The Morgan opens an exhibition solely focused on Thomas Gainsborough's works on paper

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, May 21, 2024


The Morgan opens an exhibition solely focused on Thomas Gainsborough's works on paper
Landscape with Horse and Cart, and Ruin, ca. 1770, oil paint, lead white chalk, watercolor, over black chalk, varnished, on laid paper, varnished; purchased by Pierpont Morgan (1837-1913) in 1909, The Morgan Library & Museum, III 55. Photography by Steven H. Crossot, 2014.



NEW YORK, NY.- Renowned for his portraiture and depictions of rural landscapes, the eighteenth-century British artist Thomas Gainsborough (1727–1788) is best known as a painter. However, he was also a draftsman of rare ability who extended the traditional boundaries of drawing technique, inspiring an entire generation of British artists such as John Constable (1776–1837) and J. M. W. Turner (1775–1851).

The Morgan Library & Museum is presenting an exhibition solely focused on Gainsborough’s works on paper, bringing together twenty-two outstanding examples in graphite, chalk, oil paint, and other media. Included in the show, which runs through August 19, are preparatory studies, finished works, and exercises made for the artist’s own enjoyment.

“As with many artists, Thomas Gainsborough used the medium of drawing to experiment and explore,” said Colin B. Bailey, director of the Morgan Library & Museum. “Famous in his day for his paintings of members of the British aristocracy and gentry, he eagerly turned to drawing as a respite from his portrait work. It allowed him the freedom to pursue his passion for rendering nature and scenes of country life utilizing new stylistic effects in color, line, and material. The Morgan is pleased to present its first exhibition on this important aspect of Gainsborough’s art.”

THE EXHIBITION
The Career of a Portrait Painter

Thomas Gainsborough trained in London, where he displayed an innate talent for drawing and painting. The artist’s earliest figure drawing, A Boy with a Book and a Spade (1748), served as a study for the signboard of a village school. Minor commissions such as this were a primary source of income for a novice painter like Gainsborough as he tried to establish his career.

In Bath, where he moved in 1759, Gainsborough emerged as the era’s most fashionable and successful portraitist. There he became fascinated with the effects of light on fabric, often using black chalk to explore different tonal solutions. His renderings of sitters’ expressions and the rich texture of their clothing led to his reputation as the Anthony van Dyck of his time.

Gainsborough would later create figure studies with models in different poses, using inventive techniques intended to capture the viewers’ eye in an instant. In Lady Walking in a Garden (ca. 1785), the woman’s translucent silk dress is a technical tour de force: the artist superimposed fine veils of white and yellow chalk, applied both wet and dry, imitating the feathery brushstrokes that characterize his paintings.

Despite his commercial success as a figure painter, later in life Gainsborough wanted to escape from what had become for him the routine of portraiture and business life. “I am sick of Portraits” he complained in a letter to a friend, “and I wish very much to. . . walk off to some sweet village where I can . . . enjoy the fag End of Life in quietness and ease.”

A Passion for Creating Landscapes
Gainsborough would come to devote much of his time to creating landscapes of his own invention on paper. Laying out stones, branches, leaves, and soil of various colors on his worktable, he assembled and drew landscapes in his studio.

In his quest for original effects, the artist often looked to rugged terrain, contrasts of light and shade, and the nuances of shadow resulting from the changing seasons. He explored the rolling topography of natural settings and gothic, shadowy atmospheres in his early years. They offered him almost limitless compositional possibilities as he simultaneously conducted his technical experiments: for instance, he immersed his paper in milk and varnished it to give his landscape drawings a transparent tint.

In the mid-1770s, Gainsborough increasingly experimented with drawing by mixing different media and applying varnish to surfaces to produce landscapes that mimicked the visual effects of oil paintings. In the following decade, he would go on to produce variations of similar compositions drawn mainly in black and white chalk: serpentine, asymmetrical landscapes with moving skies, windswept trees, solitary animals, and scenes of agrarian life.

Gainsborough also embraced printmaking. By combining different etching techniques, he produced prints in imitation of his drawings, replicating on the surface of the copper plate the same variety of textural and tonal effects that characterize his chalk drawings. He turned to aquatint to evoke the transparency of the sky and water, as seen in Wooded Landscape with Cows beside a Pool (1755-1780), a rare print from the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Toward the end of his career, he began favoring concepts rather than depicting a realistic view. In Figures in a Wooded Landscape, (1785–88), trees, animals and rocks lose their shape, and parts of the landscape veer toward pure abstraction.

Gainsborough’s experiments subverted the academic conventions of drawing—by combining techniques and materials, he called into question the distinction between drawing and painting. His technical achievements became a paradigm for British art for the whole of the eighteenth century, and his later works in particular influenced the near abstract compositions of the next generation of British artists. Always in fierce pursuit of the “new” in drawing, Gainsborough lamented on his deathbed that he was “to leave life just as he was beginning to do something with his art.”











Today's News

May 13, 2018

V&A explores the power of design in shaping the world of tomorrow

V&A to open new Photography Centre this October with commission by Thomas Ruff

Picasso's $115-million 'Young Girl' to be loaned to Paris museum

Rockefeller Collection sold for record-smashing $832 million

Major exhibition offers a new perspective and inspiring a rereading of art history

Exhibition at the Frye Art Museum traces the development of French landscape painting

Exhibition includes the public debut of historical portraits and recent large-scale contemporary artworks

The Morgan opens an exhibition solely focused on Thomas Gainsborough's works on paper

Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art opens a major exhibition devoted to the Sonnabend Collection

Adelaide Contemporary design proposals unveiled

Jordan Wolfson's most recent video work Riverboat song on view at David Zwirner

Heather Gaudio Fine Art opens first solo exhibition with Melissa Meyer

National Gallery Singapore announces significant donation of Ng Eng Teng's Mother and Child sculpture

Tiancheng International announces highlights from the Jewellery and Jadeite Spring Auction 2018

Swiss artist Claudia Comte creates new site-specific installation for the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis

The Hall Art Foundation opens a group exhibition curated by American artist Eric Fischl

The Autry Museum opens the first major retrospective of Native contemporary artist Rick Bartow

Grosvenor Gallery exhibits new work by Pakistani artist Ghulam Mohammad

Parrasch Heijnen Gallery opens exhibition of works by Anne Truitt and Daniel Turner

Zevitas Marcus opens a 40-year survey exhibition of photographic montages by John O'Reilly

Denver Art Museum debuts first major exhibition featuring artist Jeffrey Gibson

Scottish National Portrait Gallery opens career-spanning exhibition of works by Victoria Crowe

Kristof De Clercq gallery opens a solo exhibition by Jürgen Partenheimer

John Brennan collection of Rock n Roll memorabilia offered at RR Auction




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful