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Years Ago in Art and LifeThackeray, the author of such classic novels as Vanity Fair and Henry Esmond, studied art in Paris and wrote reviews of exhibitions at London’s Royal Academy, which were published in Fraser's Magazine during the 1830’s and 40’s. In fact, Mr. Siegel said, the best known art criticism in the English language, next to Ruskin and Hazlitt, was by Thackeray. He read from a 1906 edition of The Works of William Makepeace Thackeray, Essays, Reviews, Etc.--reviews written in the form of letters to a friend under the pen name Michael Angelo Titmarsh. "In Thackeray's criticism," Mr. Siegel said, "the relation of life to what [we see] on a canvas, comes up again and again."
In an 1838 review titled "Strictures on Pictures," Thackeray writes about a painter who was very popular at the time:
"It is good to see statements made that bring together all the arts and all periods," Mr. Siegel commented. "One of the earliest ideas seen as true and central about all the arts is the idea that art is something that takes details, manyness, and makes a one of them." Wilkie he explained, had the problem of Bruegel, of Bosch--"the problem of a photographer: how to group all these people and not have them look too dull." How something is many and one affects people--Mr. Siegel pointed out in the Rockettes; also when you look in the mirror and ask, "How well do the buttons on your sleeve or the decoration around your neck or earrings go with your stockings?"
When Thackeray speaks of "the extraordinary skill with which all the figures have been grouped, so as to produce a grand and simple effect," he is saying David Wilkie did a good job with one and many. Wilkie's most famous painting, Mr. Siegel mentioned, was Rent Day, “about paying rent to a landlord.” Thackeray then writes about Joseph Severn, the painter who was with the poet John Keats when he died in Italy, and says that while Severn doesn’t have the “dash and dexterity of Wilkie” he does have a “religious quality”. One of his paintings is Crusaders Catching a First View of Jerusalem. "This first view of the holy city”, said Mr. Siegel "is a large thing. Some people have tried to get Columbus dazzled as he first saw America." Painters, Mr. Siegel continued, "have moods, as composers do." He described the comic mood of Hogarth, the melancholy of Durer. "There's an attitude to the world," he explained, "which can be called a mood." In historical painting--a genre popular in Thackeray's time--an artist tries to capture the mood of one important event. Thackeray is both praising and critical of Severn's work, saying the figures are stiff and don't show the crusades powerfully enough--but that his "majestic and pious harmony merits hanging beside the great Raphael." Along with technique, Thackeray says, beauty arises from something larger—the purpose impelling an artist. He writes:
"A problem still in [art]," commented Mr. Siegel, "is: what is your attitude, what is in your mind [or, as Thackeray says, 'heart'] in relation to your technique." We learned about William Etty, a painter Thackeray praises, calling him “Rubens of England”. Mr. Siegel read a passage of Thackeray's writing that he said is remembered, about Etty's painting, The Prodigal Son, here in a black and white reproduction. Thackeray writes:
“This," said Mr. Siegel, “is Thackeray itching to be a novelist [and] trying to somewhat supersede the painter. We can see here the difference between art criticism and literary observation. Thackeray’s criticism is so human, so popular, and in a way so inadequate." However, the review he read next he said, is a great instance of art criticism--and, Mr. Siegel noted, "one of the famous things in English prose." In Thackeray’s 1839 review “A Second lecture on the Fine Arts" he describes a work by the great English painter, Turner, the best known today of all the early Victorian painters exhibiting in the Royal Academy. Like many others, I love the paintings of Turner, and am so grateful for what I learned about him from Aesthetic Realism consultant and painter Dorothy Koppelman, and her important paper--“Light and Dark, Hiding and Showing--in the Painting of Joseph Mallord Turner”.
I was very moved as Mr. Siegel read a beautiful passage by Thackeray about this painting:
“That is what criticism is,” said Mr. Siegel. “Aesthetic Realism believes that no matter what the subject of a painting, it is a means of liking the world more." The nearest Thackeray gets to saying that art is "praise of the world," Mr. Siegel explained, is in this passage:
"Priest of nature" said Mr. Siegel, is the same "as a person who wants to like the world. It's a little flossy but the main idea is quite true… Like most critics, Thackeray is very uncertain of [his] basis," Mr. Siegel continued, "but every now and then he implies there’s something that makes a picture right.” He calls an altar-piece “very meritorious,” and then apologizes, saying he is only giving a “private opinion” and “being mortal” it's quite possible he's wrong. "If the critic is wrong," Mr. Siegel explained, "it means there [still] must be something right. Just what is right in art is a large matter." There are persons, from Aristotle on, who are important in the history of thought and art criticism because of their desire to see something right or beautiful. "Thackeray,” commented Mr. Siegel, “like every [true] critic, plumbs for the opposites--I’ve seen that in the criticism from the 3rd century.” He read this sentence of Thackeray about the great Michelangelo:
After centuries of thought, Eli Siegel is the critic who, in our time, has given the world the criterion for understanding beauty, past and present, and its relation to our everyday lives. “All beauty”, he stated “is a making one of opposites, and the making one of opposites is what we are going after in ourselves.” As the class continued Mr. Siegel showed how Thackeray's criticism of art becomes, at times, criticism of life itself. He read about a painting by Leullier of the 1794 British sinking of a French ship. “Thackeray gets moralistic,” Mr. Siegel observed--and in what he writes we can see a relation to the statement of Aesthetic Realism that “contempt causes war.” Thackeray writes:
“Thackeray is right” said Mr. Siegel. “He doesn’t use the word contempt, but one can get the feeling that it’s there. This is part of art criticism," he continued, "if you see that you are criticizing God as artistic arranger." It is hard to convey fully in a brief report the richness of this magnificent lecture. All in all, Mr. Siegel commented on over 40 artists, and both art and life in early Victorian England, was made so vivid! We learned about how art was changing in the 19th century.
And the new mode of travel, the railroad, got into a painting by Turner. Thackeray writes:
“What you are hearing now,” Mr. Siegel commented near the end of this lecture, “is the longest consideration of Thackeray’s art criticism”. As I studied this lecture, my respect for both art and life grew, and I thank Ellen Reiss for the opportunity to report on this class. I remember seeing reproductions of some of the paintings Thackeray writes of with such excitement, on the walls of my grandmother's home. But as I grew interested in modern art and abstract sculpture, I wanted to feel everything else was old-fashioned, not worth knowing—and this hurt my knowledge of and care for art. Hearing this great lecture, being introduced to the art criticism of William Makepeace Thackeray, learning about some of the things that occurred years ago in art and life has broadened my mind, and made my feeling for art wider, deeper, more accurate. It is a thrilling study to see how central the opposites are in every period of art, and in the situations of our lives. Aesthetic Realism makes this joyful, practical study a reality for every person.
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