Is Art History ?

I have just been sent a copy of Svetlana Alpers’s writings Is Art History ? beautifully produced by the Hunters Point Press. The book is due to be launched on Thursday at Rizzoli at 1133, Broadway. There was a time when I hoped to be there, but am at least pleased now to have the full range of her writings, including on museums:-

https://www.hunterspointpress.com/product/is-art-history-selected-writings-by-svetlana-alpers

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The Well-Gardened Mind

I have been reading Sue Stuart-Smith’s very wonderful book, The Well-Gardened Mind, about the therapeutic value of gardens to all forms of disease, misanthropy and melancholia while sitting on the verandah of our back garden, gradually realising that I was myself living through the experience of one of the chapters of her book: the benefits of close observation of flowers, particularly in the fierce light after heavy rain, surrounded by a wealth of natural forms, which I have not necessarily have paid attention to in the past given my general botanical ignorance, but will obviously need to more closely in the future:-

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Elizabeth Esteve-Coll (3)

I am taking the liberty of posting a photograph of Elizabeth Esteve-Coll as she was in 1982, not long before I first met her. It comes from the University of Surrey Archives (Photo credit: @UniOfSurrey Archives (US/PH/2/7/10 ©University of Surrey).

All the photographs of her when she was at the V&A show her, not surprisingly, looking vastly much more worn down and harassed:-

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Elizabeth Esteve-Coll (2)

I have been interested by the comments on my post on Elizabeth Esteve-Coll which have inevitably made me think again about the issues surrounding her still highly controversial re-organisation of the V&A.

I notice that she is described on Wikipedia as a librarian and in retrospect I think she did bring some of her views as a librarian from the National Art Library to the wider collection of the V&A: that the core responsibility of the museum was not ‘scholarship’ in the abstract, but to look after and care for the collection, catalogue it digitally, and make it freely and widely available to the public. At the time, I remember the staff of the British Museum were very critical of this attitude, but in the light of what has happened at the British Museum more recently, this switch in resources to collections care was not only necessary but highly desirable.

She inspired fierce loyalty in a way which was non-hierarchical and indeed anti-hierarchical.

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Alison Wilding RA (4)

We have been having an Alison Wilding fest – or, more to the point, she has.

We first went to her exhibition at the Heong Gallery at Downing, the perfect space for her drawing and a small, highly select group of her smaller works:-

Then, the monograph on her drawings On Paper appeared, a very beautiful piece of book production with essays on her work.

And tonight the opening of her exhibition Testing the Objects of Affection at Alison Jacques:-

https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2024/sep/17/sculptor-alison-wilding-testing-the-objects-of-affection

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Elizabeth Esteve-Coll (1)

I have somehow managed to gain access to the obituary of Elizabeth Esteve-Coll in yesterday’s Daily Telegraph, a well-informed account of her which must have been written with personal knowledge.

I knew some, but certainly not all of her history – her schooling in Darlington and her time at Trinity College, Dublin, but not the amount of time she spent at sea with her Spanish husband.

The obituary perhaps does not convey how charismatic as well as energetic she was when she arrived as Keeper of the National Art Library in 1985, which was why the senior staff supported her appointment as Director in 1987 (this may have been forgotten).

She was recruited to reform the museum’s management.  More of her thinking will become clear when the recordings in National Life Stories are released.

I owe her a lot.  She was a remarkable person, ahead of her time, and she remained very active behind-the-scenes at the Wolfson Foundation and Sainsbury Centre after having to stand down as Vice Chancellor of the University of East Anglia because of her MS.

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/obituaries/2024/09/17/elizabeth-esteve-coll-victoria-and-albert-roy-strong-art/

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Goldsmiths’ Fair

Each year, a highlight of Romilly’s year is the annual Goldsmiths Fair which opens next Tuesday at Goldsmith’s Hall, close to St. Paul’s. 

It is an opportunity to see not only her work, but the work also of two of her ‘translators’ and many other jewellers.  You can even get half-price tickets if you follow the link.

Here is a preview:-

https://mailchi.mp/09fe82669a43/goldsmiths-fair-2024-16517460?e=9dc0f9b85b

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St. Barnabas, Hackney

My second excursion prompted by Open House was to St. Barnabas, Hackney which I had somehow overlooked in Nairn’s London ‘the inside is the best church of its date in London’.  I am not sure that there are many churches of its date in London, just before the First World War, when Charles Reilly was already established as Professor of Architecture in Liverpool.  It’s a sort of stripped down, brick-and-concrete version of Torcello:-

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