The Day

Scarred by defeat, they gave birth to a golden age of Danish art

- By SEBASTIAN SMEE New York

Whenever I see the word “identity” in an exhibition title, I have an urge to vanish into the soothing nebulousne­ss of a steamed-up bathroom. On the other hand, I am interested in how artists respond to national defeat and disaster. So I recommend “Beyond the Light: Identity and Place in Nineteenth-Century Danish Art.”

A lot of terrific art emerges from national trauma.

The show, at the Metropolit­an Museum of Art, sounds unpreposse­ssing. Danish art from the early 19th century? “Identity and place”? Unless you are a big fan of “Borgen” and eager to know what Birgitte Nyborg meant when she said, in the current season’s final episode, that “modern day Denmark was born of defeat,” you might be inclined to give it a pass.

Reconsider. A lot of terrific art emerges from national trauma. Impression­ism would not have taken the form it did without the Franco-Prussian War and the civil war inside Paris of 1870-71. Dada and art deco were both brought to you — thanks! — by the cataclysmi­c upheavals of World War I. And abstract expression­ism would not have emerged with such potency without the protracted shock of World War II.

Although it is not generally remembered outside Scandinavi­a, what happened to Denmark in the early years of the 19th century was also traumatic. In 1807, during the

Napoleonic Wars, the capital, Copenhagen, was heavily bombarded by the British for the second time (the first was in 1801). Denmark was ostensibly neutral, but Napoleon Bonaparte was pressuring the Danes to pledge their fleet to him. Britain’s preemptive response destroyed most of Denmark’s merchant fleet, one of the largest in the world. Meanwhile, its naval fleet was commandeer­ed by the British and a large part of Copenhagen was destroyed.

Britain’s actions pushed Denmark into France’s arms, an alliance that proved disastrous. Denmark’s economy collapsed (it had to declare bankruptcy) and at the end of the wars, in 1814, it was forced to cede Norway to Sweden.

Often, when a nation loses its bearings and self-esteem, it looks to its artists to alleviate the shame. Something like that happened in Denmark, which, between 1818 and 1848, enjoyed a “golden age.” (The term was first employed by the critic Valdemar Vedel.)

Defeat is often attended by a kind of self-conscious dignity that is, as Wolfgang Schivelbus­ch wrote in “The Culture of Defeat,” “as inaccessib­le to the victor ... as the kingdom of heaven is to the rich man.” The result can be a sense of moral superiorit­y, often attended by a process of purificati­on. Both are observable in Danish art of this period.

The Met’s show is mostly draw

ings. (It was organized by guest curator Freyda Spira in collaborat­ion with Stephanie Schrader and Thomas Lederballe; it will travel to the Getty Center in Los Angeles in May.) But it contains a couple of marvelous small paintings by Martinus Rorbye. One of them, “View From the Citadel Ramparts in Copenhagen by Moonlight,” shows two sailors and a soldier standing on the rampart of a citadel that was battered during the Napoleonic Wars. The central sailor’s pose is sturdy and resolute. The soldier’s bayonet gleams in the moonlight and the extravagan­t feather emerging from his helmet rhymes and overlaps with the curve of a sail in the harbor.

The compositio­n, curiously crowded and tight, was painted in 1839, after the artist had returned from an extended trip to Paris, Rome and Constantin­ople. It feels poignant that Rorbye should depict, so soon after his homecoming, a view back out to sea. (The view is across the Oresund, the narrow strait separating Denmark from Sweden. My Swedish grandfathe­r used to sketch ships passing through this very strait, then send them to me in Australia.)

But there is more going on in this gorgeous painting. Both the focus on moonlight and the use of figures seen from behind gazing out at nature reveal the influence of the German Romanticis­t Caspar David Friedrich and his close friend, the Norwegian-Danish painter Johan Christian Dahl. (Rorbye had visited Norway twice in the early 1830s, traveling for a brief period with the writer Hans Christian Andersen.)

Rorbye’s painting is certainly an expression of the particular species of romantic nationalis­m on which this exhibition is substantia­lly focused. But I think it can be just as interestin­g to think about the way the pictures like his slide away from such narratives, like truant schoolchil­dren.

Certainly, this and Rorbye’s nearby painting, “Entrance to the Vicarage at Hellestad,” painted a few years later, are ravishing works. They appeal to our imaginatio­ns today less as nationalis­tic illustrati­ons of local customs and culture than as acutely observed, quietly poetic and brilliantl­y rendered responses to the external world.

Close bonds — fraternal, aesthetic and philosophi­cal — connected the artists in this show. The younger artists were variously engaged in carrying out the program of the ardently nationalis­t Niels Laurits Hoyen, Denmark’s first art historian. Hoyen, who called for Danish artists to depict national monuments, had his hands on everything to do with Danish art during this period.

Many Danish artists went to study in Rome, where the great neoclassic­al sculptor Bertel Thorvaldse­n held sway. Some also studied with Christoffe­r Wilhelm Eckersberg, an artist and pedagogue known for his carefully observed, perfectly perspectiv­al and impeccably patriotic pictures. Eckersberg was an empiricist who favored natural light and close observatio­n. But his fanaticall­y ordered aesthetic evinces a mind caught between realism and idealism, desperate to repress anything smacking of disorder or decline. He influenced an entire generation.

Is there a sense in which these three formidable figures loomed too large over young Danish artists during this period?

A portrait of Eckersberg shows him with, as the wall label puts it, “tightly pursed lips” and a “steely stare.” Another, of Thorvaldse­n, depicts him in profile with a “distant expression,” radiating a “sense of authority and respect.”

Now look at the group portrait of the younger Danish artists in Rome painted by Constantin Hansen in 1837. Thorvaldse­n was still holding court in Rome at this time; he would return the following year to Denmark, where he was feted as a national hero. Hansen’s picture is a marvel of organizati­on. Its canny use of perspectiv­e would have made Eckersberg proud.

 ?? METROPOLIT­AN MUSEUM OF ART ?? “View from the Citadel Ramparts in Copenhagen by Moonlight,” (1839) by Martinus Rorbye. Oil on canvas.
METROPOLIT­AN MUSEUM OF ART “View from the Citadel Ramparts in Copenhagen by Moonlight,” (1839) by Martinus Rorbye. Oil on canvas.
 ?? STATENS MUSEUM FOR KUNST/PHOTO: JAKOB SKOU-HANSEN/SMK PHOTO ?? “At a Window in the Artist’s Studio,” (1852) by Christoffe­r Wilhelm Eckersberg. Pen and gray ink and brown wash over graphite, framed in light blue watercolor.
STATENS MUSEUM FOR KUNST/PHOTO: JAKOB SKOU-HANSEN/SMK PHOTO “At a Window in the Artist’s Studio,” (1852) by Christoffe­r Wilhelm Eckersberg. Pen and gray ink and brown wash over graphite, framed in light blue watercolor.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States