Date: Fri 28-May-1999
Date: Fri 28-May-1999
Publication: Ant
Author: LAURAB
Quick Words:
Bard-Baroque-Albertson
Full Text:
Life And The Arts In The Baroque Palaces Of Rome
(with cuts)
By Karla Klein Albertson
NEW YORK CITY -- Furniture or decorative arts are sometimes described as
"slightly Baroque" -- a curlicue here or a scroll there -- but the spring
exhibition at the Bard Center in Manhattan, "Life and The Arts in The Baroque
Palaces of Rome: Ambiente Barocco" is over-the-top, home-of-the-genre Italian
Baroque in its very purest form. Once again, the small gallery at the noted
decorative arts graduate school has mounted a highly-important show in its
field, gathering in one place over 100 magnificent objects and drawings that
would be difficult to see if you lived in Italy for a lifetime.
As its lasting legacy, the Baroque exhibition is accompanied by a beautifully
illustrated catalogue, focussing on Roman palatial life in the Seventeenth
Century or "Seicento," when Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Pietro da Cortona and
Francesco Borromini were busy creating the opulent city that continues to awe
visitors.
Most important for East Coast connoisseurs, the show and catalogue were timed
to anticipate the major exhibition "Art in Rome in The Eighteenth Century,"
opening in March 2000 at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, which will include
over 300 examples of painting, sculpture, works on paper and decorative arts.
Stefanie Walker, a Bard Center professor who chose the objects and co-edited
the catalogue, explains, "These three major artists were the sources for the
decorative arts. Bernini was an all-around genius and influenced design in
every field, sculpture to painting to architecture to decorative arts.
Carriages, fireworks design -- you name it.
"Pietro da Cortona was the one who combined the arabesques of ancient Roman
architectural ornament into his fresco painting, and this influence also
flowed into decorative arts design."
Among the "sub-contractors" Cortona employed was a German artist from
Innsbruck named Johann Paul Schor. He drew the imaginative plans, on display
in the show, for a fantasy bed, cradle and carriage.
From Seventeenth Century documents, scholars know that the massive bed
supported by sea gods and cherubs was actually made for a new mother in the
noble Colonna family to receive visitors after her son was born. Although the
bed has vanished without a trace, the exhibition offers a massive gilded table
and the beautiful Barberini concert harp as well as numerous other drawings,
such as a "Design for a Sugar Sculpture," which make the viewer speculate on
what sort of society could require these ornate objects.
This type of question is why the exhibition focuses on "Life" and well as "the
Arts," according to Walker.
"On one level, the show allows visitors to appreciate Roman Baroque objects as
works of art worth considering. Sure people can look at the objects
individually, but we have also tried to organize the exhibition in thematic
sections that evoke ensembles," she explained. "I want people to have a sense
what an interior looked like and contained, and the wall labels explain a
little bit about what went on in these palaces."
Then as now, the wealthy attempted to impress their subjects and each other by
surrounding their daily life with elaborate displays. As Walker puts it in the
catalogue introduction, "Though unable to match the popes in the scale of
their undertakings, cardinals and princes engaged in intense competition to
outdo each other in the building and furnishing of churches, chapels and
palaces." Public festivals, jousts, and musical production -- now memorialized
only by paintings or drawings -- were another manifestation of the extravagant
spirit of the times.
Frederick Hammond, a musicologist who teaches at Bard College, first conceived
the idea of a show about Roman Baroque palace life. He naturally began to
collaborate with Stefanie Walker, a specialist in Seventeenth and Eighteenth
Century European decorative arts, after she was hired to teach at the Bard
Center in late 1995.
Other distinguished contributors to the catalogue are Maria Giulia Barberini,
Thomas Dandelet, Edward J. Olszewski, Eduard A. Safarik and Patricia Waddy.
Among the essays covering fascinating topics of the period are Hammond's "The
Creation of a Roman Festival: Barberini Celebrations for Christina of Sweden"
and Olszewski's "Decorating The Palace: Cardinal Pietro Ottoboni (1667-1740)
in the Cancelleria."
Published for the Bard Graduate Center for Studies in the Decorative Arts by
Yale University Press, Life and the Arts in the Baroque Palaces of Rome:
Ambiente Barocco, edited by Stefanie Walker and Frederick Hammond, is a
companion publication to the exhibition, offering both important essays in the
field and a catalogue of the objects in the show. Softbound catalogues can be
purchased from the Center for $40; call 212/501-3000 for information. The
hardbound edition can be ordered for $70 from Yale University Press,
800/987-7323.
Stefanie Walker is particularly to be congratulated for her success in
securing loans for this exhibition from Italian museums, many of which were
previously unaware of the existence of the Bard Center. The Barberi harp, for
example, had never before left the dusty galleries of Rome's obscure Museo
Nazionale degli Strumenti Musicali, but Walker found an ally in Claudio
Strinati, Soprintendente dei Beni Artistici e Storici di Roma, who "was
extremely supportive and interested in this project and helped with a number
of loans," she said.
The presence in the show of other objects loaned by private collectors or
antiques dealers reminds the viewer that, however pricey, objects like these
are still bought and sold in the antiques marketplace.
After closing at the Bard Center on June 13, the exhibition travels to the
spacious marble halls of the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City for a
July 21-October 3 run. The Missouri museum is home to the notable Spencer
Collection of European Decorative Arts, which makes it a natural venue.
Says Walker, "Obviously they'll have more space, but the massing of objects
and images in our smaller area is not so antithetical to a Baroque setting."
In the final analysis, the artistic history of Rome in the Baroque period
demonstrates what happens when keeping up with the Joneses -- or the
Barberinis, in this case -- runs riot.