... an Irish expat in London casting a cold eye on life ...and stuff
Friday, 10 August 2012
Sculpture @ Waddesdon Manor
Joana
Vasconcelos’s Pavillon de Thé
Here in the Vale of Aylesbury we live in a part of England
which was once dubbed "Rothschildshire" for it is surrounded by no
less than seven Rothschild Mansions: Ascott House (Home of Sir Evelyn de
Rothschild), Mentmore Towers (Former home of Lord Roseberry who married into
the Rothschild’s and was Prime Minister), Halton House, Aston Clinton House,
Tring Manor (Now home to the Walter Rothschild Collection of the Natural
History Museum) and Eythrope House which borders Waddesdon and where Jacob
(Lord) Rothschild lives and above all the magnificent Waddesdon Manor. The Rothschild’s
didn’t just build their houses but also villages to house the staff and in the
case of Waddesdon a railway line, gasworks, electricity plant and much more.
Jean-Simon Chardin’s Boy Building a House of Cards
Thomas Houseago - Untitled "Red Man"
Tony
Smith’s painted aluminium Moon Dog
Today Waddesdon stands pre-eminent. Gifted by the family to
the National Trust it is their most visited property. It closed for 3 years
whilst the family spent £12 million renovating it and it is stuffed with the
Rothschild Collection of French decorative art collected by Baron Ferdinand de
Rothschild and is set in magnificent grounds. What sets it apart is the
wonderful (and generous) proprietorial instincts of Jacob Rothschild with the
result that every year there is much new to see. It is the only house today in “Le
goût Rothschild” best described as Touts les Louis and then some.
Last year the house hosted an exhibition of Andy Warhol’s
screen prints of prominent Jewish thinkers;
But this year Jacob has outdone himself with a truly marvelous exhibition of modern sculpture which adds much gaiety to the grounds and much interest to
any visit. From 26 May - 28 October, Waddesdon in collaboration with
Christie's, is the venue for a major outdoor exhibition of contemporary
sculpture, including works by the leading artists of our time. The exhibition has been timed as a sculptural
counterpoint to Waddesdon's recent acquisition of Chardin's Boy building a
House of Cards. It also builds on
Waddesdon's own commitment to contemporary art and its significant and growing
collection of work, which includes pieces by Richard Long, Sarah Lucas, Michael
Craig-Martin, Angus Fairhurst and Stephen Cox, amongst others.
Richard Serra - House of Cards
A giant House of Cards stands on the parterre at Waddesdon
Manor. Its four sheets of steel lean one against the other, the precarious
balancing act of American artist Richard Serra’s work sustained by weight and
pressure alone. On the other side of the Rothschild manor, a magical oversize
teapot sits on the lawn. Oxidised to a reddish brown, the filigree wrought iron
fancy of Portuguese artist Joana Vasconcelos’s Pavillon de Thé embodies the
playfulness and lightness of touch of the Boy Building a House of Cards in
Chardin’s famous paintings.
Tonicos Lemos Auad - Figa
Urs Fischer - Bad Timing, Lamb Chop!
All 33 works in this exhibition of contemporary sculpture at
Waddesdon Manor have been chosen as responses to paintings by the French artist
Jean-Siméon Chardin, especially his House of Cards on view in all four
variations inside the Manor. Conceived and curated by the auction house
Christie’s, the show includes some specially commissioned sculptures, and most
are for sale as if in a gallery (prices between £60,000 and £7.5m!). Themes
such as balance, precariousness, stability, grace, playfulness and the passage
of time connect the 18th-century paintings and modern-day sculptures. Artists
include Tony Cragg, Urs Fischer, Antony Gormley, Damien Hirst, Donald Judd,
Anish Kapoor, Jeff Koons, and Ai Wei Wei. The earliest piece is American artist
Tony Smith’s painted aluminium Moon Dog, made in 1964.
Anthony Gormley - Construct 1
Robert Indiana - Love (Red)
Thomas Schütte - Untitled (Lemon Bronzes)
Moon Dog is an extraordinary sight, minimalist yet
dominating the immediate area by size, colour and geometric configuration. From
some viewpoints it seems to tilt, giving an impression of instability that is
at odds with its massive form. Viewing it with the turreted façade of the house
as a backdrop, the influence of the artist’s early career as an architect is
clear. Smith said he was also influenced by Joan Miró's painting Dog Barking at
the Moon.
Anish Kapoor - Untitled
Damien Hirst - Decorated Mini for charity auction 2000
Xavier Veilhan - Elisabeth Lemercier & Philipe Bona
Nearby, Kapoor’s monolith Untitled is of a similar scale and
quality. Made out of dark stone polished so highly that it reflects a double
inverted image of the landscape, it is a typically elegant work by Kapoor,
perhaps made more relevant to see given the publicity around his twisted steel
Orbit Olympic Park sculpture.
Not everything is as it seems. Anthony Gormley’s ostensibly
sun-worshipping man appears to be lying flat on the paving, yet he teeters on
two points. Xu Bing’s Stone Path flowing downhill on the grass is a pleasure to
follow as if following a poem. Each of the 74 stones appears to be carved with
a Chinese character, yet word play frequently plays a part in the Chinese
artist’s work.
After viewing the sculptures in the grounds there is a very
well curated exhibition examining the sculptures and their artists in the
stables at Waddesdon. Here you will also find a café and a shop and if the “stables”
look a tad grand it is because they are a scaled down version of the Tuileries
Palace in Paris which was destroyed in 1871.
The Stables
A cleverly conceived exhibition, Waddesdon Manor,
Buckinghamshire’s beautiful grounds have never been more enjoyable. Indeed the house has reinstated much of the garden sculpture which was lost over the years and this exhibition forms a delightful foil to the existing garden sculpture.
It sounds like an absolutely magical place! I would love to take a journey west to visit one day. I like the tea pot the most.
ReplyDeleteIt looks great. I too love the tea pot. I am not really warming up to the house of cards...What a lovely place!
ReplyDeleteEmm & MuMu - You are both welcome to visit,you would be met by an expert local guide but hey, nothing is perfect!
ReplyDelete