Date: Fri 04-Dec-1998
Date: Fri 04-Dec-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: CURT
Quick Words:
Gothic-Phillipsburg-Eagen
Full Text:
Gallant Gothic In The Philipsburg Manor Gallery
with cuts
By Kathleen Eagen Johnson
SLEEPY HOLLOW, N.Y. -- A tale of horror. Fancy lettering. A distinctive chair
design. A cavernous cathedral. The Gothic revels and is revealed in all of
these. Gothic tales concocted by Mary Shelley and Edgar Allan Poe terrify.
Designers evoke the Middle Ages, a golden era of book creation, when they use
elaborate gothic typeface. Within the realm of decorative arts, a morally
uplifting seat in the Gothic style sprouts spires and rockets.
Flying buttresses, ribbed vaults, and pointed arches are Gothic architectural
hallmarks. The Gothic need not be a single artifact; it can be a way of life.
Devotees of the 1990s goth movement dye their hair and clothes the deepest
black, devour The Vampire Chronicles of Anne Rice, and lose themselves in the
music of Souixsie and the Banshees and Marilyn Manson.
The Gothic Revival was a reinterpretation and, more often than notf a
roincentioa, oa the Middle Ages. The movement, which embodied an approach to
life as well as a style of art and architecture, peaked during the NiAeteenth
ContuWy. The overall tone of the Gothic Revival was wistful and sad; the
brightest and the darkest aspects of the revival were expressed during these
years. On the positive side, adherents yearned for a distant era marked by
godliaess, knightSy deaotihn, iravery in battle, holy quests and courtly love.
King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table epitomized the far nobler men
and women who populated this never-land.
The Gothic Revival style translated medieval elements, such as spires, lancet
arches, and window tracery, into commercial and domestic architecture,
interior design and furnishings. Many critics consider the Gothic Revival the
dominating force in American design during the middle decades of the
Nineteenth Century.
Approximately two dozen objects chosen from the collection of Historic Hudson
Valley are currently on display at the Philipsburg Manor Gallery. These Gothic
Revival art and decorative art objects -- including a paintiag of knightlw
mArder, WasN iron benches, a pickle bottle decorated with lancet arches and
the abode of a lapdog -- represent aspects of a style that manifested itself
during the Eighteenth, Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries.
Gothick Exoticism
Essentially born in England during the turn of the Eighteenth Century, Gothic,
or "Gothick," ornamentation was by no means a rigorous replication of medieval
prototypes, but rather a light, decorative application of an exotic style.
Used infrequently for furniture, interior design and garden pavilions, the
Gothick fell into the realm of the frivolous. One example of the Gothic in the
Hudson Valley is the icehouse that Washington Irving built at Sunnyside.
Another is the entrance hall at Montgomery Place, a Neoclassical style house
in which tapering cluster columns support a modified ribbed vault.
A set of six chairs in the collection of Van Cortlandt Manor is also a fitting
representation of the Eighteenth Century Gothick. Thomas P93.04 I15.56
Chippendale codified three tastes, or styles, in The Gentleman &
Cabinetmaker's Director, first published in 1754. Chippendale applied vaguely
Gothick ornament to then-modern forms; pierced backs resembling window tracery
were a favorite feature.
The popularity of Gothick taste, as evidenced through the fanciful engravings
of British castles and ruins and the original art and decorative art they
inspired, continued well into the Nineteenth Century. Such prints, distributed
widely throughout Europe and America, were considered picturesque and
artistic. They were copied on canvas and paper, wrought as silk on silk
needlework pictures, and served to inspire painted decoration on chair crest
rails and table tops.
Engraved images of ruined castles and abbeys enjoyed their greatest longevity
on transfer-printed ceramics. Throughout the first half of the Nineteenth
Century, English factories produced dozens of patterns featuring Gothick
landscapes drawn from the realm of dreams. In this fantastical world, even
boats are embellished with Gothick details.
Pampered Pet
An elaborate Gothick house for a pampered lap dog -- complete with
crenellation, pierced bargeboard and half turrets -- represents what was
called the "troubadour style" in France. It reflects the association of the
Gothick with incidental buildings such as garden pavilions. The style did not
take hold as strongly on the Continent as it did in Britain and the United
States.
Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832) fueled interest in medieval history and design
via literature, architecture and interior decoration. Scott offered Britons a
gloriously romantic past. His portrayal of the Middle Ages, full of color and
adventure, served as a source of historical and design inspiration.
Throughout the Nineteenth Century, designers -- including America's own
Washington Irving (1783-1859), Alexander Jackson Davis (1803-1896) and Andrew
Jackson Downing (1815-1852), the last two considered the fraternal twins of
the American Gothic design movement -- dipped into Scott's well again and
again. Scott and his inventions also provided a link between the fanciful,
decorative Gothick of the Eighteenth Century and the more historically
inspired and integrated revival of the next.
During the Nineteenth Century, the Gothic style grew from an exotic
counterpoint to a full-fledged, historically-based, unified style of
architecture and interior design. In England, Horace Walpole's monumental
creation, Strawberry Hill (1750-70), and William Beckford's Fonthill Abbey
(1796-c.1820), designed by James Wyatt, represented the first totally Gothic
domestic structures of size that incorporated accurate replication of medieval
designs.
A third genius whose writings and interior decoration would inspire Davis and
Downing was August W. N. Pugin (1812-1852). Driven by a revelation that the
Catholic church was "unerring" in its decisions and that the Gothic was "the
grand and sublime style," this convert became the leading promulgator and
codifier of Gothic Revival design.
Pugin urged architects and designers to look to actual medieval prototypes and
to apply Gothic ornament with care. The Gothic Revival as practiced and
codified by Pugin would serve as one significant building block in the
development of the style in the United States during the 1800s.
Literary Champions
Yet another writer and builder who bridged the transition between the
Eighteenth Century Gothick and the Nineteenth Century Gothic Revival was
Washington Irving. Born in New York, the son of an immigrant Scotsman, Irving
enjoyed early success as a writer with his book A History of New-York (1809).
Sir Walter Scott became Irving's literary champion; he promoted the young
writer's career and inspired the American's literary and personal aesthetics
and style.
Irving was captivated by the ancient British customs and architecture he had
witnessed while touring rural England, Wales, and Scotland during the
mid-1810s. He turned repeatedly to Britain's rich and deep past, as evidenced
by such works as The Sketch-Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Esq. (1819), Bracebridge
Hall (1822), Tales of a Traveler (1824), and Crayon Miscellany, Part II
(1835).
Irving's most memorable Gothic statement was made through architecture rather
than literature. In 1835, Irving purchased a farmhouse and land in Tarrytown,
20 miles north of Manhattan. With the help of a friend, George Harvey, Irving
created a country estate designed to give the effect of great age.
Sunnyside, Irving's first and last permanent home, became a hallmark of the
American Gothic Revival with its cluster columned chimneys, rib-vaulted
piazza, and stepped gables. Through paintings, prints, and publications, the
ultimate Gothic cottage was offered up as a model for American homeowners.
Davis sketched the cottage and Downing published the drawing in Treatise and
Practice of Landscape Gardening, Adapted to North America (1841).
Hudson Hierarchies
The Hudson Valley served as a cradle for the American Gothic Revival. The
early settlement pattern in the valley lent itself to reinterpretation through
the Gothic. During the colonial period, tenanted manors dominated the valley.
While this land ownership pattern was not feudal in the strictest sense, the
descendants of the landlords who had been granted manorial charters considered
themselves aristocrats and likened themselves to British gentry.
The peak of the style's popularity, the mid-Nineteenth Century, also coincided
with an era of personal redefinition for these landed families. As the
hierarchical political and social order of the Eighteenth Century broke down,
the old families sometimes bolstered their identity through the use of a
"lordly" visual vocabulary in their surroundings.
Well-to-do patrons called on architects and designers such as Davis and
Downing to help them realize the country estates of their dreams. Certainly
Alexander Jackson Davis's creation, the Knoll in Tarrytown, later and better
known as Lyndhurst, remains the ultimate statement of Gothic-Revival domestic
design in the United States. Downing lived and worked in the Hudson Valley.
Its proximity to New York, a conduit of European style and a center of wealth,
made the valley a natural stage and laboratory for Gothic design. The Hudson
River was "America's Rhine." How fitting that castles overlooked its shores!
Through his publications, Downing also advised families of lesser means what
modes of the Gothic were suitable for them. An environmental determinist,
Downing believed in the reformative nature of morally uplifting surroundings.
What style could be more inspirational than the Gothic? The middle-class house
type that he is credited with developing, the "Hudson River Bracketed,"
featured attributes associated with Gothic Revival design: peaked rooflines,
pierced bargeboards, arched windows, and revealed vertical construction.
The Gothic Revival in the United States reached its zenith during the
mid-Nineteenth Century. In Britain, however, it lived on as an essential part
of English arts and crafts. This movement of art and life developed as a
reaction to growing industrialism and associated social ills. The art critic
and art historian John Ruskin; the writer, designer and socialist William
Morris; and others held up the Middle Ages as a model for right living and
right design.
Craftspeople working in the United States occasionally displayed a debt of
gratitude to English arts and crafts design. But during the Twentieth Century,
the Gothic was primarily reserved for ecclesiastical and collegiate
architecture, although it occasionally made a surprise appearance on a
railroad station or a skyscraper.
Intense interest in the medieval lived on in the arena of book illustration.
The romance of the medieval history ⦠la Scott is captured in a series of
paintings commissioned for a history of the Delafield family. In 1929, John
Ross Delafield, the owner of Montgomery Place, hired Stanley Arthurs
(1877-1950) to paint a cycle. The series began with a scene of "Richard de la
ffelde" overseeing carpenters in France, 1203, and concluding with the arrival
of John Delafield in New York in 1784, an event that marked the start of the
family in the United States.
Arthurs had studied painting with Howard Pyle, whose illustrations for
Treasure Island are legendary. Arthurs, too, captured the thrill and dash of
history by choosing to portray climactic scenes; composing a dramatic,
asymmetrical overall design; and relying on a bold palette favoring vivid
blues and greens.
A well-known muralist and illustrator for nationally prominent magazines,
Arthurs was no stranger to the genre of historical paintings. About the same
time Arthurs was undertaking the Delafield series, he was also painting
another medieval subject, "Sir Lancelot is Overthrown," published as the
frontispiece in The Story of the Grail and the Passing of Arthur (1932).
Arthurs' paintings proved that the medieval could still excite even the most
jaded, modern American.
Gothic Redux
Over a period of centuries, the Gothic sparked waves of inspiration and
translation that are, at times, contradictory. In the Eighteenth Century, the
exotic and fanciful Gothick, largely limited to the realm of garden structures
and interior decoration, offered a light, and light-hearted, surface treatment
that seduced the viewer's thoughts away from the mundane.
A more serious, somber, and intense revival flourished during the Nineteenth
Century, due in large part to the writings and architecture of Sir Walter
Scott, Washington Irving, Augustus W. N. Pugin, Alexander Jackson Davis, and
Andrew Jackson Downing. This phase of the Gothic proved more complex and
enjoyed wider application.
Within the domestic arena, the Gothic was viewed as "chaste and quiet," a
family-oriented style that encouraged spirituality and devotion to learning.
Oddly enough, the Gothic's strong association with Roman Catholicism was
overlooked by the dominant Protestant culture in America. Likewise, the
pairing of innovative processes and materials with this ancient style was seen
as perfectly appropriate during the Nineteenth Century as was its association
with untamed nature.
At its darkest, Gothic shapes suggested terror and death. At the dawn of the
Twentieth Century, as the age of Modernism approached, the Gothic was used
more sparingly. The Gothic Revival's many guises took believers far from the
actual world of the Middle Ages. Theirs was a quest for an ever-evolving
ideal.
This essay is excerpted from Gallant Gothic by Kathleen Eagen Johnson. The
catalogue is for sale in the gift shops of Historic Hudson Valley for $4.95.
"Gallant Gothic: Selections from the Collection of Historic Hudson Valley"
remains on view in the Philipsburg Manor Gallery, Route 9 in Sleepy Hollow,
through December 31. Telephone 914/631-8200.