Another Scottish artist, who belongs
to a period about a quarter of a century later, is better known to
fame—Gavin Hamilton. When he came to manhood he went abroad, and lived
almost entirely in Italy, where he held his state like one of the great
old masters, and Scotland saw no more of him save when he appeared on an
occasional visit, prompted by a lingering desire to settle in his native
county, Lanark—.a design always protracted by the coldness of the climate,
or some other uncongeniality, when it came to a practical issue. He was a
very learned and industrious worker in what may now be termed the
aesthetic department of archaeology, and the services performed by him for
the Italian collections of antiques are to be found recorded in all the
proper authorities.
He executed some stately portraits,
one of which, representing the Duchess of Hamilton with a greyhound, is
pretty well known in an engraving once very popular. Hamilton saturated
himself with classicality. He aimed high, and, in his day had a reputation
somewhat akin to that subsequently enjoyed by the French David. Efforts so
rigidly conventional in this direction are not popular at present, yet the
system has had its great advocates; and no one can deny that Hamilton,
whether he rightly or wrongly understood the mission of the artist, did
his work nobly, and carried the palm of a victor. Look at his "Andromache
weeping over the Body of Hector." There she is in full attitude, like
Clairon in one of her most felicitous classical inspirations, while
Dumesnil might have personified the decorously solicitous attendant. The
whole group is, in short, intensely theatrical, or, if one may make a word
more suitable to the purpose, attitudinary; yet it exhibits a profusion of
energy and conventional skill which must commend it as a great work to the
devotees of that style of art.
Another picture by Hamilton excited
a melancholy interest in its day. It represented Achilles dragging the
body of Hector round the walls of Troy. It was purchased by the Duke of
Bedford. The tragic fate of the young heir of that house became some time
afterwards the talk of all England, and the object of many a sympathising
echo to the grief of the bereaved parents, not unaccompanied by apposite
reflections on the incapacity of temporal greatness and wealth to save us
from the common lot. The youth fell from his horse, and was dragged by the
stirrup till death relieved him from torture. The canvass, full of energy
and terrible action, so vividly recalled the character of the calamity
that it was ejected from the collection of the ducal house, and fell, if I
mistake not, into the hands of General Scott, the father-in-law of
Canning.
If it were desirable to fill the
present rapid sketch with all available names, it would be easy to bring
forward many secondary Scottish artists who studied and worked on the
Continent; such, for instance, as Thomas Murray, whose portrait is in the
Florentine Gallery, and William Ferguson, a painter of still life, who
seems to have lived so much of his life in Italy that scarcely anything is
known of him in his own country but the general reputation of his
paintings for vigour and natural truth. Leaving the completion of such
inquiries to all who are patriotic enough for the task, I profess only to
touch—and that fugitively—the names that hold a conspicuous place in the
general history of art; and so let us pass to a name which has acquired a
renown amply deserved.—that of Allan Ramsay.
Every one, of course, is acquainted
with the fame of his father, the author of the ‘Gentle Shepherd.’ It was
one quite alien from the purpose of these papers, for he was eminently a
Scot at home—his birthplace in the Lanarkshire hills, and his house on the
Castlehill of Edinburgh, forming the limits of his migrations. He
confesses to an early propensity for art; and in some of his manuscripts
which I have seen, there are impatient dabbings of grotesque heads and
angular fragments of rock and tree scenery, dashed off to occupy the pen
while the brain was elaborating the poetic thought. About the year 1736
the poet writes to a friend that young Allan (he was born in 1713) had
been sedulously pursuing art since he was thirteen years old; "has since
been painting here like a Raphael," and "sets out to the seat of the Beast
beyond the Alps within a month hence - to be away two years." "I am sweer,"
continues the father, "to part with him, but cannot stem the current which
flows from the advice of his patrons and his own inclination."
On this his first visit to Rome he
remained for three years, and on his return home he painted a well-known
portrait of his father, and others of his relations and near friends. Very
much to the poet’s satisfaction, the artist showed a decided disposition
to re-establish the gentility of the family; for old Allan, much as he had
been tossed about in the world, and hard as was his struggle for decent
subsistence, never forgot that he was come of the Ramsays of Dalwolsey and
the Douglases of Muthill. His position—speaking of him as a tradesman, not
as a poet—was common to members of the best Scottish families in his age.
The country was not rich enough to afford two classes of traders—the
larger, who, as extensive dealers, might be counted gentlemen by
profession; the smaller, who were mere retailers. All trade was looked
askance on; but when it was necessary to find a living by commerce, we see
the best families at once accepting the humblest position in its ranks.
Old Allan united in his person three
rather incongruous social conditions. He was by descent a country
gentleman; by personal qualification a man of genius; by profession the
keeper of a bookstall and circulating library. In his old age, when he had
conquered his difficulties, and was gathering in a harvest of wealth and
fame, it was not without satisfaction that he saw his son—although
following a pursuit which, like his own, sometimes led its votaries into
an erratic carreer—holding his head high in the social circle, and likely
to keep up the old gentility of his race.
The young artist greatly
strengthened his position by his marriage with the heiress of the Lindsays
of Eyvelic, whose domain, perched on the ridge of the line of hills
running from Perth eastward, overlooks the rich Carse of Gowrie, and the
river Tay widening into the sea. Of his wife he painted a portrait, of
which it may safely be said that no other, painted in the same
half-century in Britain, can have excelled it for artistic truth of
drawing and sweetness of sentiment. It represents a fair-haired bright -
cheeked Scottish damsel, simply dressed, and with an expression full of
earnestness and innocence, carrying a basket of flowers. The attitude and
the general tone are quite natural, and borrowed from none of the standard
portraits, which relieved secondary artists from the labour of thinking
and the responsibility of novelty. It perhaps enhances the pleasantness of
this picture that it is still fresh as if it had been painted yesterday,
and has suffered none of the cadaverous ravages with which Reynolds’s
unfortunate method of preparing his colours has afflicted his beauties. It
may be a farther reason why it is so pleasant to look upon, that the
artist, while exerting all his skill, was at his ease, and did not
require. to give his sitter either a state dress or a state attitude.
Too much state is undoubtedly the
defect, in a wide sense, of Allan Ramsay’s painting. The success with
which he brought out Lord Bute’s immaculate legs beneath the canopy of his
rich Treasury robes, has been the object of much half-sarcastic laudation.
But if it be a defect in an artist to succumb to conventionalities, and
give prominence to robes and decorations at the sacrifice of the
individual character, yet painting of this kind admits of being well done
and ill done. In the common run of such state pictures the robes and
decorations are the fabric on which a human face—or something as like a
human face as the artist could create—is plastered. But with Ramsay, Lord
Bute, in all his glory, is still Lord Bute, from his powdered hair through
the easy bend of his body and the renowned calves of his legs to the toes.
And so of all Ramsay’s paintings; they may generally have too much silk
and velvet, and too much attitude—but they are pieces of thorough art.
Before returning to Rome, about the
year 1754, he had socially allied himself, not only with many men of rank,
but with a far higher circle in the permanent estimate of such matters—the
leaders of the intellect of the age. He left behind him a literary
association, which he had founded in Edinburgh, caged the "Select
Society." All inquirers into the history of British literature at that
period must be familiar with its influence over at least the Scottish
department—not a small one. David Hume is found writing to his friend
Allan of the progress and prospects of the little flock left behind him in
the wilderness: "It has grown to be a national concert Young and old,
noble and ignoble, witty and dull, laity and clergy—all the world are
ambitious of a place amongst us, and on each occasion we are as much
solicited by candidates as if we were to choose a member of Parliament."
Then of individualities, "Our friend young Wedderburn has acquired a great
character by the appearance he has made." This refers to him who became
Lord Loughborough. "Wilkie the minister has turned up from obscurity, and
become a very fashionable man, as he is indeed a very singular one.
Monboddo’s oddities divert—Sir David’s [Lord Hailes] zeal entertains—Jack
Dalrymple’s rhetoric interests. The long drawling speakers have found out
their want of talents, and rise seldomer. In short, the House of Commons
was less the object of general curiosity at London than the Select Society
at Edinburgh. ‘The Robinhood,’ ‘The Devil,’ and all other speaking
societies, are ignoble in comparison. Such felicity has attended the seed
which you planted. But what chiefly renders us considerable is a project
of engrafting on the society a scheme for the encouragement of arts and
sciences and manufactures in Scotland, by premiums partly honorary, partly
lucrative. A box is opened for donations, and about one hundred guineas
have been given in. We hear of considerable sums intended by Lord Hopetoun,
Morton, Marchmont, &c., who desire to be members. Nine managers have been
chosen; and to keep the business distinct from our reasoning, the first
Monday of every month is set apart for these transactions, and they are
never to be mentioned in our Wednesday meetings. Advertisements have been
published to inform the public of our intentions. A premium, I remember,
is promised to the best discourse on Taste, and on the Principles of
Vegetation. These regard the belles
lettres and the
sciences; but we have not neglected porter, strong ale, and wrought
ruffles, even down to linen rags."
Then follows a good-natured word on
the collection of Essays published by Ramsay, which carried a considerable
reputation in their day: "Your ‘Investigator’ has been published this
spring, and I find that it has met with a very good reception from the
wits and the critics. In vain did I oppose myself and assert it was not
just metaphysics. They did nothing but laugh at me, and told me it was
very entertaining, and seemed very reasonable."
The artist, writing back from the
Mons Viminalis,
showed that he could hold his own against the great
author, even with the pen. "Can a man, O philosopher, be both sorry and
glad at the same time? If the thing is possible, I am in these
circumstances; for I am glad to hear that there is any society of men
amongst you, who give a particular attention to the improvement of the
arts of luxury, so conducive to the riches, the strength, and liberty of
our dear country; but I am afraid, at the same time, that this scheme, by
bringing in a new set of members of another species, will destroy that
which we had set on foot; and I could have wished that some other way had
been fallen upon by which porter might have been made thick, brick thin,
and the nation rich, without our understanding being at all the poorer for
it. Is not truth more than meat, and wisdom than raiment? . . . . Have
your rewards produced an essay on Taste? If they have, and it is printed,
I should be glad to see it. Millar would send it to me, some way or other,
if you desire him. I am satisfied with my own dialogue, though I find I
shall make but few proselytes. It has always been my hard fate in these
matters to pass for a very comical dog when I meant to get the fame of a
deep philosopher; but I am comforted again when I consider that the same
has been the lot of my favourite Lucian; and that to write like a deep
philosopher, we must write like Turnbull or Plato."
This letter gives shape to a
practical joke which must have cost Ramsay an enormous deal of labour. It
is embodied in a long fabricated Greek inscription, professing to afford
evidence in refutation of Hume’s scepticism, "which," says its author, "I
found, while I was looking for bas-reliefs, in a lumber-room of the Palace
Farnese." He conveys the result of his observation on the three popular
horrors of the day in these terms: "The Pope himself is short and fat, the
Pretender is long and lean, which is all I am able to inform you with
regard to either. As to the Devil, I have not yet seen him, and am too
diffident of reports, especially when they concern heads of parties, to
send you any description of his person by hearsay." That Ramsay was a
pretty genial representative of the philosopher in "the seat of the
Beast," may be inferred from the manner in which Hume communicates to him
his own embroilments with the ecclesiastical authorities. He begins by
telling about Kames, against whom the General Assembly were undoubtedly
urged strongly by a party in the Church to proceed. "They will not," he
says, "at once go to extremities with him, and deliver him over to Satan,
without any preparation or precaution. They intend to make him be prayed
for in all the churches of Scotland during six months, after which, if he
do not give signs of repentance, he is to be held as
anathema maranatha." And
then he takes a complacent view of his own prospects: "Meanwhile I am
preparing for the day of wrath, and have already bespoken a number of
discreet families, who have promised to admit me after I shall be
excommunicated."
And again: "You may tell that
reverend gentleman the Pope that there are many here who rail at him, and
yet would be much greater prosecutors had they equal power. The last
Assembly sat on me. They did not propose to burn me, because they cannot.
But they intend to give me over to Satan, which they think they have the
power of doing. My friends, however, prevailed, and my damnation is
postponed for a twelve month. But next Assembly will surely be upon me.
Anderson—the godly, spiteful, pious, splenetic, charitable, unrelenting,
meek, persecuting, Christian, inhuman, peace-making, furious Anderson—is
at present very hot in pursuit of Lord Kames. He has lately wrote a letter
to his son, which they say is a curiosity. He mentions his own great age,
which leaves him no hopes of being able long to survive the condemnation
of that atheistical, however just judge. He therefore leaves me as a
legacy to his son, and conjures him, as he expects his blessing, or the
blessing of Heaven, never to cease his pursuit of me till he bring me to
condign punishment. Is not this somewhat like Hamilcar, who swore Hannibal
on the altar to be an eternal enemy to the Roman people?" These were the
characteristic home-memorials which broke in on the dreamy luxuriousness
of an artist-life in Rome; recalling the memories of that healthy warfare
of the mind, which, in the city of the Republic, the Caesars, and the
Vatican, had long been dead and buried.
Ramsay’s mantle fell on one of his
countrymen who studied under him at Rome—David Martin. There is a good
deal of his master’s touch in his portraits, and the same affection for
velvet and state finery. A portrait-painter takes rank in a great measure
by the importance of his sitters. Martin has thus possession of two of the
most remarkable statesmen of his day. The one was a great lawyer— perhaps
the greatest Britain ever saw—Lord Mansfield. There he is spread before
you in bland breadth, the warm glow of red velvet toning his ruddy, good
humoured, powerful face. One may see in it something of the epicureanism
which made him decline to wrinkle it with the cares of the woolsack. Like
Ramsay’s Lord Bute, this portrait goes somewhat to legs, but then they are
also well-drawn and well-set legs. The painting has the specialty that its
artist made the best engraving we have of it. The other eminent statesman
painted by Martin was a man at the opposite extreme of eminence—Benjamin
Franklin. This portrait is known to the world by a dark mezzotint, and is
reputed to be the best likeness of Franklin. Martin painted David Hume and
Rousseau, too. He could not have had access to "the self-torturing
sophist" except through the fat philosopher; and it is odd that among the
charges made by Rousseau against Hume, that of being compelled or
fraudulently induced to sit for his portrait is not included. Martin
preserved the likeness of another man who left the chief evidence of his
talents to posterity—Dr Carlyle. His autobiography, recently published,
was accompanied with an engraving of this fine portrait, which one can
easily believe to have meted out full justice to the reverend dignity and
beauty for which Carlyle was famed.
Such are a few stray notices of the
artists whom Scotland sent forth, most of them before England could point
to her great Reynolds. They were not sufficiently strong in their home
influence to found a school. The artistic character which they conferred
on their country was fed, as it were, from hand to mouth by foreign
supplies. Each stood alone on his merits, such as they were; but it may be
safely attributed to the genial influence of that connection with foreign
countries which the enterprise of Scottish warriors and scholars had
created, that down to the middle of the last century we could boast of an
array of artists such as England, with all her numerical superiority of
population, her riches, and her pecuniary patronage of art, could not
match. For Jamesone, Aikman, Hamilton, and Ramsay, she can show only such
names as Dobson, Thornhill, and Hudson; and that after her affluence had
set before her artists the examples of Holbein, Rubens, Vandyk, Lely,
Kneller, and a host of painters second to these eminences. Of Jamesone,
our old friend Allan Cunningham says, in his ‘Lives of British Painters;
"That he stands at the head of the British school of portrait-painting
there can be no question; nor had England an artist of her own worthy of
being named above him, in his own walk, before the days of Reynolds."
Here it comes to one’s remembrance
that Hogarth also was an occasional portrait-painter, and that he was
anterior to Reynolds. And without disputing the merits of his portraits,
or detracting from the rank of his transcendent genius, I yet hold that
the lofty isolation and entire solitude of his position in the world of
art, is in itself a curious record of the reserved ungeniality which
prevented England from imbibing any artistic spirit or practice out of the
opportunities afforded by the presence of great foreign artists and the
purchase of great paintings. It is common indeed to deny that Hogarth was,
properly speaking, an artist. It is impossible to wish him to have been an
artist, in the conventional sense, if his being so must have deprived the
world of those wonderful tragedies and comedies which he has performed for
us on paper. But his genius had all the rugged individuality that
characterises a single creative mind arising in the midst of surrounding
intellectual barrenness. And he became himself, through the power of his
self-achieved position, the trumpet of the vulgar English prejudice
against high art. He could not endure anything foreign. All Frenchmen he
held in such hatred, that in his short sojourn among them he could not
restrain ebullitions which, towards a less polite people, might have been
dangerous. He embodied his contempt of high art in those hideous nightmare
groups which he thought would demonstrate how easily he could excel
Michael Angelo, Correggio, or Rembrandt, if he condescended to abandon
London life and adopt their conventionalities. Hogarth was perhaps as far
above William Aikman as Burns was beyond Darwin or Glover; yet the
Scottish painter’s career was a type of national conditions more conducive
to the cultivation of art, in that catholic spirit which goes through the
whole world to discover whatever is best and greatest in the achievements
of those who have gone before.
Down to Ramsay’s epoch, our Scottish
painters had been persons of family and station. It shows perhaps the
germinating of something like a national school, when we find men of
obscure condition struggling into the ranks of fame. Jacob More was a
house-painter’s apprentice in Edinburgh. Through the aid of some
enlightened patrons he went to Italy, and there remained, unknown among
his countrymen save by the general European celebrity of his landscapes.
In other instances, the descent of artistic ambition to a humbler grade
was accompanied by the dawning of a national spirit in the objects of the
artist. David Allan, though he studied in Italy, had the boldness to
devote his genius to the illustration of Scottish life, and painted such
scenes as would have made the classic Hamilton shudder. But far above
Allan—high indeed in the great republic of genius—was the ill-starred
Runciman. He was one of those who had not the good fortune, or the skill,
as it may be, to make their light shine before men; and it is in obscure
corners that people stumble on his best works, wondering whence came the
deep artistic power, and the noble simplicity, of pictures so unknown to
fame. I have seen portraits of his own esteemed friends—of some of those,
for instance, who made his student circle at Rome— which I question if
even Raeburn—who took his tone from Runciman, and is generally reputed to
have greatly improved on it—could have excelled in truth and dignified
simplicity.
Let us now step over to another
department of art—one lower than painting, in general estimation, and
ancillary to it, yet which it was the function of one of our countrymen to
elevate to a rank very little under that of the higher walks of design.
Sir Robert Strange’s engravings look like the works of a man who could do
everything that the human hand, aided by the head, is capable of
achieving. There is not an effect in the whole range of painting which he
has not shown his capacity to shadow forth with his magic graver.
Beginning with the restless cheerful sky, and the energetic white horse of
Wouvermans’ Market-Cart, he advances with immediate perfection to the
rugged grandeur of Salvator’s Belisarius, the soft smooth fleshes of Guido
Reni, and the heavenly countenances of the Corregios. There is surely no
sweeter production that can be looked upon in uncoloured art than the
Parce somnum rumpere, whether we prefer to rest the eye on the health
and innocence radiating from the babe, or the absorbing love of the
graceful mother or on the tender beaming excitement of the beautiful
onlooker. From these features, which at-rest even the uninitiated eye, the
adept will turn to the perfection of detail in the drapery, and the
gossamer lightness of the veil which the mother gently removes. Nor less
perfect is he in representing the stately dignity of Vandyks Charles I.,
and the pleasant mixture of childish simplicity and princely consciousness
in the royal children with their dogs. There are few things more
calculated to awaken a train of pensive reflection than to find hanging,
perhaps in some quiet bedroom in a remote country-house, the portraits of
the stately monarch and the unconscious group of children, with their
silky-haired spaniels, when one contemplates them with time and
inclination to recall the tragic and eventful history through which they
all passed.
There never was a nobler and more
unselfish devotion to art than Strange’s adoption of his great object in
life. With genius enough to have achieved a separate reputation as a
creative artist, he resolved to devote his rare powers to the promulgation
of the beautiful forms which others had created, rather than attempt to
add to their number. He knew that aloft in the domes of great cathedrals,
or remote in private mansions, or in the exclusive recesses of palaces,
were those wondrous productions of the great masters which hitherto had
received but unworthy interpreters to the world, or none at all; and he
resolved that his mission through life should be so to devote those powers
which he knew he was endowed with, as to become the great teacher of art,
as it were, among the nations, by promulgating abroad its unknown
treasures.
The difficulties he had to undergo
show, when compared with the life of the ordinary engrave; who copies what
he is employed to copy, and does it as accurately as his opportunities
permit, how arduous is the task of the engraver who sets before himself a
higher object—who is bent on copying certain pictures, because they are
the best and none others will satisfy him, and who must have a full
opportunity of rendering all their characteristics on his plate ere he
ventures to interpret them to the public. In one instance, perhaps, there
are political or ecclesiastical difficulties in the way. Certain cardinals
and bishops have to be consulted ere access can be obtained to the
picture. There perhaps is a high altar-piece: to remove it would be
sacrilege, were it practicable, which it often is not; and raising a
scaffolding before it, which was not unfrequently Strange’s proposal, was
something nearly as offensive. Less truthful engravers would have been
content with such flying opportunities as they could catch, hoping that no
others would be enabled, by a closer inspection of the original, to detect
their slovenly workmanship. But Strange set out with a resolution to copy
the best pictures in the world, and to copy them faithfully; and his
resolute perseverance was rewarded with marvellous success.
It is fortunate for the memory of
Strange, and for those who love to dwell on such a history as his, that it
has been recorded by one whose naturally fastidious and highly-cultivated
taste made him a worshipper at the same shrine of high Italian art. Though
the work fell to his hands nearly a century after it should have been
performed by others, James Dennistoun, with a zealous devotion which the
fatal progress of disease could not quench, collected the fragments of the
artist’s history—scattered as they were, minute and scarcely perceptible,
all over Europe—and massed them together in a book, which, if it do not
afford an exciting narrative to the cornmon reader, must be full of
interest to. the collector and the critic of art.
The artist, casually referring in a
letter to the impulse under which he devoted himself, says: "Since the
time of the memorable revival of the arts in the fifteenth century, Italy,
without doubt, is the country which has produced the most celebrated
painters. There are none who have penetrated so deep as they into the
secret of this art, or reached to such a height in the sublime. A purity
and correctness of design, the most noble expressions, elegant forms, just
proportions, elevated ideas, and a fertility of genius, give a superiority
to their productions which no other artist would have been able to attain.
It is only by studying and meditating upon the works of the Italian
masters that we can reasonably expect to form a true taste, and to defend
ourselves against the destructive and capricious sorcery of fashion, which
changes almost with the seasons, and of which the most applauded and
finest efforts in the space of a few years generally appear to be, what
they really are, unnatural and ridiculous."
How very true is this reference to
"the capricious sorcery of fashion!" How imperfectly have mental
philosophers yet expounded that specialty in the human intellect that
carries it off in aesthetic epidemic, to hold that the prevailing fashion,
and nothing else, is graceful or beautiful, and to feel that when a change
has come, nothing can be more hideous and odious than the prevailing
fashion last deserted! Perhaps this, like all other indications of
barbarism, is getting chastened down as the world grows older. Certainly
the multiplication through the world of the forms destined to everlasting
homage for their grace and beauty was likely to be a counteracting
balance-wheel to such oscillations.
And in this the world’s debt of
gratitude to Strange is very great Few men can possess the paintings of
the great masters. Their possession is indeed not always a privilege to be
envied, since, if honour-ably and kindly used, it must admit of
participation by others. It is, perhaps, hard that because a man is
wealthy and can buy great pictures he should become a showman; yet
concealing them from the sight of those worthy of beholding them is
something like a crime. Humbler devotees of art, collecting scraps of
paintings, enjoy the notion that though not great works there is here a
special artistic touch, and there a happy combination of colours,
that, after frequent study, in the
end endear to them the possession. So in paintings. But in engravings
there is no excuse for decorating the wall with anything that does not
repeat the forms adjusted by the great masters. Believing in the education
of the eye by training it to beauty, I cannot but also believe that the
being habitually surrounded by such forms gives a capacity for finding and
enjoying beauty, to the eyes of children, and when, in maturity, they see
the great paintings themselves, the engraved copies at home recall all the
relish of the sight. Since, then, Strange seems to have rendered these
great works as fully as an inspiration can be rendered, I have often
thought that it would be a wholesome arrangement that places frequented by
young people should be decorated by the best Stranges, and perhaps a few
other engravings of like eminence, such as Morghens’s of the smaller
Raphael Madonna, or Muller’s of the larger. They would be all the better a
safeguard to the eyes of the young, that at present there exists a school
which, determining to pit the ideal ugly against the ideal beautiful, has
worked for the degradation of the popular taste with an amount of zealous
energy, and also of success, which are, taken together, among the wonders
of the age.
To come to Strange’s personal
history: he was descended of a somewhat worshipful family in Orkney, his
father leaving some landed property and sheep, with "twelve double-silver
spoons," "a knock [clock] and case thereof," and a wainscot cabinet. His
mother’s name was Scollay, and the paternal name was originally the
Norwegian Strang or Strong. The artist, disliking its northern harshness,
softened it by the addition of an e, and thus carried it into a
totally different line of etymological descent—the French étrange.
There is a traditional story—I remember being told it by Dr Chalmers—that
soon after the metamorphosis he happened to meet a traveller, who, hearing
his name, said, "Ah, sir, you call yourself Strange, but the
strangest part of it is that your name is only the letter e." The
artist’s guilty conscience smote him with the idea that the traveller
intended to be sarcastic on his addition to the patronymic; but he was
only an etymological enthusiast, who derived the word, very inaccurately,
by increment from the Latin preposition e. Thus e, ex, extra,
extraneous, whence comes the French
étrange.
With a sort of instinct that he was
some day or other to be great, he began at an early period an account of
his own progress. It dropped, suddenly interrupted by the labours of a
busy life; and the artist-like clearness of his account of whatever passed
around him in his early humble phase of life, makes the reader regret that
it is so brief. He underwent some training in one of the humbler
departments of the law, but apparently with a hopeless restlessness; and
the bent of his genius drove him to an engraver of the name of Cooper,
whose apparently wealthy circumstances show how considerable a field was
then open in Edinburgh to one of that profession who was little above a
trading mechanic. The young artist joined the insurgents of
1745—fortunately for himself and art, not so effectually distinguishing
himself by his warlike prowess as to encounter the vengeance of the
victors.
His chief service to the cause was
characteristic. At the camp at Inverness, and just before the battle of
Culloden, he engraved at the Prince’s desire a plate for bank-notes,
payable at the Restoration. The excellence of the engraving, however,
could not make up for the want of assets; and doubtless, if one of the
notes thrown off could now be recovered, it would bring far more as a
relic of art than its original value in the money market. Making his
escape, like many others, from the broken army through terrible hardships,
he reached France, and studied engraving with Le Bas. It would have been
difficult to find a better master. His clearness and quiet sweetness make
him still a favourite, whether the collector prefers his fresh sunny
seaports with their lazy life, or the warm interiors, where the solemn
Dutch alchemist blows his bellows, and imparts wisdom to his pupils.
But as Strange acquired technical
skill in secondary work, higher aspirations dawned on him, and a visit to
Italy confirmed him in the great project of his life. With the devotion of
the monk or the crusader in the pursuit of his mission, he made sacrifices
to his pursuit, some of them trivial, others deep and real. His adherence
to the Jacobite cause has been attributed with considerable foundation to
his love for Miss Lumisden, the sister of the accomplished secretary of
the exiled court in Italy. She was one of the arbitrary and enthusiastic
Jacobite beauties who would tolerate no lover unless he first proved
himself a true knight by wearing the white rose. Strange obtained his
reward, and they were married; but art stepped in to claim her votary, and
years after years of absence from her husband, all-absorbed in the pursuit
of his mission, joined to the protracted hopelessness of her darling
cause, turned her enthusiasm into acidity.
Her growing fretfulness and ardent
Jacobitism to the end make the letters and conversation of this strong-charactered
woman very amusing. When it came to her ear that her brother, after a
quarter of a century of endurance, must at last leave the Prince’s
service, and the announcement came along with rumours not complimentary to
the habits and conduct into which the object of her devoted loyalty had
fallen, she cannot show the letter to her husband, so filled is it with
matter of overwhelming grief. "If ever," she says, "anything in prejudice
of my darling’s [the Prince’s] character is suggested, I deny it, or find
an excuse for it. Oh, he has had much to disturb his brains! I am
perfectly satisfied, my dearest Andrew, that you have not failed in your
duty, for which I thank God. Believe me, I would sooner wish to hear of
your death than blush for anything you ever did in your life. Suffer I
can, but sin I will not. Honest principles were the noble legacy our dear
parents left us; while we live we will display them when called on to do
so. All I beg is secrecy. Four-and-twenty years’ faithful service cannot
be rewarded with a frown—no, you must be mistaken. If you are not, at
least be advised. ‘Tell it not in Gath, publish it not in the streets of
Askelon; lest the uncircumcised rejoice, and the daughters of the
Philistines be glad ‘—this was our good grandfathers text for many years
on the 30th of January."
And on another occasion: "If my
twenty years’ old acquaintance [the Prince] is now at your house, on your
knees present my most respectful duty, nor blush to think a lady bid you
do so. Oh, had I been of a more useful sex! Had my pen been a sword, I had
not been here, sitting tamely by my fireside, desiring you to do me a
simple office like this. In those years, so many and so long, I have not
been altogether idle, for I have made three fine boys, who, I hope, will
do me credit: they’ll be recruits when I am gone—I hope they’ll all have
Roman spirits in them. I’ll instruct them that their lives are not their
own when Rome demands them." Afterwards sending one of these young Gracchi
to Paris, she insists that he is not to wear ruffles, silk, or lace, or
any other ornament, however imperiously dictated by fashion: she will give
her reasons when she sees her brother—they are doubtless founded on the
calamitous condition of her favourite court, and not to be casually
committed to writing even in the year 1770; and she characteristically
winds up her injunction, "If he appears awkward, say he does so by the
positive command of his worthy old mother, who never did or said anything
but what she had a good reason for—therefore you comply without asking a
single question."
A common tradition attributes the
commencement of Strange’s prosperity to the courtly dexterity of his wife.
A rumour of the excellence of his engraved portrait of "the Prince" had,
according to the tradition, reached the palace, and some royal relation
called at Strange’s workshop desirous to see it. Mrs Strange, who was
there alone, knowing that the portrait by her husband was of the wrong
Prince, took care that amid the other works with which she entertained the
visitor it should not be found, and fixed a time for a second visit,
before which she got her obedient husband to have in tolerable progress an
engraving of the right Prince.
It is very clear that Mrs Strange,
or "Bella," as she was called, was not a person to perform such a feat. It
was known, indeed, to those conversant with the artistic gossip of the
time, that Strange had received proffers from the royal family very early
in his career, and that he had repelled them with a surly abruptness,
which was supposed too clearly to indicate the motives of "the
brother-in-law of the Pretender’s secretary." The documents published by
Mr Dennistoun make this affair very clear. A proffer had been made to him
by Allan Ramsay to engrave his own portrait of the Prince of Wales, just
before he became George IlI. But Strange was then full of his great
Italian projects. His allegiance was for his own chosen sovereign, high
art, and he cared for neither of their houses.
But it was not necessary to go into
large questions—there was a sublunary and immediate shape assumed by the
offer. The payment was to be £100, and Strange, saying that to do justice
to the subject would occupy him fifteen months, said he could not afford
to engrave the picture at the price offered. Other people would, of
course, naturally look to the consequent patronage of the Court as the
ultimate bribe to such an undertaking. But Strange had built his ultimate
hopes elsewhere—the only question about the offer was whether the
immediate remuneration might bribe him to postpone for a time his nobler
studies. It would not; and so the matter ended. But public fame naturally
rumoured disaffection as his motive, and the consequences of this, coupled
with his exclusion from the Royal Academy as an engraver, excited bitter
feelings. He wrote a fierce letter to Ramsay, saying, "Did I ever directly
or indirectly, hint that it was from the least disaffection I declined at
that time to engrave the picture you had painted? Speak the truth, and the
whole truth, so help you God." Ramsay, thus pressed, answered very bluntly
that there had been no hint whatever of disaffection, "the reasons you
gave me were all of the money-getting kind." There was something in an
expression of this sort not calculated entirely to secure the friendship
of a man actuated by such motives and aims as those which governed
Strange, and the apparent conclusion of the whole history was not likely
to cool the ardour of Bella’s Jacobitism. She continued to pray for an
heir to the exiled house, after the greater portion of her most zealous
allies were comforting themselves that the improbability of such an event
was a fortunate conclusion of all difficulties. Yet this mother of the
Gracchi stands as an illustration of that sarcastic philosophy which says
that all have their price if one knew the coin to pay it in. She was ready
for all forms of martyrdom, and direct bribery of any kind she would have
thrown back with scorn. But when one clay rather unexpectedly she found
that Bobbie was knighted, and that she was Lady Strange, all reminiscences
from across the water seem to have been swept away in a gush of gratitude.
Let us have a few words before
parting on a department of art proverbial for leaving the artist
forgotten, while his work remains to create wonder and admiration. The
world is filled with buildings of which the architects are unknown, but
which yet are found by the careful student to contain enough to show the
character of their acquirements, and sometimes the school in which they
must have studied. I have already had to show how, after the rupture with
England, Scotland took her ecclesiastical and baronial architecture from
the Continent, and chiefly from France. The process by which the rich
turreted chateaus of France were transferred to the moorlands of the north
and the braes of the Grampians could not fail to be extremely interesting
if we could remove from it the veil which shrouds it in the mystery common
to so large a portion of the architectural history even of civilised
times. How much of it was brought over by foreigners? How much learned in
France by Scotsmen who returned to practise at home?—are questions that
must be asked in vain. We have no clue to the studies which induced Aytoun,
by decorating the bulky framework of a German palace with a beautiful
coronet of turrets and decorated chimneys, to conceive the plan of
Heriot’s Hospital. Even so late as the time of Sir William Bruce, who
worked into the last century, we are not aware how far his conversion of
Holyrood into a French chateau of the sixteenth century was founded on a
practical acquaintance acquired in the land of its origin with that style
of building. And yet he was a person of worshipful condition, whose lands
and inheritances are set forth in genealogical books. We know, however,
too much of the poverty of the country at the time of the reconstruction
of the palace in 1674. From the accounts still preserved, every kind of
work above that which supplied the sordid needs of a poor people had to be
brought from other lands. In far later times we know that Robert Adam,
also a man of considerable territorial position, studied the architectural
remains of the Roman empire with a devoted zeal, attested by his great
work on the ruins of Diocletian’s mighty palace at Spalatro.
But there was a Scotsman before the
period of Robert Adam, whose pilgrimage among classical remains produced
results not to be so briefly passed by. James Gibbs was born in Aberdeen
about the year 1674. He was the son of a substantial tradesman, and
finding himself at twenty without parents, and possessed of some money and
a good useful Scottish education, he made up his mind to qualify himself
as an architect. He went first to Holland, where, save the State House of
Amsterdam, he can have found little adapted to his peculiar taste; but
what he did consider worth studying, he examined laboriously and
practically. By mere accident he was found there by the Earl of Mar, who
felt an interest in the .quiet persevering youth who had come forth from
his own peculiar district in the north to push through the world. Whatever
were the Earl’s defects of character, he is generally admitted to have had
fine taste. Whether for assistance received at that time, or for
subsequent patronage in his profession, Gibbs was so grateful to Mar,
that, when he had realised fame and fortune, and the family of his patron
were precarious exiles, he bequeathed a considerable fortune to his
benefactor’s son.
After the commencement of the
century he spent ten years in Italy, studying, searching, and treasuring
up the practical results of his labours for future use. He returned at a
favourable juncture. The great church-extension scheme for London had
developed itself in an arrangement for building fifty new churches, and
his friend Mar being in power, the young architect had an excellent
opportunity of bringing forward his claims, and obtained a considerable
share in the execution of the undertaking. Gibbs accomplished a sufficient
number of works to make an era for himself in English architecture, and
his name came so readily upwards, that poor Savage, in his wild forgotten
poem of ‘The Wanderer,’ naturally calls on it. When he passes from the
ancient fanes, where time’s hand leaves its print of mossy green, it is to
cry—
"Oh Gibbs! whose art the solemn
fane can raise
Where God delights to
dwell and man to praise;
When mouldered thus, the column falls away,
Like some great prince majestic in decay;
When ignorance and scorn the ground shall tread
Where wisdom tutored and devotion prayed—
Where shall thy pompous work our wonder claim?
What but the muse alone preserve thy name?"
His many works were by no means
equal in merit. The Radcliffe Library at Oxford—probably the most
ambitious—justifies the borrowed remark of Walpole, that it looks as if it
had sunk a stage into the earth. Yet Allan Cunningham, speaking of its
general effect on the landscape, says: "The Radcliffe dome, in fact,
conveys to every distant observer the idea of its being the air-hung crown
of some gigantic cathedral or theatre. It is perhaps the grandest feature
in the grandest of all English architectural landscapes. It rises wide and
vast amidst a thousand other fine buildings, interrupts the horizontal
line, and materially increases the picturesque effect of Oxford." He
completed the quadrangle of All-Souls, where Walpole gives him credit for
stumbling upon a sort of Gothic picturesqueness; and made additions to
King’s College, Cambridge, which have been censured for subdivision of
detail.
The work, however, on which his fame
rests as the embodiment of a great thought, unbroken by partial defects,
is the Church of St Martin’s-in-the-Fields, fortunately opened up
to the admiration of
the present generation by the works in
Trafalgar Square. It was a bold and original
idea, greatly censured in
its day as a barbarous combination of two distinct and
antagonistic types of architecture, and a rank rebellion against the first
Horatian rule of taste. The spire or steeple had been held peculiar to
Gothic architecture, and was deemed the natural terminus of the aspiring
character of the pointed arch. Yet Gibbs placed a spire on a pediment,
supported by Corinthian columns. It was, however, no mixture of styles
in luxurious
confusion, like the efforts of the French renaissance. The edifice in
itself was untainted by Gothic; and even on the spire,
that architecture
had no more claim than merely as it
was a spire, since
its details were
carefully and severely classic.
Illegitimate or not,
it was a great hit
in
architecture—something like Michael Angelo’s mounting the dome
in air—and became so
prevalent that it is
now never deemed an anomaly. For the general merits of
the building, it
may be truly said
that it is one of the chief architectural
glories of London. Formerly buried in
a mass of obscure streets and lane;
its thorough
architectural character has been tested by the severest ordeal to which
the innate character of a building can be trusted—a general clearing away,
which lays it bare for full inspection, and either close or distant
criticism. To try how it bears this, look first upon St Martin’s, and then
turn to the costly modern edifice to the right, built as a suitable
repository for the artistic treasures of the British Empire!
Of course it has its enemies among
those who are inimical to the classic forms, but I hope we are getting
more tolerant in esthetics, as in other things, and that the day may come
when people will be content to enjoy each in its own way all the forms in
which high intellect is developed in stone structure, just as in going
over a picture-gallery we can pass from the divine loveliness of the
Raphaels and Correggios to enjoy the riotous vitality of Rubens, the
solemn gloom of Teniers, and the perfect velvets and satins of Terbourg.
There is a good deal, no doubt, of intolerant sentiment against the
classic forms. Such terms as "dishonourable" and "sensual" are levelled at
them, as if those who esteem them might be capable of forging a bill on
you, or ruining the peace of your family. But all is mere scolding, and
there is no one eloquent enough to deal towards the classic that utter
intolerance which, in our grandfathers’ days, held down the Gothic under
the level of art.
Even during the revival, this
oppression has a mischievous influence, like that of their former life on
emancipated slaves. Its own admirers treat the Gothic with a disrespectful
familiarity. They forget that it is the oldest art in existence, for it
lived by the influence of the clergy when other arts perished, and so it
is legitimately descended from the age of the pyramids, having passed
through the rigid Greek to the ductile Roman, from which all the steps to
the pointed arch are distinct. Too many of its votaries are unconscious
how much reverend study it should take to become master of the art which
if took three hundred years of the labours of the most accomplished
artists in their several generations to develop. Every draughtsman and
mere builder thinks he can flounder through the details of the Gothic, and
hence every religious denomination is doing its most desperate to rear a
set of structures, which can but torture every eye in which the sense of
the symmetrical and appropriate is not utterly dead. |