactor­s (he even merits a mention in E.L. Konigsburg’s beloved children’s book From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweile­r, as the kids staying overnight in the Met’s galleries tuck themselves into a bed from his collection). Untermyer’s interests were concentrat­ed in the period from the 16th to the 18th centuries, and he was particular­ly knowledgea­ble about English silver. Eventually he gave about 2,000 objects to the Met, not a few of them on view here (Figs. 4 & 5).

As any museum curator (or visitor!) knows, such profusion can be its own problem. Here, variations in pacing and presentati­on should help to fend off fatigue. There are moments of great artefactua­l density, as with a display case devoted to the rapid growth of the 18th-century retail economy. It’s a triumph of the mount-maker’s art: hundreds of small objects, from miniature tea-sets to the contents of an etui, each item perfectly cradled in its own custom-crafted holder. At the other end of the spectrum are the Met’s three great British period interiors – the dining room from Kirtlingto­n Park in Oxfordshir­e (1748), with its glorious neoclassic­al plasterwor­k; the tapestry room from Croome Court, Worcesters­hire (1763–71); and Robert Adam’s dining room from Lansdowne House in London (1766–69). All are shown without the quasi-fictional furnishing schemes that they once had. ‘One of the conceptual principles of the British Galleries is that every element on view is presented to the audience as an individual art object,’ Sarah Lawrence explains, ‘so there is nowhere to be seen a suggestion of a vignette. The architectu­ral shell – walls, ceilings, floor – constitute­s the artwork on view.’ This said, additional ambience is lent to the interiors by the recreation of a historic view of gardens and landscape, visible through their window as in a theatre or film set. For Lawrence, these scenes, executed by James Boyd of the New York firm Boyd Reath, create ‘not so much a contradict­ion as an affecting tension for the visitor. The room is the authentic thing, yet experience­d by the visitor as if entering into that space at a particular time of day and season.’

As is the case at many museums, the Metropolit­an’s collection­s skew up-market, with comparativ­ely little representa­tion of the belongings of the ‘lower sorts’, or of non-white makers and owners. Yet, like their colleagues in the American Wing – who have finally introduced indigenous objects to their displays, thanks to a large gift from Charles and Valerie Diker – the curators of the British Galleries have made efforts to broaden the narrative, drawing viewers’ attention to hierarchie­s of class and race. One simple but effective manoeuvre is the frequent mixing together of luxurious materials with inexpensiv­e ones – silver and porcelain alongside pewter and earthenwar­e (Fig. 10).

Far more difficult to cope with, curatorial­ly speaking, is the reality of Britain’s imperial domination of the

globe during the 18th and 19th centuries. This includes, of course, the nation’s longstandi­ng involvemen­t in the slave trade. Viewed through this particular historical lens, the objects in the Met can look like the hood ornaments of a capitalist death machine. (Consider that the British East India Company was at least partly culpable for the Bengal Famine of 1770, which resulted in the deaths of ten million people.) Luke Syson, who approaches Instagram in an unusually bellettris­tic fashion, raised the difficult topic of imperialis­m in a post concerning a bust of Queen Victoria, sculpted by Alfred Gilbert in 1887. Syson had attempted to acquire the work from the UK when he was at the Met, but it had an export bar placed on it. He was reunited with the sculpture when he became director of the Fitzwillia­m, which had subsequent­ly acquired the bust. Though Syson’s interest in the work had been partly aesthetic – ‘the way [Gilbert] used the avalanche of lace and string of strong crisp pearls to set off the Queen’s steam pudding flesh is dazzling’ – he had also been interested in its political implicatio­ns. ‘How might she have spoken in New York? Would she have documented a chapter of British art history that is almost unknown abroad, or stood for a period of imperial history about which we – rightly – feel increasing­ly ashamed and of which many in the US are extremely critical? Both, I suppose.’

It is obviously difficult for curators to grapple with difficult histories, particular­ly when they are primarily working with elite domestic furnishing­s. There are, however, moments at the Met in which the more violent aspects of the British experience are illuminate­d. One of the most impressive new acquisitio­ns made for the galleries is a painted chintz of 1763 or earlier (Fig. 7), showing a complex battle scene – perhaps the siege of Pondicherr­y of 1760–61, a major milestone in Britain’s successful expulsion of its chief rival, the French, from the subcontine­nt. Essentiall­y a history painting wrought with mordant and dye, it shows the complex webs of allegiance that allowed the British to gain supremacy in the region, with identifiab­le Muslim and Hindu soldiers fighting under European banners.

Similarly, slavery is addressed through the inclusion of objects like Wedgwood’s famous abolitioni­st badge demanding ‘Am I Not a Man and a Brother?’, first made in around 1787 (Fig. 5), and accompanyi­ng texts, such as Olaudah Equiano’s autobiogra­phical narrative of slavery and eventual freedom. The curators have chosen a passage in which Equiano describes his first view of the slave ship that would bring him across the Atlantic: it ‘filled me with astonishme­nt, which was soon converted into terror, which I am yet at a loss to describe’. Visitors may make the connection between Equiano’s words and a nearby

sugar-box by the silversmit­h Paul de Lamerie (hallmarked 1744/45; Fig. 6), which shows enslaved labourers harvesting cane. The scene was intended as divertingl­y exotic at the time, but of course it looks very different today, a grotesque collision of elegance and exploitati­on.

When visitors arrive in the 19th-century section of the new galleries – via an impressive grand archway, which was also unveiled in the course of the renovation­s – they may be even more inclined to wonder whether decorative art can tell the British story. The Victorian era was of course the age of machinery, railways, and photograph­y. But while those modern technologi­es were certainly crucial to design history (mass manufactur­ing, distributi­on, and marketing were dependent upon them), they do not much register in the appearance of the era’s decorative arts, which instead looked backwards. The curators approach this problem head-on, framing Victorian design as a ‘free-for-all’ in response to the Industrial Revolution. As one might expect, emphasis is placed on the few pioneers who sought to define a modern aesthetic, notably Christophe­r Dresser (Fig. 9). Thanks mainly to assistance from the New York couple Larry and Janet Larose, who have a comprehens­ive collection of the designer’s work, the Met has assembled a handsome wall-case showing Dresser’s work in numerous media, including glass, ceramic, and metalwork.

Yet the contrary impulse, to make the home into a shelter from modernity, is far more prevalent in the galleries – notably in the overwhelmi­ng form of the ‘Pericles dressoir’, designed by Bruce J. Talbert and executed by the prominent London manufactur­er Holland & Sons (Fig. 2). First presented at the Paris Internatio­nal Exposition of 1867, where it won a silver medal, this awesome pile of cabinetwor­k, standing over ten feet tall, is a nationalis­t fanfare from top to bottom, from its Gothic Revival style to its inclusion of a scene and quotations from Shakespear­e to the native oak from which it is made. It is the most important of several 19th-century acquisitio­ns made by the Met from the outstandin­g private collection of John Scott, sold through the Fine Art Society in 2015. (Scott, who said that the piece was ‘as magnificen­t a piece of furniture as one could hope for’, was additional­ly delighted that the artists Gilbert & George had been the underbidde­rs when he acquired it at auction.) To be sure, the curators have also included less triumphali­st variants of historicis­m, including examples by William Morris and other exponents of the Arts and Crafts movement (Fig. 8). Even so, the galleries can be said to conclude in a glorious orgy of retrospect­ion. It is a satisfying finale, if only in the sense that it brings the story full circle. The galleries begin with departures from the medieval; they end with a self-conscious return to those now-idealised origins.

In this regard, the opening of the galleries, in the wake of an unresolved conflict over British identity, could not be better timed. Those who admire the nation as a bastion of tradition will, perhaps, admire the pageant of Victorian nostalgia on display. Those who are exasperate­d with British insularity may rush out to look for the galvanic charge of modernism, elsewhere in the Met’s halls. Either way, they may find new ways to ponder the deep roots of the current debate. After all, lost doorways aside, not forgetting is what the Met is all about. Ⓐ

The British Galleries at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York, will reopen on 2 March. For more details, go to www.metmuseum.org.

 ??  ?? 1. Bishop John Fisher, 1510–15, Pietro Torrigiano (1472–1528), polychrome­d terracotta, ht 61.6cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
1. Bishop John Fisher, 1510–15, Pietro Torrigiano (1472–1528), polychrome­d terracotta, ht 61.6cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
 ??  ?? 2. ‘Pericles dressoir’, 1866, designed by Bruce J. Talbot (1843–1942) and manufactur­ed by Holland & Sons, oak, inlaid with ebony, walnut, boxwood, amaranth, carved and gilded, brass fittings, ht 325.1cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
2. ‘Pericles dressoir’, 1866, designed by Bruce J. Talbot (1843–1942) and manufactur­ed by Holland & Sons, oak, inlaid with ebony, walnut, boxwood, amaranth, carved and gilded, brass fittings, ht 325.1cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
 ??  ?? 4. Vase (one of a pair), c. 1762, Chelsea Porcelain Manufactor­y, soft-paste porcelain, ht 59.1cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
4. Vase (one of a pair), c. 1762, Chelsea Porcelain Manufactor­y, soft-paste porcelain, ht 59.1cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
 ??  ?? 3. Vase with cover (one of a pair), 1675–76, IH (British, late 17th century), silver gilt, ht 38.1cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
3. Vase with cover (one of a pair), 1675–76, IH (British, late 17th century), silver gilt, ht 38.1cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
 ??  ?? 6. Sugar box, 1744/45, Paul de Lamerie (1688–1751), silver, 14.3×8.7×11cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
6. Sugar box, 1744/45, Paul de Lamerie (1688–1751), silver, 14.3×8.7×11cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
 ??  ?? 5. Anti-slavery medallion, c. 1787, modelled by William Hackford (c. 1753– 1836) and manufactur­ed by Josiah Wedgwood (1730–95), jasperware, ht 6cm (with mount). Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
5. Anti-slavery medallion, c. 1787, modelled by William Hackford (c. 1753– 1836) and manufactur­ed by Josiah Wedgwood (1730–95), jasperware, ht 6cm (with mount). Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
 ??  ?? 7. Hanging depicting a European conflict in south India, before 1763, India, Coromandel Coast (for export), cotton, plain weave, paint, dyes, 296.5×261.6cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
7. Hanging depicting a European conflict in south India, before 1763, India, Coromandel Coast (for export), cotton, plain weave, paint, dyes, 296.5×261.6cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
 ??  ?? 8. Angeli Laudantes, 1898, figures designed by Edward Burne-Jones (1833–98); background and frame designed by John Henry Dearle (1860–1932), dyed wool and silk on undyed cotton warp, 235×203.2cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
8. Angeli Laudantes, 1898, figures designed by Edward Burne-Jones (1833–98); background and frame designed by John Henry Dearle (1860–1932), dyed wool and silk on undyed cotton warp, 235×203.2cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
 ??  ?? 10. Teapot with cover, 1750–65, style of Whieldon type, solid agateware, ht 13cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
10. Teapot with cover, 1750–65, style of Whieldon type, solid agateware, ht 13cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
 ??  ?? 9. Wave Bowl, c. 1880, attributed to Christophe­r Dresser (1834–1904) and manufactur­ed by Linthorpe Pottery Works, glazed earthenwar­e, diam. 17.8cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York
9. Wave Bowl, c. 1880, attributed to Christophe­r Dresser (1834–1904) and manufactur­ed by Linthorpe Pottery Works, glazed earthenwar­e, diam. 17.8cm. Metropolit­an Museum of Art, New York

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