NEW YORK, NY.- Drawing is often seen as the most immediate of the fine arts, capturing a subjects essence in quick, suggestive strokes of chalk, pencil, or ink. This can be particularly evident in portrait drawing where the dynamism of the medium allows for the recording of a likeness in the here and now, while simultaneously offering clues into the relationship between artist and sitter.
In a new exhibition titled Life Lines: Portrait Drawings from Dürer to Picasso, the
Morgan Library & Museum takes visitors on a fascinating exploration of the genre. Spanning five centuries and including more than fifty worksfrom Dürers moving sketch of his brother Endres to Picassos highly expressive portrait of the actress Marie Dervalthe show features treasures from the Morgans collection as well as a number of notable drawings from private holdings. The exhibition is on view through September 8.
Life Lines is aptly named as no medium quite captures a person or the connection between artist and sitter like drawing, said Peggy Fogelman, acting director of the Morgan. Whether a dashedoff sketch of family life by Rembrandt or a preparatory study for a famous marble bust by Bernini, each work in this revealing exhibition is a window into a personal world.
The drawings in the exhibition are organized thematically into four sections: Self-Portraits; Family and Friends; Formal Portraits; and a final grouping, entitled Portraits?, that explores the boundaries of this type of work. The pieces range from early studies for paintings and sculptures to highly-finished drawings that stand alone as works in their own right. What all of them share, however, is the image of a likeness of someone worth remembering, bearing testimony to the deeply human sentiment to leave a mark.
THE EXHIBITION
I. Self-Portraits
Selfies are hardly a new phenomenon. Many artists have recorded their own likeness over the past five hundred years, and examples in this section range from Palma il Giovane (1544-1628) to Henri Matisse (18691954). Some artists like to faithfully record their image looking into a mirror. Others embed their likeness in a decorative or narrative context, often showing themselves as artists.
Italian Pier Leone Ghezzi (1674-1755), for example, portrays himself in fanciful costume, while holding a caricature of his likeness wearing a cape. This humorous work is a self-portrait within a self-portrait, demonstrating the whimsy of an artist best known for his ironic sketches of both Romes citizenry as well as notable visitors to the ancient city. Ghezzis two depictions of himself seem to stand facing one another, one pointing his finger at the other, as if in conversation.
II. Family and Friends
Many of the drawings presented of family and friends are not given the trappings of formal portraiture. They record the people closest to the artists: their children, spouse, siblings, and friends. Some of these drawings, such as Rembrandts (1606-1669) sketch of his wife Saskia asleep, are particularly intimate.
Albrecht Dürers (1471-1528) drawing of his younger brother Endres can be identified thanks to a portrait of him at the Albertina in Vienna. While that portrait, dated and inscribed, shows Endres on his thirtieth birthday, the drawing in Life Lines appears to be slightly later. More stylized than the earlier version, it shows Endres clad in a fur-trimmed coat and wearing his beret boldly aslant.
III. Formal Portraits
The largest group of drawings is devoted to more formal portraits, many of which would have been commissioned from the artists. A sketch of Cardinal Scipione Borghese by Gian Lorenzo Bernini (1598-1680), for example, is preparatory for a marble bust, while a portrait of Anna van Thielen and her daughter by Anthony Van Dyck (1599-1641) serves as a study for a painting. Van Thielen was the wife of the Antwerp painter Theodoor Rombouts (1597-1637).
Among the many extraordinary works with a more finished polish is an early drawing by Pablo Picasso (1881-1973) depicting Marie Derval, a popular actress in Paris at the turn of the century. The energetic contour of the figure and her frightening stare lend the portrait an expressionist vigor reminiscent of the work of Picassos contemporary Edvard Munch (1863-1944).
IV. Portraits?
Some drawings defy the conventional notion of portraiture. Though resembling portraits in one way or another, they raise the question of what actually constitutes such a work. This section invites visitors to draw their own conclusions and reflect upon traditional boundaries of the genre.
The sitter posing for Joseph Wright of Derby (1734-1797), for example, is identified in the inscription. The artist made this impressive life study in preparation for one of several paintings based on Laurence Sternes 1768 novel, A Sentimental Journey through France and Italy by Mr. Yorick. In the episode sketched out, the protagonist meets an old man weeping at the death of his donkey. The inscription reads: Portrait of / John Stavely / who came from Hert- / fordshire with Mr. French / & sat to Mr. Wright in the character of the old man & his ass in the / Sentimental Journey. But does this identifying text make the drawing a portrait?
And what about Hendrik Goltziuss (1558-1617) staggering Young Man Holding a Skull and a Tulip, executed in 1614? A life-size fantasy portrait, it is a virtuoso finale to the artists series of pen-and-ink drawings in the style of engravings. The Latin inscription Quis evadet? / Nemo (Who escapes? / No one) and the symbols of the hourglass, skull, and tulip serve as a reminder of mortality and the transience of existence. Although the distinctive face was probably based on a young man whom Goltzius knew, the purpose of the drawing seems more to impart the foreboding message than to capture the likeness of the youth.