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All the works of art illustrated
here are in the collection of the Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid
All photographs are the courtesy of the Museo Nacional del
Prado, Madrid |
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El siglo
XIX en el Prado [The Nineteenth Century in the Prado]
October 31, 2007 – April 20, 2008
Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid
Catalogue:
El siglo XIX en el Prado
José Luis Díez and Javier Barón, editors
Ana Gutiérrez Márquez, Leticia Azcue Brea, and Carlos
G. Navarro, contributors
Madrid: Museo Nacional del Prado, 2007
516 pages, numerous illustrations in color and in black and white
Cost: 55€
ISBN: 978-84-8480-126-9
support
NCAW: buy this book at Amazon.com |
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Last autumn, after six years of construction
and remodelling work that was preceded by heated polemic, the Museo del
Prado opened its new building extension around the area of the Convento
de los Jerónimos. Designed by the architect Rafael Moneo, the
winner of an ad hoc international competition in 1998, it is the
most important transformation of Juan de Villanueva’s 1785 building,
originally created for the Academy of Natural Sciences, and subsequently
converted into the Real Museo de Pinturas y Esculturas in 1819. The idea
to modernise the Museo del Prado, placing it on a par with the leading
museums of the world, has been a preoccupation for the successive governments
of the post-Franco era. The museum’s new director Miguel Zugaza
seems to have given a definitive impetus to this aspiration. The current
extension is one the most significant steps in the transformation of
the Prado, with other important ones planned for the coming years. |
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The choice
of nineteenth-century Spanish art for the inaugural exhibition is particularly
relevant, since this is a period that is poorly known, and seldom appreciated,
at home and abroad. The large show The Nineteenth Century in El Prado was
scheduled to last for almost six months, from October 2007 to April 2008.
Meanwhile, the galleries of the original Villanueva building housed two
other exhibitions on old masters of the Spanish School, one on Velázquez’s
Fables. Mythology and Sacred History in the Golden Age (November
2007 – February 2008), and the other on El Greco in El Prado (December
2007-February 2008). Such a coincidence is neither neutral nor innocent.
The simultaneous exhibition in the Prado Museum of a towering figure
like Velázquez and of nineteenth-century art seems to echo the
2003 show Manet en el Prado that focused on the reception of the Siglo
de Oro painting by the French avant-garde, led by Edouard Manet,
in the 1860s. Last but not least, The Nineteenth Century in
El Prado was immediately followed by a major exhibition on Francisco
de Goya, namely Goya in Times of War (April, 15 – July,
13 2008). Thus, the schedule of exhibitions following the inauguration
of the new Prado has brought together Spanish art of the nineteenth century
and the painting of three of the greatest masters of the Spanish school,
Velázquez, El Greco, and Goya. Significantly enough, all of them
have had a profound influence in the art production of the nineteenth
century, Velázquez at an earlier stage, El Greco and Goya in the
later decades. |
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This exhibition on nineteenth-century
art followed a new orientation at the Prado: to showcase art of the recent
past while linking it to the tradition of the old Spanish School. In
this case, the exploration of the dialogue between the art of the Golden
Age and that of the nineteenth century has been one of the guiding concepts.
A more radical example of this position was the 2006 exhibition, Picasso.
Tradition and Avant-garde, which opened the Prado Museum to modernity
through an analysis of Picasso´s reception of the Spanish old masters
held in the museum´s collection. |
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The history of the nineteenth century
collection owned by the Prado is both complex and problematic. An initiative
of King Ferdinand VII and his second wife, Isabel de Braganza, the Museo
Real was founded in order to exhibit a selection of the Spanish royal
art collections to a wider audience and to artists. From the very beginning,
contemporary art was given a place in the museum, and soon after its
creation, a Sala de los Contemporáneos was opened with
paintings by Goya, who was still alive at the time, and by several of
his contemporariesJosé de Madrazo, for example, who was
to become its director in the years to come. |
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The necessity of housing works of art
obtained through the nationalization of the Church patrimony in 1835-1836
led to the creation of the Museo Nacional de la Trinidad in 1838. By
the mid-nineteenth century, the museum also had to accommodate
the acquisitions of the state, mostly huge history paintings from the Exposiciones
Nacionales de Bellas Artes, the official exhibitions of contemporary
art begun in 1856 after the model of the Parisian Salons. Ultimately,
in 1872 the Museo Real and the Museo de la Trinidad were unified and
thus the Museo Nacional del Prado was created. Due to lack of space,
many of the works held at the Museo de la Trinidad were deposited in provincial
museums and other official institutions. In the thirty years between
1866 and 1896, over 300 works were sent to administrative buildings,
universities, hospitals or libraries in addition to museums. This dispersion
of art works ultimately led to the long delayed opening of the
Museo de Arte Moderno in 1896. This museum was to contain the work of “the
most outstanding Spanish artists since the extinction of the old regional
schools, whose last and exceptional blossoming is represented by D. Francisco
de Goya” (444). Further acquisitions for the collections of both
nineteenth and twentieth century art followed until 1951, when
the two collections were given separate museums: the Museo Nacional de
Arte del siglo XIX, and the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo. |
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Finally, in 1971, the collections of
nineteenth-century painting and sculpture reentered the Museo del Prado.
They were housed and partially exhibited in the Casón del Buen
Retiro, a remnant of the old royal palace of the same name, close to
the Villanueva building. Substantial rearrangements of the collection
on display proved necessary with the arrival in 1981 of Picasso´s Guernica in
the Casónand yet again in 1992 when it was transferred to
the Centro de Arte Reina Sofía where it remains today. In 1995,
the nineteenth-century public collections were divided between the two
major national museums. A government decree established 1881Picasso´s
birth dateas the criterion for reassignment. Thus, works of artists
born after 1881, even if previously held at the Prado, were to be included
in the collections of the Centro de Arte Reina Sofía. This transfer
of works of art from one institution to the other involved many exceptions,
such as Darío de Regoyos (b.1859), Santiago Rusiñol (b.1861),
and Ramón Casas (b.1866). The Casón del Buen Retiro closed
its doors in 1997 and has just reopened after an extensive renovation,
including the restoration of the ceiling decorated with a fresco by Luca
Giordano. It is now intended to function as a research center and not
as a museum space. |
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Although the public historically showed
only marginal interest in the Casón collection, it has been literally
invisible for the last ten years while it was stored away in Alcalá de
Henares near Madrid. The exhibition in El Prado thus offered the public
an opportunity to reacquaint itself with the painting and sculpture produced
by Spanish artists of the nineteenth centuryor at least to approach
it in a novel and unprejudiced way. In fact, Spanish art of the nineteenth
century has long been relegated to a Cinderella role; it is clear that
this is now changing. Central to the institutional project of the new
Prado is the planned reorganization of the entire collection as soon
as more room becomes available in the Villanueva building. Much of the
space is to be occupied by the nineteenth-century Spanish art on view
in this exhibition, which will then be displayed in the permanent galleries
of the museum. |
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This is a way of facing what was an
unsatisfactory situation as well as of acknowledging how insufficiently
known, and even misunderstood, the Spanish art of nineteenth century
has been. This is not to say that studies or exhibitions on individual
artists or on specific genres, such as landscape or portraiture, have
been lacking. Indeed, exhibition programs of museums in Madrid and other
Spanish cities regularly include shows on art of the nineteenth century,
especially of the fin-de-siècle decades, in which major figures
are revisited and often situated at an international level. Such was
the case for the Sorolla / Sargent show last year at the Thyssen-Bornemisza
Museum. Nevertheless, the last major shows surveying Spanish painting
of the whole century was held at the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo
(though organized by the Prado) sixteen years ago in 1992. Under the
title La pintura de historia del siglo XIX en España, it
was devoted exclusively to history painting, and it was curated by José Luis
Díez who was also responsible for the present show, together with
Javier Barón, both currently chief curators of Modern Painting
at the Prado. To this day, few exhibitions held in the Prado have been
consecrated to nineteenth-century Spanish artists. As exceptions to this
rule, one can mention the show on Carlos de Haes (2002), the pioneer
of realist landscape painting in Spain, and the exhibition on the art
collector Ramón de Errazu, Fortuny, Madrazo y Rico. El legado
de Ramón de Errazu (2006). With this inaugural exhibition,
the Prado apparently had two goals: to promote Spanish art of the nineteenth
century and, consequently, to promote its own collection. Indeed, the
museum has shown a canonical selection of its holdings of painting and
sculpture of the nineteenth century, thus dignifying a part of its collection
that had suffered too long from provisional acceptance and disregard.
This is also the case for the exhibition now in Toledo, The Spanish
Portrait in El Prado: from Goya to Sorolla, that focuses on nineteenth-century
portraiture. |
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In general, Spanish painting of the
nineteenth century is almost unknown outside Spain, and in comparison
with that of other European countries or the United States, it is little
addressed either in international research or in academic production.
To speak of an “invisibility” of Spanish art is thus no overstatementnor
would it be such even in Spain. It is commonplace to see nineteenth-century
Spanish art as somehow dwarfed or squeezed by the gigantic figures of
Francisco de Goya, on the one extreme, and Picasso on the other. It seems
as if there is a vacuum, a sort of black hole, after the death of Goya.
At the end of the century, the figure of Picasso would rescue Spanish “genius” after
decades of decay and obscurity. Indeed, the decline of the Spanish school
after Goya was an accepted opinion by the mid-nineteenth century. For
instance, when confronting the work of Spanish artists shown at the Universal
Expositions of 1855 and 1867, French critics tended to resent its lack
of originality and independence. The comparison with the Spanish School
of the seventeenth century was always unfavorable: contemporary Spanish
painting appeared to the eyes of critics as different as Maxime Du Camp,
Théophile Gautier or Etienne Délecluze, as excessively
dependent on its French counterpart, and thus unable to express its own
national character. For example, Gautier declared that Goya was the last
of a race of true and original artists, that of Velázquez, Murillo,
Zurbarán and Ribera. This perception of Spanish art of the nineteenth
century as an interlude without genuine interest has proved extraordinarily
persistent, a stigma that has distorted both its appreciation and its
interpretation; hence, the relevance of the curators’ aim at linking
the painters of the nineteenth century to their predecessors in the Golden
Age. |
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Related to this is the idée
reçue concerning the quality of Spanish art of this period;
that is, as a production that does not stand comparison with other
national schools whether French, English or German. From the perspective
of modernism, Spanish art of the nineteenth century is retardataire,
since it incorporates foreign artistic innovations with considerable
delay, and after their radicalism had been tamed. Such is the case
with the late introduction of romanticism and with the particular brand
of impressionism developed by Joaquín Sorolla at the turn of
the twentieth century. Nevertheless, Spanish artists were not producing
in a context that was resistant to influences from abroad. On the contrary,
one of the points made clear by the research involved in this exhibition
is the importance of the international art centers of Paris and Rome
for Spanish artists throughout the century. While many journeyed to
Rome, long before the foundation of the Academia de Roma in 1873, many
others travelled to Paris, staying with well-established (and official)
masters, and participating in Salon exhibitions and in the different
Universal Expositions of the second half of the century. |
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It is clearly an opportune moment to
make a critical reassessment of Spanish art of the nineteenth century,
analogous to the recent reappraisal of Scandinavian art of the same period,
through exhibitions and academic publications. Exhibitions such as The
Nineteenth Century in El Prado offer more than the possibility of
making it available to wider audiences, with a favourable display and
a clear, didactic discourse. More than simply updating our knowledge,
the challenge of the show wasor should have beenits invitation
to approach and interpret the specificity of nineteenth-century Spanish
art according to a new set of criteria. |
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The Museo del Prado’s extraordinary
collection of nineteenth-century Spanish art amounts to almost 3,000
works, the vast majority of which are paintings, many in storage or deposited
in provincial museums or official buildings. The present exhibition showed
a careful selection of ninety-five paintings, from Goya to Joaquín
Sorolla, along with a disproportionately poor representation of twelve
sculptures. Significantly, neither drawings nor engravings had been included
in the show. Some paintings not displayed in the Casón del Buen
Retiro, such as José de Madrazo´s allegory Divine and
Profane Love (1813) were exhibited at the Prado together with some
of the museum’s very recent acquisitions, such as two genre paintings
by Leonardo Alenza. |
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When selecting the works to be shown, the curators´ criteria was
based on quality; thus their concern was to choose the best of the holdings
and to display them in the best possible way. This focus on excellence
and quality was apparent even in the material aspects such as the state
of conservation of both canvases and frames, some of which were original
and in several cases, spectacular. |
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The selection of artwork was also representative
of the variety of the art created in Spain, offering an overview of the
major trends and figures of this period. The exhibition was displayed
in three large, functional, and well lit rooms, two of them divided into
four sections, and occupying the ground and first floors of the museum’s
addition. Formal quality and a sometimes overwhelming technical mastery
were enhanced by an austere layout. Explanatory panels were reduced to
a minimum; additional information was provided by a small booklet with
comments on each work on view, which was distributed upon entering the
exhibition. |
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The three rooms were painted in different colours.
Those on the ground floor were more intense: deep blue for neoclassic,
romantic and academic painting and Pompeian red for history painting.
The realist and naturalist paintings on the first floor were hung on
walls painted pale blue. Such an interruption in the spatial continuity
helped to make the transition to the brighter room upstairs, which seemed
entirely appropriate to the more modern works on view there. |
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| Fig.1.
Installation of the section “Goya and Neoclassicism.” Left,
portraits by Francisco de Goya, Duquesa de Abrantes, 1816,
and La Marquesa de Santa Cruz, 1805. Background: portraits
by Vicente López . Right: (partially seen): José de
Madrazo, La Muerte de Viriato, jefe de los lusitanos, 1807.
Sculptures by José Álvarez Cubero, Isabel de Braganza,
1826 (center), and José Ginés, Venus y Cupido,
ca.1807 (right). |
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| Fig.
2. Vicente López, El pintor Francisco de Goya, 1826.
Oil on canvas. |
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| Fig.
3. Federico de Madrazo, Amalia de Llano y Dotres, condesa de Vilches,
1853. Oil on canvas. |
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The exhibition was divided into nine sections following
a chronological order, from the disciples of David, José de Madrazo
and Juan Antonio Ribera, to fin-de-siècle figures such as Joaquín
Sorolla and Aureliano de Beruete. However, this strict chronological
linearity was problematic since dates ended up being an arbitrary criterion:
why was there no painting by Goya prior to 1805, when the exhibition
closed with works of the first decade of the twentieth century? |
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Under the title “Goya and Neoclassicism”,
the first section of the show exhibited portraits and history paintings
(fig. 1). Three portraits by Goyaone for each decade of the centuryfaced
two large history canvases by Ribera and Madrazo, the most representative
examples of Spanish neoclassicism. The portrait of an elderly Goya by
the then-director of the Museo Real, Vicente López, was of particular
note (fig. 2). The section devoted to Romanticism brought together a
wider variety of genres. A single landscape by Genaro Pérez Villaamil,
the most prominent master of this genre, was hung in the company of small-scale “goyesque” canvases
by Goya´s followers Leonardo Alenza and Eugenio Lucas. A group
portrait by Antonio Maria Esquivel showed a prominent collection of writers
and poets listening to José de Zorrilla in the painter’s
studio. This emblematic depiction of Madrid intellectual life during
the reign of Queen Isabel II could well be the local equivalent to images
of gatherings in the artists’ ateliers as places of sociability:
the place where the artist not only works, but also emerges as a social persona. |
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Six large portraits of members of high society,
mostly aristocrats, by Federico de Madrazo, one of the future directors
of the Museo del Prado, dominated the space devoted to “Academic
Purism”. Particularly noteworthy was the portrait of the Countess
of Vilches (1853) reminiscent of French portraiture of the period, and
of Ingres in particular (fig. 3). The accomplished rendering of this
charming young woman, in her fashionable pale blue dress, with her fresh
smile and natural gesture, was used in the promotional poster of the
exhibition. It stood in contrast with the formal portrait of the aristocrat
Isabel Álvarez Montes, almost excessive in both the lavishness
of the composition and the technical skill of the artist. A large Nazarene-influenced
canvas representing an obscure scene of the Virgin and Saint John
journeying to Ephesus after the death of Christ (1862) was on view
after careful restoration, together with several genre paintings by Valeriano
Domínguez Bécquer that recorded popular types and traditions
of the regions of Spain. A Young Boy Seated (1859) by Víctor
Manzano recalled Velázquez and Murillo in both its naturalism
and the sobriety of its color and composition. |
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| Fig.
4. Installation of the section on Eduardo Rosales. Left: Muerte
de Lucrecia, 1871; Mujer al salir del baño, ca.
1869; and Concepción Serrano, luego condesa de Santovenia,
1871. Middle: Agapito Vallmitjana, Cristo yacente, 1872. |
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| Fig.
5. Eduardo Rosales, Doña Isabel la Católica dictando
su testamento, 1864. Oil on canvas. |
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| Fig.6.
Installation of the section on History Painting. Left to right: Antonio
Gisbert, Fusilamiento de Torrijos y sus compañeros en las
playas de Málaga, 1887-1888; Francisco Pradilla, Juana
la Loca, 1877; José Moreno Carbonero, El príncipe
don Carlos de Viana, 1881. |
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The first room to be exclusively consecrated to
an individual artist, and one of the most accomplished spaces of the
exhibition, showed the work by the short-lived Eduardo Rosales (fig.
4). It reflected the pivotal position of this painter in modern Spanish
art. In comparison with the previous sections, a change of quality was
apparent in the selection of eight canvases of different genres, ranging
from history painting to portraits as well as a nude, all of them produced
in scarcely a decade between the late 1850s and the early 1870s. Rosales’ painting,
which introduced a brand of realism based on the work of Velázquez,
represented a significant shift in Spanish art. The two large history
canvases, both winners of the highest prizes at the Exposiciones Nacionales,
were especially remarkable. Queen Isabel la Católica dictating
her Will was not only a huge success at the exhibition of 1864, but
also at the 1867 Universal Exposition of Paris, while The Death of
Lucretia (1871) received a polemical reception at home because of
the audacity of its technique of broad and loose brushstrokes (fig. 5).
The full-length portrait of Concepción Serrano as a teenager in
her pink silk dress was an homage to both Velazquez and Goya. In the
middle of the space stood a sculpture of Lying Christ (1872) by
Agapito Vallmitjana, that echoed the deathbed scene of Queen Isabel;
Rosales himself sat as the model, thus making the presence of the painter
implicit among his paintings. |
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The historical depictions of Isabel la Católica and Lucretia,
two episodes with a significant political dimension, linked the section
devoted to Rosales to the next section, entirely dedicated to history
painting and the most spectacular room in the whole exhibition (fig.
6). Twelve huge canvases by ten painters, real grandes machines depicting
mostly somber and dramatic subjects, covered the red walls. The paintings
were all produced for the Exposiciones Nacionales between 1864 and 1889,
the heyday of those official productions before the importance of the
genre declined sharply in the mid-1890s. |
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Apart from two examples of scenes taken from ancient
history (a Death of Seneca exhibited in strong competition with
the Lucretia submitted by Rosales the same year) and from religious
history (a Burial of Saint Sebastian, by Alejandro Ferrant, 1877),
the majority of images were drawn from Spanish history. The themes ranged
from the Middle Ages and the epoch of the Catholic monarchy of Fernando
and Isabel to contemporary times. Conspicuously absent were some of the
most ubiquitous subjects in official history painting, such as Columbus
and the discovery of America, or the fall of Granada and the victory
of the Christian Reconquista over the Muslim presence in Spain.
The Expulsion of the Jews from Spain in 1492 by Emilio Sala (1889)
was one of the most significant events of the reign of the Catholic kings
to be represented in the show. |
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| Fig.
7. Antonio Gisbert, Fusilamiento de Torrijos y sus compañeros
en las playas de Málaga, 1887-1888. Oil on canvas. |
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Directly inspired by Velázquez´s Rendición
de Breda was José Casado del Alisal’s canvas celebrating
the first Spanish victory over the French in the War of Independence
(1808-1814), the Surrender at Bailén (1864). He also
depicted the gruesome legendary episode of the twelfth century King
Ramiro II of Aragon, in the company of his noblemen, contemplating
in horror the severed heads of the traitors whose execution he had
ordered. The huge canvas is a spectacular, yet perhaps empty, example
of the painter’s mastery of his métier and his
skills in scenographic composition. Contemporary history is the source
for Antonio Gisbert´s Execution of Torrijos and his Companions
on the Beach at Málaga (1887-1888), the representation of
the tragic outcome of a liberal conspiracy against Ferdinand VII in
1831 (fig. 7). Commissioned by the liberal government then in power,
and possibly one of the most outstanding works on view, with its moral
tension and the modernity of the cropped corpses and the fallen top
hat on the foreground, it was given a highly visible place in the room. |
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The alliance of madness and love, much in the romantic
vein of the time, could explain the popularity of the story of Juana
la Loca, the allegedly insane daughter of the Catholic kings. Two canvases
devoted to her were on view, in particular Francisco Pradilla´s
iconic Juana la Loca (1877) showing the queen with her husband’s
coffin as she paused to rest on her journey to Granada for his
burial. Literary or legendary sources inspired paintings such as The
Lovers of Teruel (1884) by Antonio Muñoz Degrain. In the end,
many of the paintings came closer to oversized representations of genre
historique, which combined a taste for historical accuracy, naturalistic
rendering and technical mastery. |
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The special place devoted to this artistic genre
in the exhibition discourse deserves to be noted here. By the sheer size
of the canvases and by the impressive layout of the room, history painting
was the evident protagonist of the show. Its centrality in the artistic
production during the second half of nineteenth century in particular
is a phenomenon entirely specific to Spain. That is to say that official
art was given an extraordinary visibility through the much publicized
Exposiciones Nacionales, as well as a definite prominence over independent
developments that led to the emergence of modern art elsewhere in Europe.
The exhibition made the importance of the state-patronage system manifest,
which promoted an academic and conservative style in both painting and
sculpture. At the same time, it disclosed how extensively artists depended
on it to shape their public careers. Indeed, the Exposiciones Nacionales,
with their prestigious prizes, the acquisitions for public collections,
and the consequent display in national museums or in official buildings,
proved essential for the artists as the place of their consecration.
As one can expect, first prizes went to historical canvases that attracted
the attention of the juries, the critics, and the audiences through dramatic
compositions depicting historical episodes, through declamatory gestures
and a melodramatic rhetoric that carried straightforward messages. |
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In fact, the prominence of official and state-controlled
institutions was not counterbalanced, at least until late in the century,
by an independent art network as it was the case in other European countries
and the United States. In Spain, the historical and social conditions
throughout the nineteenth century made the emergence of a sound private
art market, with galleries and collectors, problematic. Equally difficult
to assess is the relevance of artistic societies such as the French Sociétés
d´Artistes or of alternative educational institutions. Finally,
the role of art criticism in the reception of contemporary art, linked
to the development of a specialized press, did not have the significance
that this phenomenon had in France or in England. |
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| Fig.
8. Carlos de Haes, Desfiladero, Jaraba de Aragón, c.
1872. Oil on canvas. |
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In sharp contrast to the heavier, sometimes exceedingly
impressive, atmosphere of the rooms on the ground floor, the ambience
of the gallery upstairs was lighter in all respects. The pale blue walls,
the smaller scale of the works, the luminosity of their palette, and
the often mundane scenes depicted contributed to this impression of brightness.
The first section was dedicated to landscape painting thus acknowledging
the key role played by this genre in exposing Spanish painting to modernity.
Landscape had an important public success in the official Exposiciones,
where it was abundantly represented, even though not regularly awarded.
Two of the most important contributions were from the Catalan, Ramón
Martí Alsina, who was acquainted with French realism through his
first-hand contact with Courbet and the Barbizon School; and from the
Belgian-born Carlos de Haes, the father of Spanish modern landscape. On
view in this section were a large painting of a mountain landscape in
northern Spain, and four studies executed outdoors in a single session
by De Haes, together with canvases by Martí Alsina and by Muñoz
Degrain, still romantic in sensibility (fig. 8). |
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With so pivotal a role, landscape painting perhaps
deserved a more generous treatment in terms of space and prominence.
For example, the Prado museum owns a large number of works by Carlos
de Haes, donated by his pupils, among them almost 200 plein-air oil
studies of landscapes from different regions of Spain, France and Holland.
Only four of them, so essentially modern in their sketchiness and their
directness, were exhibitedand possibly not in the most favourable
waysomething that was particularly disappointing. |
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| Fig.
9. Installation of the section “Fortuny and its Circle.” Center:
Raimundo de Madrazo, Josefa Manzanedo e Intentas, II marquesa
de Manzanedo,1875. Right: Raimundo de Madrazo, María
Guerrero como “Doña Inés”, 1891. Left:
Vicente Palmaroli, Concepción Miramón, 1889.
Madrazo´s portrait of the art collector Ramón de
Errazu, 1879, is flanked by two canvases by Mariano Fortuny.
In the middle, the sculpture by Jerónimo Suñol, Dante
pensativo, 1908. |
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A battle painting of the North African military
campaigns of the early 1860s was the link with the next section devoted
to Mariano Fortuny, one of the most internationally renowned Spanish
painters of the century. Most of Fortuny’s paintings were from
the last years of his life in the early 1870s. They are small canvases
or panels with genre scenes, some intimate in mood, in the orientalist
taste popular at the time, or following the new Japanese fashion. The
virtuosity and the refinement of his technique, his handling of light
effects, as in the diminutive Nude Boy on the Beach of Portici (1874),
made Mariano Fortuny one of the most sought-after painters among the
wealthy art-collecting bourgeoisie. The circle of artists around Fortuny
included Martín Rico y Ortega and Raimundo de Madrazo. Four landscapes
by Martín Rico presented important stylistic differences: from
the realistic depiction of the shores of the river Oise, vaguely reminiscent
of Daubigny, and the orientalist view of the Alhambra gardens, to the
panorama of Paris from the Trocadéro terrasse. In contrast,
Raimundo de Madrazo was a portraitist of the Parisian grand monde,
in particular upper class women and wealthy Spaniards living there; he
would later be popular among American elites as well. Two impressive
portraits dominated this section, that of the Marquesa de Manzanedo and
of her friend, the art collector, Ramón de Errazu, owner of the
most outstanding paintings by Fortuny and Martín Rico, which he
donated to the museum with the rest of his collection (fig. 9). |
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The section entitled “From Realism to the
End of the Century” was rather eclectic in its gathering of diverse
works and painters, ranging from the naturalist genre scenes by José Jiménez
Aranda and the portraits by Ignacio Pinazo to the huge canvas depicting
an emphatic historical anecdote by Muñoz Degraina sort of
monumental genre scene in the style of academic naturalism. Joaquín
Sorolla´s naturalist And They Still Say Fish is Expensive (1894),
an image denouncing the labor conditions endured by the poor, is included
in the final section of the exhibition. The canvas is the only example
of naturalist painting dealing with social concerns in the show, although
this was a visible trend in the works submitted to the National Exhibitions
at the end of the century. |
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10. Aureliano de Beruete, El Guadarrama desde el Plantío
de los Infantes, 1910. Oil on canvas. |
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The show closed with a selection focused on the
work by Sorolla and his friend, the landscapist Aureliano de Beruete.
Both are major figures of late nineteenth-century painting, contemporary
with other artists present in the collections that have been transferred
to the Centro de Arte Reina Sofía. Four splendid portraits by
Sorolla were included, among them one of Beruete’s son, a future
director of the Museo del Prado, and one of the actress María
Guerrero dressed as the Infanta Margarita, based on the Velázquez
painting in the museum’s collection. One of Sorolla´s scenes
of the luminous beaches of his native Valencia, Boys on the Beach (1910),
was on view together with Beruete’s landscapes of the outskirts
of Madrid, such as a La Pradera de San Isidro (1909), a place
represented by Goya more than a century earlier. There was also a view
of the snowy mountains of the Sierra del Guadarrama, a reference
point for scientific and cultural societies such as the Institución
Libre de Enseñanza, which was to lead intellectual reforms in
Spain up to the Civil War (fig. 10). The exhibition ended with the Guadarrama
Mountains, a last homage to Velázquez who often depicted this
landscape as the background to his portraits. |
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Although the exhibition seemed to follow a strict
chronological order, the general impression was that there were in fact
interferences and inconsistencies in its lineal narration. Thus, some
sections were focused on major figures (for example, Madrazo, Fortuny,
or Sorolla) or even exclusively devoted to a painter, such as Eduardo
Rosales. In other cases, the artistic genre was the criterion as for
the galleries devoted to history painting or landscape, but historical
canvases and landscapes were to be found also elsewhere in the show.
In addition, other sections were organized according to style such as
those on neoclassicism, romanticism or realism. |
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As for the catalogue, it has the same encyclopaedic
breadth as the exhibition. Lavishly illustrated, it is almost 500 pages
in length, with substantial entries for each work, the result of careful
and documented research. It includes an appendix with biographical notes
on all artists exhibited and an updated bibliography. A long introductory
essay by Javier Barón, one of the curators, retraces the evolution
of Spanish painting and sculpture from Goya to Picasso while an article
on the history of the nineteenth-century collections by the Prado curator
Ana Gutiérrez Márquez closes it. Barón´s survey,
and the entries as well, were based on stylistic distinctions and precise
formal analysis of individual paintings and sculptures. Gutiérrez
Márquez’s article, although placed at the end, is a central
contribution to this publication since it discusses one of the most important
issues raised by the show. Indeed, the reconstruction of that particular
history makes clear how precarious the public visibility of the collection
has been in the last two centuries, and how secondary in status and interest
it waseven within the Prado itself. |
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Barón´s essay includes the discussion
of artists and works that were not exhibited (though illustrated in many
cases), some even beyond the Prado’s holdings, such as fin-de-siècle
painters like Ignacio Zuloaga, Santiago Rusiñol or Joaquim Mirnot
to speak of Picasso, whose Woman in blue (1901) closes the text. This
brings to mind one of the most immediate dysfunctions of the show, which
in fact is a problem of the museum’s collection itself. The exhibition
ends abruptly, and so does the Prado collection, according to criteria
which are neither properly artistic nor historical (as the date of 1914
is for the Musée d´Orsay) but simply biographical, 1881
being the birth date of Pablo Picasso. As the government decree of 1995
puts it in peculiar administrative prose, Picasso´s figure and
work, “because of its recognized genius and relevance beyond the
limits of the merely aesthetical, can serve to determine what comes before
and what comes after in the artistic evolution of the last two centuries” [“…por
su reconocida genialidad y su trascendencia más allá de
lo puramente estético, pueda servir para determinar el antes y
el después de la evolución artística en los dos últimos
siglos.” Royal Decree 410/1995, March 17]. Indeed, the criterion
for the exceptions to this rule, that is the artists born between 1850
and 1880, was based on the presumed “special characteristics” manifest
in their work, and seems even more arbitrary and questionable than Picasso´s
birth date for assignment to one national museum or the other. As Barón´s
essay is implicitly stating, the closing of the exhibition with Beruete
and Sorolla was artificially forced, as some of their contemporaries
whose work is essential for a proper grasp of Spanish art of the late
nineteenth century are in the collections of the Centro de Arte Reina
Sofía only since 1995, and for this reason alone were excluded
from the show. |
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As a whole, the exhibition, together with its catalogue,
could be seen as a clear example of the confrontation of the practices
of art history in the museum and at the university, not far from the
tension between museum curatorial research and academic scholarship addressed
at in the 1999 Clark Conference on The Two Art Histories. In fact, The
Nineteenth Century in El Prado has been a project headed in every
aspect of its development by the museum that owns the collection, and
its curators are also the editors and authors of the catalogue. No invitation,
whether national or international, seems to have been made outside the
institution, whether to university professors or independent scholarswith
the exception of an international colloquium of curators from Europe
and the United States. Neither the exhibition nor the accompanying publication
aimed at offering an interpretative approach to the art produced in Spain
during the nineteenth century. As mentioned previously, the primary goal
of the curators was to bring to light the formal and technical quality
of the selected art works, to let its “aesthetic dimension” manifest
itself. The exhibition discourse followed this stance with great coherence,
and the catalogue was not concerned with theory, even less with critical
approaches, but with documenting the research carried out for each individual
work. |
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Indeed, several significant issues are left open
in both the exhibition and the catalogue, which should be the focus of
art historical investigation. Chronology and style, the artist and
the work of art separated from social life, from politics and
history, are categories of art historical discourse that have been largely
displaced by other conceptual frames of analysis and interpretationat
least in certain academic milieus. For example, the issue of gender was
left undiscussedunmentioned in the catalogue entrieseven
though the images of women were ubiquitous, from portraits of aristocratic
ladies, to the voyeuristic fantasies of a Slave on Sale (Jiménez
Aranda, 1897) or the bound nude bodies of the daughters of El Cid (Dióscoro
Puebla, 1871). Discarding gender appears to be an inadequate option given
the context of a patriarchal society such as that of nineteenth-century
Spain, with the pressure of the Church on sexual morals and the relegation
of women from the public sphere. Another aspect that could have been
taken into account relates to the social identity of the artist, and
its construction in this period, since a significant number of portraits
of artists, writers, actors and even museum directors, hung on the walls. |
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But the most conspicuous omission in the show, and
in the catalogue, was that of the historical and the ideological dimensions.
In the nineteenth century, Spain had an especially turbulent political
and social history. Declining international significance, civil wars
subsumed by wars of succession, changes of regime from monarchy to republic
and vice versa, reactionary social elites, and the weight of institutions
such as the Church made the country exceptionally resistant to modernization
and progressive innovations. This situation contrasted with that of leading
European states like the United Kingdom, France, or Germany. In addition
to this, Spain was in the process of constructing itself as a modern
national state. History painting, that most official of all genres, contributed
to the fabrication of an ideological discourse aimed at making the existence
of a Spanish nation credible–an issue which is still open to controversy.
With the representation of specific moments and personalities of the
Spanish national past, history painting became a politically loaded genre
of rare public effectiveness. Thus, it helped to fulfil the need to legitimate
a presumed national identity, which would allow contemporary Spaniards
to think of themselves as members of a united community with a shared
history, culture and tradition. In recent decades, nineteenth-century
history painting has been the subject of reassessments that have questioned
a modernist discourse that based aesthetic interest on rupture and innovation.
The revision of this genre in Spain was already apparent in the previously
mentioned 1992 exhibition, La pintura de historia del siglo XIX en
España. The present show in the Prado was thus a confirmation
of the importance of this path-breaking approach, which recognized the
inherent values of a type of painting considered too close to academic
precepts in terms of both technique and concept. Nevertheless, in the
Prado exhibition, the notion of history painting as ideology, free of
the prejudices of modernism, deserved a more substantial reflection. |
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History, politics, ideology: significantly, none
of these issues were addressed in an exhibition that was staged as a
succession of artworks highlighting the sustained and even brilliant
skills of the artists. However, the question immediately arises as to
whether this is a sufficient intellectual foundation for an exhibition
whose immediate ambition should have been to place nineteenth-century
Spanish art under the focus of international research. The catalogue
could have provided room for updated approaches to art historical investigation
beyond the limits of traditional practices and discourses. |
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One can end by saying that identity was indeed addressed
in the exhibition, but only by way of artistic identity. Something omnipresent
both in the exhibition and the catalogue was the existence of a given
Spanish pictorial tradition that ensured the continuity from the masters
of the Golden Age to the painters of the nineteenth century. As Barón
points out in the opening pages of his essay, it is the guiding thread
of Velázquez that unites Goya to the fin-de-siècle painters.
Velázquez is probably the name most often repeated in the catalogue
and the artistic reference most conspicuous in the show, from the numerous
portraits to Rosales’ canvases or the landscapes by Beruete. The
presence of Goya at the beginning of the exhibition was a way of underscoring
that connection. Thereby, the institution itself was put, in a rather
oblique way, at the center of the exhibition’s conceptual framework:
the Museo del Prado, the keeper of that Spanish pictorial tradition,
appears to be an important instrument for the artistic creation of the
nineteenth century. The focus on Velázquez, and thereby on the
Prado itself, was also an indirect way of bringing Spanish nineteenth-century
painting closer to European modern art. Velázquez was indeed a
reference for both Spanish artists and avant-garde painters such as the
French, for example, and the Prado was a point de rencontre in
their shared interests. But if raised at any stage of the show, the question
of how “modern” Spanish art of the nineteenth century was,
or could have been, is left unanswered. Velázquez probably did
not have the same meaning for Edouard Manet as he did for Eduardo Rosales.
To examine this difference with an unprejudiced vision, to investigate
the conditions as well as the limitations of the art production of nineteenth-century
Spain, is the challenge put forth by the exhibition The Nineteenth
Century in El Prado. |
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Isabel Valverde
Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Barcelona
isabel.valverde[at]upf.edu |
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© 20089 Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
and Isabel Valverde. All Rights Reserved. |
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