The Guardian (USA)

The monstrous old master: how Succession’s Rubens lays bare the Roy family’s brutality

- Katy Hessel

From old masters to contempora­ry scenes, artworks are often embedded in our favourite TV shows. They can foreshadow a narrative, give an insight into a character’s storyline, or influence the aesthetics of the whole series. Yet we might not decipher this at first glance.

It was when I heard the name Artemisia Gentilesch­i, and her painting Self-Portrait as an Allegory of Painting, being discussed by Prince Philip and art historian (and spy) Anthony Blunt on season three of The Crown, that I realised that art on TV is often much more than just set dressing. The conversati­on about Gentilesch­i spoke to the history of the royal collection – the painting was a commission by King Charles I who personally invited the artist to England in 1638 – and pointed to the prominence Gentilesch­i had in her lifetime. Although clearly this was not to last, as Blunt had to correct Philip’s assumption that the female painter was a “he”.

Television can also be a place to discover contempora­ry art. I first learned about Marilyn Minter, the New Yorkbased painter who constructs close-up images of body parts to explore the contradict­ions of beauty and desire, after seeing her work on the walls of the penthouse belonging to Gossip Girl’s Serena van der Woodsen – one depicting the back of a dirty ankle and high heel, the other showing a glittering silver eye. The same apartment housed a work from Elmgreen & Dragset’s

Prada Marfa series, when the two artists placed a fake Prada store in the middle of the Texas desert – an installati­on that also made its way on to The

Simpsons.

The pilot show of HBO’s Industry saw overachiev­er Hari Dhar look up to a painting of a distorted face directly inspired by the American artist, George Condo. Setting the mood for the series, the ghoulish face reflected not only the cutthroat personalit­ies of the young graduates vying for places in Pierpoint bank, but also the toxicity of the trading floor they were to work in.

Yet one of the most powerful artworks on TV is perhaps the painting looming behind the Roy family in the promotiona­l poster for the first seasons of Succession: Peter Paul Rubens’s The Tiger Hunt. It’s viscerally chaotic, depicting a never-ending cycle of animals battling humans – biting, punching, ripping, and killing. The poster suggests that the Roys are live embodiment­s of the figures grappling behind them, and speaks to the many power dynamics that underpin the series. By picturing them in front of this possession, a museum-standard old master – which was seized by the French from the Germans during the Napoleonic wars – Succession presents the Roys’ great wealth, and their bullish, ruthless characters. But, as the painting warns, this is not a story of victory.

Succession’s second season was promoted with a picture featuring additional cast members sitting in front of an equally aggressive work. In Dante and Virgil in Hell by William-Adolphe

Bouguereau, the two protagonis­ts look out from the shadows on to a scene of violence: the fraudster Gianni Schicchi biting the neck of an alchemist called Capocchio. The torment, however, is overshadow­ed by the formality and beauty of Dante and Virgil’s stance, as if, like us viewers, they were calmly surveying the scene’s depravity. The painting is set in the eighth circle of hell, and also features a dead man on the floor; naked bodies falling; and a man-bat who gazes wickedly at Dante and Virgil – begging the question about which Roys will become analogous to Bouguereau’s tortured souls.

 ?? ?? No one wins … Rubens’s The Tiger Hunt in the poster for Succession. Photograph: HBO
No one wins … Rubens’s The Tiger Hunt in the poster for Succession. Photograph: HBO
 ?? ?? Tortured … William-Adolphe Bouguereau’s Dante and Virgil in Hell. Photograph: incamerast­ock/Alamy
Tortured … William-Adolphe Bouguereau’s Dante and Virgil in Hell. Photograph: incamerast­ock/Alamy

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