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- <text id=93TT0924>
- <title>
- Jan. 25, 1993: Music Halls, Murders and Tabloid Pix
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 25, 1993 Stand and Deliver: Bill Clinton
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ART, Page 64
- Music Halls, Murder and Tabloid Pix
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Well ahead of his time, British painter Walter Sickert took
- popular culture, even the mass media, as his theme
- </p>
- <p>By ROBERT HUGHES
- </p>
- <p> Some artists drop through the cracks, and for a long
- time, it looked as though Walter Richard Sickert (1860-1942) was
- one of them. His retrospective at London's Royal Academy of
- Arts, curated by Wendy Baron and Richard Shone (until
- mid-February, then at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam), is the
- first deep look at Sickert the British have had in almost 30
- years. In America, he is virtually unknown. No museum has ever
- acknowledged him, and if you dip for his work into the big
- public collections, let alone the private ones, you will come
- up empty. Ditto in France, where he spent a lot of his working
- life.
- </p>
- <p> Only in Britain is this Danish-British painter known, and
- only there is his influence felt. As a modern Realist, he
- energized younger British Modernists in the 1900s like Spencer
- Frederick Gore and Harold Gilman. You can still see his mark
- today, on the work of figurative artists like Lucian Freud,
- Frank Auerbach and even Francis Bacon. Sickert's "brown world"
- of rented rooms in Camden Town, with their plump, sweaty nudes,
- sprawled on iron bedsteads, dense and claustrophobic, runs into
- the younger painters', its solidly constructed Realism forming
- a bridge across the light turbulence of derivative avant-gardism
- in so much British art.
- </p>
- <p> An unspectacular painter, you might think--but take
- care. For it was also Sickert who in his old age, during the
- 1930s, became obsessed with mass-media images. Decades before
- American Pop, and to the consternation of most critics, he made
- signery into scenery, recycling theater publicity photos, news
- shots (of the King with his horse trainer or Amelia Earhart
- being mobbed at the London airport) and even a gangster-movie
- poster of Edward G. Robinson. No American or European artist at
- the time used such sources with as much aplomb. Scorning
- British good taste and the Edwardian artist's role as the groom
- of new aristocrats--a task he left to what he called the
- "wriggle and chiffon" school of portraiture, led by the American
- expatriate John Singer Sargent--Sickert went down a few class
- notches, looking for a virile, demotic way of painting that did
- something more with popular culture than peer at it from above.
- </p>
- <p> As Shone writes in the catalog, Sickert's career ran
- parallel to all the great Modernist movements from the 1880s to
- the 1930s but belonged to none of them. He was "a passionately
- self-isolating figure...highly individual, combining
- expected elements of the European mainstream with personal
- tastes that can appear willful or mandatory." He was also a
- witty and truthful art critic, whose essays and journalism,
- collected in 1947 by Osbert Sitwell under the title A Free
- House!, are never dull and often possess a Shavian energy.
- Courageous to the point of eccentricity, Sickert always followed
- his own nose.
- </p>
- <p> It led him, first, to France. Sickert was the main link
- between European and British painting at the turn of the
- century: the son of a Danish father and an Anglo-Irish mother,
- born in Munich, fluent in German and French. When the general
- histories of modern art mention him at all, it's as a small
- footnote to the Symbolists and the Postimpressionists, like
- Bonnard (the nudes in bedrooms) or Toulouse-Lautrec (the
- music-hall scenes). But one needs to remember that Sickert was
- slightly older than most of these painters. He was born in 1860;
- they hardly influenced him at all. The men who did were pre-
- rather than Postimpressionist: Whistler, Manet and, above all,
- Degas. Sickert had worked for Whistler as a studio assistant in
- the early 1880s, and Whistler gave him a letter of introduction
- to Degas. A strong friendship grew up between the two men.
- </p>
- <p> Just as Whistler honed Sickert's taste for art-world
- polemics and politics, so his long association with Degas
- steered him away from being a provincial Impressionist, grazing
- on first sensations. Construct in the studio, do studies,
- mistrust "the tyranny of nature." And if you want narrative, why
- not have it? The world, especially the city--for Sickert was
- an intensely urban painter--was crammed with narratives, and
- like Degas, Sickert found his in closed rooms and places of
- popular entertainment. For Degas's cafes concerts, Sickert
- substituted the British music hall, then at its apex of rowdy
- success.
- </p>
- <p> He loved the stage; British paintings like Gallery of the
- Old Bedford treat the worn, overloaded gilt-and-mirror
- interiors with the seriousness another artist might have brought
- to an Italian church. Since Sickert had spent time in Venice,
- there may be some subliminal connection between the clusters of
- audience in derby hats, leaning precariously from the balconies
- and reflected in the mirrors, and the more elegant crowds that
- thronged Tiepolo's ceilings. Sickert never condescended, and his
- portraits of the now forgotten stars of this dead form of
- entertainment are done with fine straightforwardness: The Lion
- Comique, 1887 (patter singers in white tie were known as "lions"
- or "mammoths" in the stage argot of the day), with his baggy
- tails and painted backdrop of a lake, is seen as precisely as
- any Manet.
- </p>
- <p> Sickert's pictures of seedy domestic boredom, violence and
- the aftermath of murder seemed much more problematical, and
- they still do. In 1907 a blond prostitute was found with her
- throat cut in a rented room in Camden Town. This killing, close
- to Sickert's London lodgings, gave him a subject. Through
- 1908-09, he painted a series of harsh, dark images of a naked
- woman on a bed and a clothed man--shades of Manet's Dejeuner!--glaring down at her. In L'Affaire de Camden Town, 1909, she
- seems to be alive but cowering from him; with its sexual
- frankness (disconcerting to taste in 1909), heavy claustrophobic
- patterning and leaden light, it is a sinister painting, like a
- Vuillard whose domestic narrative has gone wrong. It isn't
- surprising to learn that Sickert was interested in the story of
- Jack the Ripper. But the truly bizarre twist was the rumor that
- sprang up 20 years after Sickert's death--that he actually was
- the Ripper himself. Alas, there is no evidence for this bit of
- urban mythology.
- </p>
- <p> Sickert may have been an intimist, of a peculiar sort, in
- such paintings, but there is no doubt of his later nostalgia
- for the kind of public declamation that the great tradition of
- earlier painting could fill. "We cannot well have pictures on
- a large scale nowadays," he remarked, "but we can have small
- fragments of pictures on a colossal scale."
- </p>
- <p> Such a work was his huge self-portrait head with a
- patriarchal beard, The Servant of Abraham, 1929. Another,
- majestic in its broken dark-green underwater light, was The
- Raising of Lazarus, circa 1929, which he worked up from a
- composite photo of a life-size articulated dummy being delivered
- to his London studio. For by now, Sickert's interests were
- shifting decisively to photography--much to the puzzlement of
- the London art world. Photos were common speech, immediate,
- iconic but not "sensitive." They stood the Impressionist cult
- of the nuance on its head. And turning the black-and-white of
- photography back into color represented a fascinating challenge
- for a tonal painter like Sickert.
- </p>
- <p> Working from photographs--whether specially taken for
- the painting or clipped from the press--produced some of
- Sickert's most engrossing images. Among them are his 1929
- portrait of the novelist Hugh Walpole and The Miner, circa 1935:
- a man just out of the pit, fiercely kissing his wife, an abrupt
- and passionate painting imbued with sooty grain that reminds one
- of late Goya. Photographs also enabled Sickert to produce, in
- 1936, what is probably the last portrait of a British royal
- personage that can claim serious aesthetic merit: Edward VIII,
- emerging from a limousine, clutching his black fur busby like
- a teddy bear. The monarch, who was shortly to abdicate, looks
- remarkably wan and shifty, and it's hard not to imagine that in
- this picture the Servant of Abraham was granted a moment of
- prophecy.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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