Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Haberdashers, barristers, and a young musician: Situating Schalcken in late seventeenth-century London
- 2 Schalcken’s Maecenas and the court of William III
- 3 Self-portraiture as self-promotion
- 4 Schalcken’s London period genre paintings
- 5 Schalcken’s London period history and still-life Paintings
- Conclusion
- Critical Catalogue, lost paintings, and checklist
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
5 - Schalcken’s London period history and still-life Paintings
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 February 2021
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Illustrations
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Haberdashers, barristers, and a young musician: Situating Schalcken in late seventeenth-century London
- 2 Schalcken’s Maecenas and the court of William III
- 3 Self-portraiture as self-promotion
- 4 Schalcken’s London period genre paintings
- 5 Schalcken’s London period history and still-life Paintings
- Conclusion
- Critical Catalogue, lost paintings, and checklist
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
It is very well known that prior to the eighteenth century the art-buying Englishman's interest in history paintings paled in comparison with his seemingly inexhaustible appetite for portraiture. Iain Pears's statement certainly holds true that the general impression among the English was that the only good history paintings were made by foreigners. Late seventeenth-century sources, among others, William Aglionby's Painting Illustrated in Three Diallogues (1685), corroborate Pears's observation. Some modern scholars hold a lowly opinion of Aglionby's book, dismissing it as a mere plagiaristic recycling of Charles Alphonse Dufresnoy's (1611–1668) important art-theoretical text, De arte graphica (1668). Nevertheless, as Craig Ashley Hanson has convincingly demonstrated, far from simply presenting plagiarized material to his audience, Aglionby reshaped his source of inspiration toward the innovative goal – innovative, that is, for the time and place in which he was writing – of promoting history painting in England. In essence, by acknowledging the need to encourage the development of an English school of history painting, he provided his well-heeled readers with a practical manual concerning how to appreciate such work in an effort to convince them to become true collectors and patrons of this genre.
An interesting passage in Aglionby's preface is worth quoting, because it sums up the situation in late seventeenth-century England vis-à-vis history painting:
But for a Painter, we never had, as yet, any of Note, that was an English Man, that pretended to History-Painting. I cannot attribute this to any thing but the little Incouragement [sic] it meets with in this Nation; whose Genius more particularly leads them to affect Face-Painting … But our Nobility and Gentry, except some few, who have eminently showed their Kindness for this noble Art, they are generally speaking, no Judges and therefore can be no Promoters of an Art that lies all in nice Observations.
In essence, Aglionby reflects upon the disheartening state of affairs with respect to fine-art production in England: the best English painters are portraitists while history painting itself, though principally collected by members of the aristocracy, is not practiced by native artists. Yet by the time that Schalcken arrived in London in the spring of 1692, change was already afoot. For new developments, both literary and pictorial, helped sow the seeds of what would ultimately lead to shifting tastes during the eighteenth century proper.
- Type
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- Information
- Godefridus SchalckenA Dutch Painter in Late Seventeenth-Century London, pp. 129 - 152Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2018