|
Northern European Frames:
a conference at Dresden
A report by Lynn Roberts,
December 2005
This conference, Frames: The
Northern European Tradition, arranged by Lisa Koenigsberg
through her organization Initiatives in Art and Culture, in association
with New York University, was held in Dresden at the Gemäldegalerie
Alte Meister and the Kulturrathaus from 20 to 22 October 2005.
An exhibition on 'Dresden Gallery
frames', Die blendenden Rahmen: Der Dresdener Galerierahmen,
had been arranged to coincide with the conference; curated by
Christoph Schölzel, it provided a fascinating panorama of
a Rococo livery framing which began with the original designs
of Matthias Kugler in the 1760s and of Joseph Deibel in the 1770s
and continued in the same style throughout the nineteenth century.
The exhibition included examples of modern restoration, recutting
in the gesso and regilding; whilst the permanent hangings in
the main galleries of the Gemäldegalerie demonstrated how
the same gallery frame had been used for every period and nationality
of painting, from works by Titian, Garofalo and Brueghel to Liotard's
delightful pastel, The Chocolate Girl, with its trophy
variant of the frame. A catalogue, Die blendenden Rahmen,
introduced by Harald Marx and with essays by Christoph Schölzel,
Karin Mühlbauer and Tania Korntheuer-Wardak, has been published
by the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden (2005).
The title of the conference,
The Northern European Tradition, was justified by an extraordinarily
varied and authoritative collection of papers which included
those by Hubert Baija, Hélène Verougstraete and
Elisabeth Bruyns on Flemish and Netherlandish frames, and work
on seventeenth and eighteenth-century German frames by Christian
Burchard, Katharina Walch-von Miller and Christoph Schölzel.
The papers on modern framings included those from Eva Mendgen
on German Historicism; from Suzanne Smeaton on the German influence
in American frames; and two especially interesting contributions
by Richard Ford on Schmidt-Rottluff's and Feininger's designs,
and by Tilo Grabach on Mondrian's frames.
Three contributions demonstrating
new or unfamiliar research and scholarship of a high order are
discussed here: on Lucas Cranach, on Swedish frames from the
seventeenth to the nineteenth centuries, and on the history of
Russian frames.
Lucas Cranach
Gunnar Heydenreich's paper, 'The
Practice of Framing in the Workshop of Lucas Cranach the Elder'
was a fascinating introduction to the subject (see Notes
below) Cranach ran what amounted to a factory of artworks in
his workshop at Wittenburg, producing frames to his own designs
which were moderated through time by outside fashion, function
or efficiency. They developed from the earliest engaged frames,
valued for their stability and because they allowed both sides
of the painting to be seen, and which might use a combination
of cavetto and rainsill to produce the effect of a window, or
stepped mouldings to enhance pictorial perspective. Cranach's
designs remained consistent even when produced by numbers of
different workmen; they were inventive (for example, double tondi,
the frames of which fitted together like a bowl and its lid to
make a protective, portable object); and they were used to wed
a painting to the external architecture of, for example, a church,
or as a linking device across the different panels of a polyptych.
Heydenreich's minute examination of Cranach's output has revealed
that the use of a temporary frame has resulted in unpainted areas
of the panel, or that some pictures have been placed in their
frames before the panels were painted. A St Catherine altarpiece,
for instance, was finished and framed, and then repainted in
its frame to correct the colour balance. Since the workshop employed
both carpenters and sculptors, panels and frames could be produced
relatively quickly and to individual specifications, although
one fifth of the entire output falls within the six standardized
panel sizes preferred by Cranach. Different types of hanging
devices were also used, according to the function or location
of the painting. The painting might be hung from two projecting
hooks in the frame, have no visible means of support from the
front, or have a central wooden eye on the top moulding to fit
on a nail. The Altarpiece of the Ten Commandments in Wittenburg
probably stood originally upon a plinth, and was secured with
nails through the upper moulding, possibly as an element of wainscoting.
Cranach also produced small double
portraits in hinged frames; these could be opened like a book,
at an angle of less than 180, and displayed on a surface; this
was taken into account when the composition of the painting was
worked out, so that the perspective is heightened if the two
portraits are seen at an angle. An example of one of these diptychs
in the original hinged frames can be seen in the National Gallery,
London: the double Portrait
of Johann the Steadfast and Johann
Friedrich the Magnanimous. Other portraits were designed
with protective covers fitting into the frame; one of Hieronymus
II in Luxembourg still preserves its lid. And accounts reveal
that in 1516 Cranach charged his client for leather to protect
a finished panel whilst it was being transported; protective
leather-covered cases were also manufactured to guard painting
and frame.
Tradition and innovation are
both ingredients in the framing of Cranach's pictures: his designs
move from the Gothic of the Neustadt altarpiece to the Renaissance
forms shown in a 1530 sketch of a round-arched aedicular frame;
his use of black and coloured paint, as well as of gold leaf,
may have been influenced by his journeys in the Netherlands.
Swedish frames
New ground was broken in Eva-Lena
Karlsson's paper, 'Frames in Sweden: The Seventeenth to the
Nineteenth Century with Special Regard to Portraiture'. This
was based on the holdings of the Swedish
Royal collections which have rarely been subject to reframing;
inventories usually mention either the painting or the frame
but seldom both together. There are no surviving frames of an
earlier date than the sixteenth century, when altarpieces were
imported from the Netherlands and Germany. An early portrait
of 1570 has a deep cassetta with a black frieze ornamented
with gilt stars, and with lily-shaped brackets at the corners;
but the common run of frame is of a simple type: a flat black
border with a gilt sight edge, which continued to be made until
the late nineteenth century and is therefore difficult to date.
An inventory of 1745 of the contents
of Stromsholm Castle mentions both frames and paintings; this
palace belonged to the Dowager Queen, who had great influence
on the arts of her time. Some frames are described as carved
and gilded, although many are still the 'gilt and black frames'
common since the seventeenth century. More elaborate examples
have carved ornament, and one frame on a portrait of the Dowager
Queen is an oval with a crest. Gilded moulding frames with bunched
leaves were also popular; they are occasionally referred to as
'Ehrenstrahl frames', after David Klöcker Ehrenstrahl (1628-98),
the German-born artist with whom they are most associated.
In the late seventeenth century
the carver Burchard Precht of Bremen (1651-1738) set up his workshop
in Sweden. He produced looking-glass frames as well as church
furniture, and the spectacular royal frame draped in a carved
Nemean lionskin which may have been designed by the architect
Nicodemus Tessin the Younger (1654-1728). In the eighteenth century
Queen Ulrika Eleonora the Younger (1688-1741) and her consort
Frederik I (1676-1751) commissioned frames from Martin van Meytens
the Younger (1695-1770) for the portraits he painted of the royal
couple. The carvers of these frames are unknown; they are Rococo
in style, although unlike French Rococo frames they are not asymmetric.
French frames were available in Sweden, and indeed French artists
had been called to Stockholm to work after the fire of 1699 in
the Royal Palace. However, the Swedish Rococo maintained its
own integrity: frames in the style were austere and linear, and
while the centres and corners were ornamented the rails were
generally plain.
In the 1730s and 1740s panelled frames with foliate corners were
popular, followed by Neoclassical and then by Gustavian frames
(so-called after King Gustav III, reigned 1771-92). From the
later eighteenth century a far larger group of people was commissioning
portraits: the clergy, prosperous tradesmen and merchants; they
tended to use the plainer Gustavian styles, while richly ornamented
versions were produced for wealthier patrons. Neoclassical emblematic
frames were common in the late eighteenth century; these might
be oval or oblong, with small ornaments and a crest, often asymmetrical.
One particularly notable frame was commissioned by Gustav III
to frame a portrait by Per Krafft the Elder of the poet Carl
Michael Bellman. Bellman was a member of parliament and in the
King's power. His portrait, a reward for influencing parliament
to agree to the King's wishes, was kept in the Royal Palace;
the frame has a dramatic crest appropriate to the sitter, with
the grapes of Bacchus and a theatrical mask, and is hung on a
carved faux ribbon.
As in other countries, some Swedish
frames formed part of an integrated architectural interior and
were designed by, or in co-operation with, the architect of the
building. For example, the French ornamental sculptor, Adrien
Masreliez (1717-1806), working with the Swedish architect Jean
Eric Rehn (1717-93), designed the interior decoration of Gustav
III's galerie contemporain at Gripsholm Castle. Part of
the decoration comprised a set of frames for the portraits displayed
in the gallery. When Catherine the Great sent a portrait of herself
in a spectacular frame to Gustav, he had it transferred to one
of Masreliez's frames to fit its new setting. A copy of the portrait
was produced to fill the original Russian frame.
Swedish frames of the nineteenth
century were very similar to other European styles of the period:
heavy Neoclassical fluted frames, hollow frames with palmettes
in the 1800s to 1820s, plain hollow frames and spandrel frames.
One interesting sidelight is shone on conservation problems by
a pair of frames on portraits by Amalia Lindgren of the Crown
Prince Karl (later Karl XV) and his wife Lovisa, dating from
1859. The portraits were separated in the 1870s after the death
of the Prince; that of his wife entered the Swedish National
Portrait Gallery in Gripsholm Castle where it was restored and
cared for, while that of the Prince remained in private hands
until recently. Its frame had become darkened, but although there
was now a disparity in the appearance of the reunited pair of
pictures, restoration of the Prince's frame was kept to a minimum
in the belief that the patina, like the label on the bottom of
the frame, formed part of the portrait's history.
Russian frames
Oksana Lysenko's paper, 'The
History of the Frame in Russia: Research and Restoration',
introduced territory which is even less known to frame scholars.
Miss Lysenko's presence was an imaginative coup; her paper uncovered
a swathe of information and was illustrated with fascinating
pictures. She began with the first exhibition of picture frames
to be held in Russia, in the State Museum during the summer of
2005, and touched on chronological styles and the problems of
conservation [The
State Hermitage Museum]. A catalogue in Russian, also
by Oksana Lysenko, has been produced to accompany the exhibition:To
Dress a Picture: Art and Frames in Russia from the Eighteenth
to the Early Twentieth Centuries, State Russian Museum, St
Petersburg, Palace Editions, 2005, 167pp, 103 ills. It includes
an introduction, chapters on each century covered, details of
framemakers' stamps and labels, and a glossary.
Frames were not apparently in use in Russia before the last quarter
of the seventeenth century, as walls were commonly painted overall;
but then travellers began to bring back framed portraits, religious
subjects and engravings from western Europe. Described as being
gilded, silvered, black, painted or carved, unfortunately none
of these frames has survived. In the eighteenth century, however,
frames began to be produced in Russia in tandem with the new
fashion for secular paintings, and also to frame imported foreign
works which were more cheaply transported unframed. Peter the
Great (Czar from 1682; Emperor 1721-25) ordered his courtiers
to collect and commission paintings for their houses, and a Russian
frame trade began.
At first the only designs were
simple mouldings, centre-and-corner frames, or patterns with
linear runs of foliate ornament. They could be gilded, black,
and occasionally green or white. Gradually the various styles
became more embellished; baroque frames were produced, echoing
the magnificent interiors of the palaces and cathedrals constructed
under the aegis of Empress Elizabeth Petrovna (reigned 1741-61),
and the repareur arrived to refine and elaborate the work
of the carver. From 1756 to 1762 the Italian Pietro Rotari worked
in St Petersburg, and was commissioned by Catherine the Great
to paint 300 female portraits; these were set into the walls
of the so-called 'Picture
Hall' in the Grand Palace in Peterhof, divided by a grid
of gilded mouldings. Another Italian, the architect Antonio Rinaldi,
may be responsible for a set of carved and painted portrait frames,
also dating from the 1760s.
Eighteenth-century Russian frames have not, however, survived
in great numbers, as they tended to be replaced with every change
of fashion or interior; whilst the two world wars have resulted
in the loss of many carved frames, particularly those on royal
portraits. Nor are there paintings or drawings of eighteenth-century
interiors, except for engravings from the age of Peter the Great;
information on earlier frames is therefore mainly documentary.
The woods used have been studied from what remains: lime and
pine in the eighteenth century, and the same in the nineteenth
century, along with oak, walnut, cypress, alder and fir.
Nineteenth-century frames generally
followed European fashions, although always with an individual
gloss. The Empire, Biedermeier and Art Nouveau styles were ubiquitous,
but Russian craftsmen were inventive in their use of texturing
materials and finishes; pulverized marble, semolina and buckwheat
were used for texture, and metal leaf, bronze powder, wax, paint,
veneers, or layers of paint glazes as finishes. Papier-mâché
frames were also produced in the second half of the nineteenth
century. Designs might be influenced by folk art, and by earlier
Russian styles.
After 1917 few notable frames were produced, apart from those
designed or chosen by the artists themselves. It is only quite
recently that frames have been considered as objects of interest,
aesthetics and historical information, or have begun to be conserved.
Some of the conservation processes are themselves interesting,
using pieces or crumbs of cork as a filler which moves along
with the wood; or replicating old patinas with layers of watercolour.
These three last papers on relatively unknown subjects were revelatory
and very rewarding. The conference also included good and interesting
speakers from the Dresden Galleries themselves, as well as carvers,
dealers and conservators.
See also Dresden
Gallery Frames by Peter Schade
Notes
Gunnar Heydenreich received a
PhD on the painting materials, techniques and workshop practice
of Lucas Cranach the Elder from the Courtauld Institute of Art,
University of London in 2002. Articles by him include 'Herstellung,
Grundierung und Rahmung der Holzbildträger in den Werkstätten
Lucas Cranachs d. Ä.', in I. Sandner, Wartburg Stiftung,
Unsichtbare Meisterzeichnungen auf dem Malgrund: Cranach und
seine Zeitgenossen, Regensburg (1998), pp.181-200, and 'Artistic
exchange and experimental variation: studies in the workshop
practice of Lucas Cranach the Elder', in Ashok Roy and Perry
Smith (eds.), Painting Techniques: History, Materials and
Studio Practice, Contributions to the Dublin IIC Congress,
London (1998), pp.217-22.
|