Country Life

Vision on

Andrew Loukes previews an exhibition that puts the emphasis where Blake wanted it to be–on his achievemen­ts as a visual artist

-

LATE in his life, William Blake told the journalist Henry Crabb Robinson how, years earlier, he had been set on course to become an artist. He recounted to Robinson how a visiting spirit had offered the advice: ‘Blake, be an artist & nothing else.’

Blake, however, largely made a living as a copy-engraver and the visionary poetry and visual imagery that we know today went largely unnoticed in his own time.

The show sets out to reimagine Blake’s art as he intended it to be experience­d

Yet more than anything, it was as a fine artist that he wanted to succeed and Tate Britain’s exhibition sets out to reimagine his art as he intended it to be experience­d. The new survey features more than 300 exhibits and ranges from iconic images, such as his vision of the creation in The Ancient of Days, to rarely seen examples from American and Australian collection­s.

The most explicit manifestat­ion of Blake’s aspiration­s as an artist came in the ill-fated solo exhibition of 1809, which he mounted in rooms above the shop in Broad Street, Soho, where his brother James had taken over the family haberdashe­ry business. This ‘Exhibition of Paintings in Fresco, Poetical and Historical Inventions’ comprised 16 paintings and lasted for more than a year. Entry cost one shilling, pointedly the same as the infinitely bigger Royal Academy (RA) Summer Exhibition, with the explanator­y catalogue priced at a further 2½ shillings.

Probably due to a combinatio­n of these uncompetit­ive prices, Blake’s obscurity and the venue’s unfashiona­ble address, very few people visited the show and it received only one solitary and negative review.

None of the previous Blake retrospect­ive exhibition­s— including four at Tate since 1913—have so fully featured this project, such a central declaratio­n of the artist’s profession­al intent. The current show reunites eight of the surviving exhibits alongside contextual objects and re-creates the domestic space of Broad Street to evoke something of the original experience—albeit with considerab­ly more fellow visitors for company.

For two of the works that were exhibited in Soho and are now on show at Tate Britain, Blake had especially grand designs. The Spiritual Form of Nelson Guiding Leviathan and The Spiritual Form of Pitt Guiding Behemoth were meant to secure, in his own words, ‘a national commission to execute these two Pictures on a scale that is suitable to the grandeur of the nation, who is the parent of his heroes, in high-finished fresco’.

Tate Britain has gone some way to realising Blake’s unfulfille­d ambition by digitally enlarging and projecting the works at the vast scale that was imagined by the artist. At this size, it becomes even more apparent how Blake positions both the hero of Trafalgar and the ex-prime Minister as ‘anarchic warmongers’—as his depictions of them are described in the excellent accompanyi­ng catalogue by Tate curators Martin Myrone and Amy Concannon. Despite Blake’s patriotic intentions, these anti-establishm­ent portrayals were never likely to bring about the state sponsorshi­p he desired, even had their initial exhibition in small format in Soho received any kind of influentia­l audience.

At the other end of the scale, the new exhibition includes some of the artist’s hand-coloured books in their original bound form, so that we can appreciate how the plates were intended to be experience­d. (Inevitably, the effect of these works of art is altered when dismembere­d pages from his books are exhibited as framed prints, as they so often are when encountere­d by a modern audience.)

Other themes explored here include Blake’s relationsh­ip with the RA, which partly fired his intention to tackle grand themes in art and his patriotic purpose. Some of his student drawings and RA exhibits are also on show. The impact of London on Blake’s art is made apparent and there is an overdue reappraisa­l of the role played by his wife, Catherine, in both the creation and promotion of his work.

Most of all, this compelling exhibition compounds our appreciati­on of Blake’s extraordin­ary sense of design and his skill as a colourist. It also shows his commitment to championin­g the role of art in society. The experience leaves us in no doubt that Blake was, indeed, an artist.

William Blake is at Tate Britain, Millbank, London SW1, until February 2, 2020 (020–7887 8888; www.tate. org.uk)

Next week Collage at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh

 ??  ?? The embodiment of Britain: Albion Rose is more broadly interprete­d as symbolic of personal freedom
The embodiment of Britain: Albion Rose is more broadly interprete­d as symbolic of personal freedom
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Left: The Ancient of Days shows the artist’s repressive character Urizen attempting to chart infinity. Above: The Spiritual Form of Pitt Guiding Behemoth. With Pitt flanked by a reaper and a menacing ploughman, it refers to his martial position against the French
Left: The Ancient of Days shows the artist’s repressive character Urizen attempting to chart infinity. Above: The Spiritual Form of Pitt Guiding Behemoth. With Pitt flanked by a reaper and a menacing ploughman, it refers to his martial position against the French
 ??  ?? A plate from the most highly detailed of the six surviving copies of Blake’s epic poem Jerusalem, showing a couple in a water lily
A plate from the most highly detailed of the six surviving copies of Blake’s epic poem Jerusalem, showing a couple in a water lily

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom