HOWARD HODGKIN.DULWICH PICTURE GALLERY Collections of historical masterpieces have two main ways of engaging with contemporary art, if they don't ignore it completely. One is to feed the mouth that bites them, so to speak, by bringing in some institutional critique; the holdings will look stronger for having survived the in-house sniping (as Karen Knorr's recent exhibition of photographs at the Wallace Collection Wallace Collection: see under Wallace, Sir Richard. demonstrated). The other is to show a "contemporary classic" in harmony with the classic classics. This, surprisingly, is the riskier option. Between the old masters and even the most conservative contemporary artist there lies a vast breach. The juxtaposition juxtaposition /jux·ta·po·si·tion/ (-pah-zish´un) apposition. jux·ta·po·si·tion (j k st can show everything in the worst light: Old art looking fussy and fusty; new art, slapdash and superficial. That's the chance Britain's oldest public gallery took when it asked Howard Hodgkin Alan Lloyd 1914-1998. British physiologist. He shared a 1963 Nobel Prize for research on the action of nerve impulses. Hodgkin, Dorothy Mary Crowfoot 1910-1994. Egyptian-born British chemist. She won a 1964 Nobel Prize for determining the structure of compounds needed to combat pernicious anemia. For all that, Hodgkin's presence here is justified by the emphasis on painterliness his work shares with the Dulwich collection, which was built around holdings amassed at the end of the eighteenth century, originally with the intention that it become the basis for a national gallery in Poland. In this context an incipiently Romantic dimension seems to emerge even in Poussin. Hodgkin's exacerbated contemporary painterliness may seem weak in comparison to such mastery but serves to highlight the hidden strengths of some of the collection's smaller figures. In one of the few juxtapositions that seems based on a formal echo, Hodgkin's oval When in Rome, 2000, draws attention to the shape of the Archangel Archangel, city, RussiaArchangel: see Arkhangelsk, Russia.archangel, in religionarchangel (ärk`ānjəl), chief angel. They are four to seven in number. Sometimes specific functions are ascribed to them. Michael's shield in Sebastiano Ricci's adjacent Fall of the Rebel Angels, ca. 1720--a passage that anchors great centrifugal force in its own conspicuous painterliness. Likewise the startling disjunctions in Jan Weenix Weenix - /wee'niks/ An ITS fan's derogatory term for Unix, derived from Unix weenie. According to one noted ex-ITSer, it is "the operating system preferred by Unix Weenies: typified by poor modularity, poor reliability, hard file deletion, no file version numbers, case sensitivity everywhere, and users who believe that these are all advantages". Some ITS fans behave as though they believe Unix stole a future that rightfully belonged to them.'s Landscape with Shepherd Boy, 1664, the compositional imbalance of Sebastien Bourdon's A Braw l in a Guardroom, ca. 1643, and the daring vacancy of Arent de Gelder's Jacob's Dream, 1710-15, seem to take heart, as it were, from their continuing relation to Hodgkin's present--just as that present, in turn, may recognize its own brutal image in the raw-meat red slathered across the bottom of Rembrandt's Portrait of a Young Man, 1663, an inarguable excuse for the sitter's cloak. |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||

k
st
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion