'Drawing in Silver and Gold: Leonardo to Jasper Johns' opens at the British Museum
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'Drawing in Silver and Gold: Leonardo to Jasper Johns' opens at the British Museum
Albrecht Dürer, Dog resting, c. 1520, silverpoint over charcoal? on pale pink prepared paper, 128 x 180mm. © The Trustees of the British Museum.



LONDON.- This collaborative exhibition with the National Gallery of Art, Washington charts for the very first time the development across Europe of metalpoint through six centuries from Leonardo to the present day. The show presents a unique gathering of around 100 of the best examples of metalpoint loaned from collections across the globe and also highlights the remarkable graphic holdings of works held in the British Museum. Spanning across centuries and countries, this exhibition is the first to look at the whole history of a technique, providing both an introduction to the medium and seeking to explain the longevity of metalpoint as an art form.

Metalpoint drawings are created with a metal stylus, most commonly made predominantly of silver, on a roughened preparation that ensures a trace of the metal is left on the surface. Forming the cornerstone of the drawing-centred education of artists from the 1400s, it was an exacting technique as the line once drawn could not be easily erased, so it demanded the artist carefully to plan their design with the narrow limited tonal range of the medium in mind. When mastered metalpoint can produce drawings of crystalline clarity and refinement, and in the hands of the greatest artists it was utilised with a spontaneity and freedom that belied its restrictions. From portraits to free sketches, print studies to botanical and topographical studies, this exhibition reveals how the portability of metalpoint allowed it to be used by artists for recording the personal and the intimate.

Drawing in silver and gold explores how the technical challenge of using the medium inspired some of the greatest drawings by artists of the calibre of Fra Filippo Lippi, Rogier van der Weyden, Petrus Christus, Leonardo, Raphael, Dürer, Baldung, Holbein the Elder, Lucas van Leyden, Rembrandt, Burne-Jones, Holman Hunt, and Otto Dix. It shows the similarities and differences in how artists north and south of the Alps used metalpoint.

Metalpoint was a medium predominantly employed in Italy in the studio for training and preparatory studies, yet while the advent of chalk eclipsed the use of metalpoint, at least in Italy, from around 1550, in northern Europe metalpoint continued to be used to explore landscapes and intimate portraits of friends and family. Marvellous examples of this medium are on display by artists such as Hendrick Goltzius and Hans Bol in the latter part of the 1500s and Rembrandt in the 17th century. After then metalpoint was virtually forgotten until the 19th century when the admiration for Renaissance art sparked its renewed use. The exploration of the medium for figurative and abstract drawings continues to this day with examples by contemporary artists such as Jasper Johns, Bruce Nauman and Susan Schwalb.

The exhibition benefits from spectacular loans from European and American museums as well as private collections. Loaned by Her Majesty The Queen from the Royal Collection are four of Leonardo’s greatest metalpoint studies that show how his powers of observation and precision flourished within this medium. Two of only three remaining metalpoint drawings by the 17th century Dutch artist Rembrandt are being uniquely displayed side by side; one on loan from the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen in Rotterdam, the other loaned from Kupferstichkabinett of the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin.

The show has inspired a campaign of non-invasive technical analysis of some of the British Museum’s greatest metalpoint drawings, the findings of which are showcased in the exhibition and in the accompanying publication. This research has begun to illuminate the differing materials and techniques used in metalpoint by different artists during different eras. This exhibition shows that what unites all these artists, from the Renaissance through to modern practitioners and all those in-between, is that the basic process of making metalpoint drawings has remained the same. It is the challenge of the technique that has engaged artists in the past and that keeps it interesting for modern practitioners to experiment with today.










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