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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69208 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69208)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema, by Helen
-Zimmern
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema
-
-Author: Helen Zimmern
-
-Release Date: October 22, 2022 [eBook #69208]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Al Haines
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR LAWRENCE ALMA
-TADEMA ***
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Frontispiece: AN EARTHLY PARADISE. ("ALL THE HEAVENS OF HEAVEN IN
-ONE LITTLE CHILD.")]
-
-
-
- Bell's Miniature Series of Painters
-
-
- SIR LAWRENCE
- ALMA TADEMA
-
- R. A.
-
-
-
- BY
-
- HELEN ZIMMERN
-
-
-
- LONDON
- GEORGE BELL & SONS
- 1902
-
-
-
-
- CHISWICK PRESS: CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
-Life of the Artist
-
-The Work of Alma Tadema
-
-The Art of Alma Tadema
-
-Our Illustrations
-
-List of the Principal Pictures by Alma Tadema, with Owners' Names
-
-List of the Principal Portraits painted by Alma Tadema
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
-An Earthly Paradise. ("All the Heavens of Heaven in one little
-child") _Frontispiece_
-
-A Reading from Homer
-
-At the Shrine of Venus
-
-"Ave Caesar! Iò Saturnalia!"
-
-Spring
-
-An Audience at Agrippa's
-
-Sappho
-
-The Coliseum
-
-
- All the illustrations are reproduced by special permission
- of the Berlin Photographic Company.
-
-
-
-
- LIFE OF
- SIR LAWRENCE ALMA TADEMA
-
-Laurens Alma Tadema was born on January 8th, 1836, at Dronryp, a
-little town in the very heart of the Frisian province of Holland.
-Hence by birth Tadema is Dutch, though by residence and
-naturalization he is now an Englishman. His Dutch birth, as we shall
-see later, was not without significant effect upon the development
-and character of his art. The father, Pieter Tadema, was an
-intelligent lawyer with a pronounced taste for music. Unfortunately,
-while the young Laurens was still a baby, this parent died, and his
-education and upbringing were left entirely in the hands of the
-mother. A woman of unusual capacity, she found herself at an early
-age with four children upon her hands--two, a girl and our painter,
-being her own offspring, and two her husband's by a previous
-marriage. The means at her disposal were small; but undaunted, she
-put herself to fight single-handed the battle of life, and with such
-success, that by her unassisted efforts she was able to place all her
-children well. Laurens, her youngest, was also something of her
-darling, and even as a child he realized all his mother was doing on
-her children's behalf. To her early example no doubt are due his
-great powers of perseverance, his undaunted application, his
-high-minded sense of duty.
-
-From the very first his favourite plaything was a pencil and paper;
-he drew as by instinct. A family tradition survives to the effect
-that before he was five years old, Laurens had corrected an error in
-a drawing-master's design. Nature herself, therefore, seems to have
-pointed out his future career. But so the mother and guardians did
-not think. Art was regarded in those days as a profession which
-savoured of a discreditable character, and certainly not as one that
-could be rendered lucrative. It was therefore resolved that Laurens
-should follow in his father's footsteps.
-
-This choice he found irksome to the last degree, and irksome, too,
-were the preliminary steps. For the dead languages he had no taste,
-for all dry-bone studies he had little use. His spare hours, and
-often his lesson hours too, were spent in drawing, and many a time he
-would have himself awakened before daybreak in order that he might
-devote the hours before school time to working at his favourite
-pastime. He had no masters and little encouragement, nevertheless he
-plodded on, and with such good results that already, in 1851, he was
-able to exhibit in a Dutch gallery a portrait he had painted of his
-sister, a work that even in its immaturity betrays some of the
-qualities that distinguish his later and greater efforts in this
-department.
-
-But the dual effort imposed on this young soul by the fight between
-duty and inclination was too heavy a physical burden for the juvenile
-shoulders to bear. A collapse of health occurred just as Laurens was
-growing up, and so serious did it seem that the doctors told the
-mother and guardians how, seeing the young man was not long for this
-world, it seemed needless to mar his few remaining months of
-existence by forcing him to continue his hated legal studies. For
-this short period at least he might be allowed to be happy following
-his bent. But what was the surprise of doctors and guardians when
-Laurens, as soon as the heavy strain was removed, recovered as though
-by magic, and rapidly became the sturdy, robust man he has remained
-all his life.
-
-It was now at last evident to those in authority that Tadema was a
-genius whose advance must not be thwarted or coerced; art, therefore,
-was reluctantly acknowledged to be his proper profession, and to
-prepare himself for this he sought admission to an art academy.
-
-Strange, nay almost incredible though it sounds, he could gain no
-admission to those of his native land. Antwerp, at that time a noted
-artistic centre, proved more discerning and less inhospitable. It
-chanced that Tadema entered at a moment when the rival claims of
-French pseudo-classicism and Belgian naturalism were dividing the
-Academy into factions.
-
-The one, the Pseudo-classic, was headed by Louis David, who at that
-time was living in Antwerp in exile. The other, called the
-Belgian-Flemish School, aimed at reviving the ancient local art of
-the Low Countries. Alma Tadema was not made of the stuff to become a
-pseudo-classic or a pseudo anything. It was, therefore, quite
-natural that the young student ranged himself at once with those who
-sought to revive the best traditions of the Dutch and Flemish
-schools. This native section was led by Wappers, and Tadema soon
-became one of his most enthusiastic partisans.
-
-A friend who knew him in those days has said, "Tadema did not work at
-Antwerp, he slaved in his efforts to make up for all the precious
-time that had been lost." Of his early efforts, however, none have
-survived. Tadema has no severer critic than Tadema himself, and to
-this day he will not allow a picture to leave his studio until he has
-made it as perfect as he knows how, so that he mercilessly destroyed
-all his tentative canvases that could not yet reproduce the perfected
-ideals of the master. Even in those early days the subjects belonged
-either to history proper or that ancient history which is half
-enveloped in myth.
-
-It was about this time that Tadema added the prefix Alma to the
-paternal surname. Alma was the name of his godfather, and such a
-proceeding was, it seems, not unusual in Holland. Tadema's reason
-for taking this step was that in this wise his name in artistic
-catalogues was ranged among the A's instead of further down among the
-T's. Undoubtedly such apparent trifles do prove of consequence in
-helping or hindering a career.
-
-From the Academy of Antwerp Alma Tadema passed into the studio of
-Hendrick van Leys, the great Belgian archæologist and historical
-painter; his teaching, coming at the moment it did, proved of great
-value to Alma Tadema. Van Leys was just then busy decorating the
-Grand Town Hall of Antwerp with frescoes. In this work Alma Tadema
-was allowed to assist the master, and while so doing the young artist
-gained knowledge that proved of immense importance to his own after
-career. To van Leys' influence he owes his own historical accuracy
-and his attention to detail even the most minute. It also helped him
-to see objects truthfully and, what is equally important, to see them
-in mass. It is true that for a time van Leys' example was somewhat
-pernicious, since some of Alma Tadema's works of the period are
-visibly influenced by his master's dryness and harshness of
-execution. But the young man's own native bias toward rich and full
-colour was too strong for any influence long to repress the
-remarkable and idiosyncratic capacity that throbbed within him and
-was yearning to find full expression.
-
-The subjects treated by van Leys in the Antwerp Guildhall were all
-taken from the history of the Low Countries. It was thus that Alma
-Tadema became acquainted with their early annals by which his own
-first pictures were inspired.
-
-It was the sale of one of these, _The Education of the Children of
-Clovis_, bought by the King of the Belgians, that made it possible
-for the young artist to call his mother and sister to live with him
-in Antwerp. This removal of his family gave Alma Tadema intense joy,
-for he is one of those wholesomely constituted beings to whom family
-life is an absolute necessity. In order for him to be happy and to
-have his mind free to work at his congenial occupation, it is needful
-to his nature that outside circumstances be calm, and that his
-existence be surrounded by an atmosphere of tenderness and affection.
-
-Four years after joining her son, Madame Tadema died. It is sad to
-think that this good parent did not live to witness her son's
-world-wide fame, but pleasant to know that she still heard the praise
-aroused by some of his first exhibited pictures, and to see him the
-recipient of his first gold medal, that accorded to him at Amsterdam
-in 1862. In 1865 Tadema married a French lady, and removed to
-Brussels, where he remained until his wife's death. This occurred in
-1869, when he was left alone with his sister and two little girls,
-the eldest, Laurence, who has developed into a gifted writer, and the
-second, Anna, the delicate, dainty artist who has inherited so much
-of her father's power for reproducing detail.
-
-It was during the lifetime of his first wife that Alma Tadema paid
-his first visit to Italy and saw with his own eyes the homes of those
-Romans who were destined to become his most familiar friends.
-
-This journey, as might be expected, exerted a strong influence upon
-his art, but it did not entirely reverse all his views and methods,
-as has been the case with many other artists. The fact is that Alma
-Tadema had of set purpose avoided going to Italy before this date.
-On this point he had, and has always had, a very pronounced opinion.
-According to him the influence of Italy is so potent, so epoch-making
-in the life of an artist, that he should never go there until he is
-himself mature and has already found his own road. Otherwise all he
-sees in that magic land only helps to unsettle him, and hence hinders
-rather than helps forward the evolutionary development of the man's
-own artistic idiosyncrasy.
-
-And indeed Alma Tadema's opinion would seem right on this point,
-though it is in direct opposition to the practice of all the art
-schools and academies of the world. It is certainly strange how few
-of those who gain travelling scholarships, of those who are Prix de
-Rome and are sent to the Villa Medici, become great and original
-artists.
-
-Speaking on this theme one day Tadema remarked, "Of what use is it to
-try and graft a branch laden with fruit upon a sapling. If the
-sapling has no trunk how is it possible to effect a graft? Rubens
-followed the right principle, and so after having extracted from
-foreign travel the best it could give he still remained Rubens. But
-what would have happened if he had undertaken his journey
-prematurely, that is to say before the artist inside him was fully
-developed?"
-
-On another occasion Alma Tadema expressed his views on the same
-subject: "It is my belief that an art student ought not to travel.
-When once he has become an artist, conscious of his own aim, of his
-own wants, he will certainly profit by seeing the works of the great
-masters, because he will then be able to understand them, and can
-then, if necessary, appropriate such things as may appear useful to
-him. With one or two exceptions the Prix de Rome men are not the
-foremost of their day. Meissonier, Gerome, van Leys, remained at
-home till they had become consummate artists. Rembrandt never left
-Amsterdam, and Rubens, when travelling through Italy, made some
-sketches after Lionardo da Vinci which might pass as original Rubens,
-because Rubens was already Rubens when he did them. Vandyck and
-Velasquez travelled when they were already Vandyck and Velasquez, but
-not before."
-
-The great picture dealer in those early days of Alma Tadema's art
-life was the Frenchman, M. Gambart, "Prince Gambart," as he used to
-be called in playful irony, for it was he who controlled and
-regulated the picture market of Europe, to the immense benefit of his
-own pocket. It is but fair, however, to add that he was a generous
-as well as a discerning dealer. When he was visiting any city in his
-commercial capacity, the whisper "Gambart is here!" would run round
-all the studios, and many a plot did unknown young artists lay in
-order to wile him into their workshops, and keen was the
-disappointment if the great man left the city after visiting only the
-studios of one or two of the most noted men, ignorant of all the
-schemes and plans that had been laid to entrap him.
-
-The young Alma Tadema was among those who plotted to secure a visit
-from the great Gambart, and he too was doomed to see his hopes
-dashed. At last, however, these hopes were fulfilled. It was thanks
-to van Leys, who had purposely given a wrong address to Gambart's
-coachman, directed to carry his master to the studio of a painter
-then much _en vogue_. Hence it came that the great dealer found
-himself in front of Alma Tadema's modest studio instead. In the
-doorway stood the young artist palpitating with excitement. Gambart,
-who by this time had perceived his error, was too good-natured to
-turn back without entering. After he had looked at the work upon the
-easel in silence, he suddenly asked in brusque tones, "Do you mean to
-tell me you painted this picture?" Alma Tadema bowed his
-acquiescence, he was too overcome to speak. "Well," replied the
-dealer, after asking the price and a few other details, "turn me out
-twenty-four other pictures of this kind and I will pay for them at
-progressive prices, raising the figure after each half dozen."
-
-This was indeed an unexpected stroke of good fortune for Alma Tadema,
-who at once set to work to fulfil his commission. It was not all
-plain sailing however. Gambart wished to pin down the wings of the
-artist's fantasy, and it was only after long discussion and
-bargaining that he permitted the painter to choose his themes from
-among classical subjects instead of remaining among those of the
-Middle Ages in which he had first found him engaged.
-
-It was thus that some of the most famous of the artist's earlier
-works were included in this series ordered at so much the half dozen,
-as if they had been gloves or any article of haberdashery.
-
-It took Alma Tadema four years to carry out Gambart's first
-commission. When he was at the finish of his task, Gambart once more
-appeared upon the scene.
-
-"I want you to paint me another twenty-four pictures," was the quaint
-order given by this dealer--Maecenas again offering to remunerate
-Alma Tadema at an ascending rate of payment, only this time the
-starting point was a very much higher figure.
-
-Once more the artist consented. The first work of the new series was
-the famous _Vintage_. When the dealer saw it he perceived that it
-was a far more important canvas than any of its predecessors, a work,
-too, that had cost the artist far more time and labour, and he at
-once insisted upon paying for it the figure which was to have been
-given for the last half dozen. For Gambart, despite his profession
-and his bizarre ways, was liberal and generous, and perhaps he
-understood too that it paid to be honest.
-
-Alma Tadema is fond of telling the tale how, when he had finished his
-second two dozen pictures, Gambart invited him and the whole artistic
-colony of Brussels to dinner. To our artist's no small surprise, he
-found that it was he who was the guest of honour. In front of his
-plate there shone a silver goblet bearing a most flattering
-inscription, while into his table-napkin was folded a large cheque, a
-sum accorded to him by Gambart beyond the stipulated price.
-
-An accident brought Tadema to London in 1870, and here he at once
-took root. A year later he remarried, his wife this time being Miss
-Laura Theresa Epps, a woman of rare beauty, and herself a painter of
-distinction.
-
-For many years Tadema's home was in Regent's Park Road, a modest
-London residence which by his ingenuity he transformed into a fairy
-palace. He afterwards moved into larger quarters in Grove End Road,
-where he has reared a house entirely upon his own designs that
-repeats on a larger and more sumptuous scale the beauties of the
-earlier residence.
-
-In Alma Tadema's case the environment does indeed explain the man.
-His keen sense of beauty, his classic tastes, his love of flowers,
-make themselves felt in every nook and corner of his abode; in the
-silver-walled studio with its onyx windows, in its mosaic atrium, in
-which a fountain splashes, in Lady Tadema's special room with its
-oak-beamed ceiling, its Dutch panelling, its old Dutch furniture, in
-its low-windowed library packed with splendid illustrated works on
-artistic themes, in its pretty garden ever gay with blossoms, with
-its fish pond and trellised colonnade. In almost every room can be
-reconstructed the scenes of his pictures; the lustrous marble basin
-in the sky-lit atrium bears upon its sloping rim a heap of withered
-rose leaves, faintly recording that rich shower of fragrance which
-once suggested a striking detail in the Heliogabalus picture. The
-burnished brass steps appearing at frequent intervals figure over and
-over again in the pictures of Roman villas and classical
-environments. Perhaps one of the most striking features of this
-house, which is filled with objects of priceless worth, is its
-unevenness of pavement. There are such endless nooks and alcoves,
-each room is conceived upon a different scale and may be lower or
-higher than its immediate neighbour, and yet, most marvellous of all,
-the cluster of beautiful apartments perfectly harmonize one with
-another. From the oblong entrance hall, over whose fireplace runs
-the greeting,
-
- "I count myself in nothing else so happy
- As in a soul remembering my good friends",
-
-whose wall decorations consist in panels painted for the artist by
-his friends, to the low-lying dining-room, looking upon the garden
-and shaded by the great tree which it is Tadema's delight to watch in
-its leaf unfolding, its full summer verdure and its winter gauntness,
-all is beautiful, all is sympathetic, and all is the result of an
-ardent appreciation of the artistic possibilities of the most humble
-objects of domestic life.
-
-Through all the rooms are scattered portraits of its beautiful women
-inmates, here a statue of Lady Alma Tadema, there a window into whose
-delicately coloured panes are fashioned the likenesses of the quaint
-little girls who have now grown to women, outside under the window of
-these same daughters' room is a beautiful bit of sculptured frieze
-bearing the interwoven tulips of Holland, lilies of France, and
-English roses.
-
-The most frequent guest finds continual surprises in this house whose
-every accessory is as carefully conceived as one of the details of
-its master's pictures.
-
-Holland, Greece, London and Rome have all contributed their quota to
-render this house _sui generis_, and once we have passed the postern
-gate that leads from Grove End Road into the garden we instinctively
-feel ourselves incorporated into another world, another clime, and
-London and its squalor, its fogs and cold, are forgotten for a time.
-
-It is in this congenial _milieu_ that the artist works, a _milieu_
-helpful and suggestive to the special character of his art. His life
-since his removal to England has been uneventful. The saying, "Happy
-those who have no history" might be applied to Tadema. Hard work,
-persistent study, unremitting efforts after ever greater perfection
-of style and treatment, sum up Alma Tadema's artistic existence.
-
-[Illustration: A READING FROM HOMER.]
-
-He is essentially a sociable man, a lover of his kind. His work is
-only interrupted by visits from friends, by weekly afternoon and
-evening receptions, so charming that the entrée is greatly coveted,
-by the claims upon his time as Professor at the Royal Academy and
-member of the Council; demands all of which he fulfils with his
-characteristic strenuousness and high sense of duty. In 1876 he
-became an Associate Member of the Royal Academy, and in 1879 a Royal
-Academician. In 1899 he received the well-merited honour of
-knighthood at the hands of Queen Victoria.
-
-It is not often that Alma Tadema leaves the house to which he is
-devoted, both for its beauty and because it harbours all whom he
-holds dear, for he is essentially a domestic man. Occasional visits
-to the English country, which he greatly admires, and rare trips to
-Italy, which he naturally loves, are all the holidays he allows
-himself, and even during such changes of place he does not permit
-himself rest, but is ever studying fresh effects of light and colour,
-fresh combinations, imbibing fresh artistic suggestions. Nothing
-escapes Tadema's wide-open eyes; he is never too weary to receive a
-new impression.
-
-As a man he has about him no trace of the pedantry which might be
-anticipated from the archaic character of his work. He is generous,
-genial, warm-hearted, a lover of jokes and anecdotes good and bad, a
-cheery optimist, a boon companion in the best sense of that term. He
-is also the truest and most faithful of friends, and the kindest and
-most large-hearted of teachers. His appreciation of the works of
-others is wide and sincere, and, no matter how different this work
-may be from his own style and taste, he gives to it its due meed of
-praise, provided it be executed with honest intent.
-
-London society is familiar with this wiry, strong-set figure, with
-this face of kindly comeliness, with the cheery voice, with the
-frank, observant eye, the merry quips and pranks, the energy, the
-intense love of all that is great, and good, and lovely. To be with
-him is to feel invigorated, for he seems to have so much superfluous
-vitality that he is able to dispense it to his surroundings.
-
-Of his art he rarely speaks, and still more rarely of his
-art-theories. Indeed he is no theorist, though he knows perfectly
-well at what ends he aims, and his art, like his personality, is
-homogeneous throughout. But it is not in his nature to analyze, he
-follows his instincts, and these are true and right. "To thine own
-self be true," has been his life motto, and faithfully has he served
-it.
-
-
-
-
-THE WORK OF ALMA TADEMA
-
-The first in date of Alma Tadema's preserved paintings is a cycle of
-pictures dealing with Merovingian times. To these Merovingians he
-was early attracted, partly perhaps because in his old home and
-birthplace relics, such as coins, medals, armour belonging to that
-epoch were the only antiquities the soil could boast. Added to this,
-chance threw into his way Gregory of Tours' History of the Franks and
-the quaint old chronicler completely captivated his fancy. From this
-treasure-house of fact and fiction he drew a series of pictures
-which, if no more historically correct than Gregory himself, were
-nevertheless carefully pondered pieces of archæological improvisation
-in which the minute studies of accessories made while still in Frisia
-stood Alma Tadema in good stead. _Clotilde at the Grave of her
-Grandchildren_ was an incident entirely without foundation in fact,
-but one of Gregory's stories had suggested the situation, and Tadema
-at once realized its dramatic and pictorial possibilities. In
-treatment this canvas was still a little hard and dry, the influence
-of van Leys' somewhat arid manner was too apparent. The same
-criticism applies, but in a less degree, to its successor, the work
-that won for Alma Tadema his first success, _The Education of the
-Children of Clovis_. This, too, was inspired by the old Prankish
-chronicler, and here also, as often in Alma Tadema's art, a good deal
-of previous knowledge is requisite in order fully to appreciate the
-composition. It cannot be denied that this is one of the
-difficulties of truly understanding the painter's work. His subjects
-are apt to be at times a little too archæological, a little too
-literary for immediate or easy explanation. Their atmosphere is
-inclined to be somewhat remote from common knowledge or interest.
-Nevertheless in this canvas the tale is sufficiently told, and
-already the real Alma Tadema is making himself felt in the greater
-richness of the colouring and in the skilful disposition of the
-figures. Quite especially free and energetic is the figure of the
-eldest boy throwing his axe at the mark, and that of his teacher
-looking on intently to see how his charge conducts himself during
-this public exposition of his prowess. This work, which is now the
-property of the King of the Belgians, was bought by the Antwerp
-Society for the Encouragement of the Fine Arts for the paltry sum of
-one thousand six hundred francs, an amount which at the time seemed a
-large remuneration to its painter.
-
-This picture was followed by yet others, all inspired by the
-Merovingian chronicles that had taken such a firm hold upon the
-artist's imagination. In each successive picture the scheme of
-colour grew fuller and warmer, the dull manner of the master van Leys
-was more and more abandoned, the real Alma Tadema made himself more
-and more felt. His own individuality, his own methods of conception
-became manifest. This is especially the case in a picture called
-_Gonthram Bose_, another of the Merovingian series. We here see Alma
-Tadema already applying his peculiar capacity of filling in every
-inch of the canvas, thus often giving to the tiniest space a sense of
-vastness, of distance, of immensity, that renders his smallest works
-such marvellous gems of concentrated beauty. Of course it took time
-to learn to do this without arousing a sense of overcrowding, a fault
-that occurs even in one or two of his later works, but more and more
-as he advanced this danger was eliminated and the capabilities hidden
-in this artifice became ever more manifest. The little figures with
-which he peopled his pictures also steadily advanced in correctness
-of movement and bore about them a local physiognomy that revived an
-entire historical epoch in a few square inches of canvas. The whole
-Merovingian period seemed incarnated in these works.
-
-This same capacity of resuscitating a remote historical time was yet
-more pleasantly revealed when Alma Tadema at last turned from
-painting these gorgeous but bloodthirsty barbarians, and applied
-himself instead to the mysterious land of Egypt, the source of all
-culture and all knowledge, the land he has never seen, but which he
-has apprehended so wonderfully with the eye of his brain. The German
-Egyptologist and novelist, George Ebers, a friend of Alma Tadema's,
-to whom he dedicated one of his historical tales, once asked him what
-it was that had turned him from his Franks towards the land of Isis.
-Alma Tadema replied, "Where else should I have begun as soon as I
-became acquainted with the life of the ancients? The first thing a
-child learns of ancient history is about the Court of Pharaoh, and if
-we go back to the source of art and science must we not return to
-Egypt?"
-
-This migration to the Nile closed what may be termed Alma Tadema's
-first artistic period, which embraces the ten years that lie between
-1852 and 1862. In 1863 he exhibited his _Egyptians Three Thousand
-Years Ago_. Here, though archæological knowledge was manifest,
-Tadema did not sacrifice his picture to a pedantic display of
-learning. On the contrary, it rather seemed his object to show that
-these dead and gone old Egyptians, whom we are too inclined to think
-of as the stiff, lifeless figures that greet us from the temples and
-stone carvings of their native land, were men and women like to
-ourselves. A work such as this exhibited great study, more perhaps
-than that demanded by his Merovingians. But from the outset it was
-evident that Alma Tadema would not covenant with prevailing fashions
-in art in order to buy public favour at a cheap price. He would take
-up no task which did not commend itself to his æsthetic faith, to his
-individual inclination, to the particular preferences of his taste.
-Never, even at the outset of his career, when financial success had
-not yet come, did Alma Tadema convert his function of artist into an
-easy or lucrative profession.
-
-In _The Mummy, The Widow, The Egyptian at his Doorway_, Tadema for
-the first time applies the methods of genre painting to the treatment
-of antique themes. This novel manner of dealing with archæology,
-which is really of his creation, has found a large school of
-imitators, none of whom, however, approach the master either for
-spontaneity of conception or skill of execution. This leaning
-towards genre and its application to subjects that had hitherto not
-invited treatment in this manner, may probably be traced to Tadema's
-Dutch origin, seeing that the Dutch were past masters in this form of
-composition, which by them was chiefly used to illustrate trivial
-moments of their immediate environment.
-
-The most remarkable of these works is the _Death of the First-born_;
-indeed, Tadema ranks it as his best picture, and has never yet
-accepted any offer for its purchase. It hangs permanently in his
-studio, and is looked upon by his family as a priceless possession.
-The date of this work is 1873, when the artist had already begun to
-turn his attention to those Greco-Roman themes with which his fame
-has since been so closely associated. As the picture is not familiar
-to the world from reproductions, we will describe it at length.
-
-In this picture of the last, worst plague of Egypt, we find pathos,
-despair, and that silent grief which "whispers to the o'er-fraught
-heart and bids it break."
-
-We enter a great Egyptian temple where darkness and gloom, oppressive
-in their intensity, are only relieved by the gleam of moonlight seen
-through a distant doorway, and by a single lamp which makes the
-surrounding shadows more deep. In the foreground is a pillar with
-hieroglyphics inscribed upon it, its capital lost in the darkness
-gives a strange sense of awe, but the pervading influence, the power
-of the scene, is the apprehension of death which seems to rest over
-the mighty columns, which fills the great temple, which bows to the
-earth Pharaoh himself, for it is his first-born who lies dead before
-him. Priests and musicians are gathered round lamps standing on the
-floor. The priests are chanting their prayers, and the musicians are
-touching strange-looking instruments. The entire effect is gloomy
-and awe-inspiring in the extreme. The colouring is sombre with its
-inimitable use of greens and browns. The surroundings fitly prepare
-us for the central group of four persons who cluster round the figure
-of the desolate king. It is one of the extraordinary effects of this
-picture that the accessories strike the observer first, and in their
-mournful disposition prepare him for the chief interest, although
-both spiritually and actually, Pharaoh and his attendants hold the
-centre of the canvas. The king sits upon a low stool, and across his
-knees lies the slender body of his first-born. The dead face of the
-almost nude youth is indescribably sweet, and around his neck hangs
-limply a strangely-fashioned golden chain, probably bearing some
-amulet to shield the king's son from harm. The king, upon whose
-figure the light falls, wears his crown, the brilliant jewels of
-which seem to mock his helpless grief. He sits rigid, immovable, the
-strong, proud man will make no sign, but there is one feature which
-even his powerful will cannot control, his mouth trembles ever so
-slightly, so faintly that at first it is not distinguishable. But
-what grief it expresses, this faint indistinctness of outline! This
-figure might be taken as the embodiment of grief, grief fixed and
-immutable, and like all true emotion, truly expressed, with not a
-hint of morbidness. The mother sits near, bowed to the earth in her
-sorrow. She, too, has striven to be strong, and even in this
-outburst of despair, shows self-restraint. At the other side of
-Pharaoh sits the physician whose powers have been useless in this
-combat. Outside the temple door two figures approach. They are
-Moses and Aaron coming to behold their work.
-
-This is a truly marvellous picture, and it is not strange that Alma
-Tadema retains it in his own hands. It is so true, so complex, so
-alive, that at every view, with every changing light it reveals new
-features, new aspects of sorrow, and yet with its profundity of
-sorrow it is not too tragic to live with. It is so true, so human,
-so beautiful, and so deep, that it does not repel. About Alma
-Tadema's art there is nothing false or strained; he is always
-healthy, there is in his nature no strain of morbidness, and hence
-whatever he paints appeals direct to the truest feelings, whether he
-paints the glad, sensuous world of the ancients, or the tragedies
-which befell them, there is never in his work the sickly
-introspection, the hyper-analysis of modern days. Just as in his
-_Tarquinius and Emperor_, Alma Tadema proved that he could express
-tragedy, so here he has shown conclusively that he can express pathos
-and that he is possessed of a deep imagination, which, unfortunately,
-he puts forth all too rarely. Had Alma Tadema created but this one
-superb work he would be among the greatest artists of our time.
-
-This _Death of the First-born_ is a true representation of Egyptian
-life, and, as if to prove how accurate are the artist's instincts, it
-is noteworthy that he placed at the feet of the dead a wreath of
-flowers which strikingly resembles a like garland, found ten years
-after the picture was painted, in the royal tombs of Deir el Bahari.
-
-Meantime however, as we have said, he had begun to paint genre
-pictures of Greek and Roman life, and so numerous are these, so
-rapidly did he produce them, that it is impossible in our limited
-space to enumerate even the most important. We have chosen a few at
-random, taking care however to select from among the most noteworthy.
-One of his finest early Roman pictures is, beyond question, the
-_Tarquinius Superbus_, in which Tadema has shown what tragic power he
-could wield when he wished. But his general inclination leads him to
-let us see his men and women merely as they present their outward
-faces. He cares not to look beyond, to apprehend the informing
-intention, the psychic force of his creations.
-
-This idiosyncrasy is based on the artist's character which is
-singularly direct, and to which introspection and analytic research
-is distasteful. Of quite a different character is the _Pyrrhic
-Dance_, a wonderful _tour de force_. We are made to feel that these
-Dorian fighters, executing a war-dance, are heavily armed, and that
-it is only their skill and agility which makes their choregraphic
-evolutions appear light under such heavily handicapped conditions.
-Indeed, as we know from history, but few could execute with grace and
-skill this "mimic warrior armour game" as Plato calls it, it might so
-easily become ridiculous and it is not the least of Tadema's merits
-in this canvas that he has treated it without the least touch of
-exaggeration, and with a gravity and dignity that are truly admirable.
-
-_The Vintage_, painted just before Tadema's removal to England, is in
-some respects one of his most important and most characteristic
-works. It has been objected that Alma Tadema is essentially a
-painter of repose. To this picture as well as to the _Pyrrhic Dance_
-this criticism cannot be applied. The first thing that strikes us as
-we look at the work is the sense of motion and music which it
-imparts. Another of the objections sometimes made to Alma Tadema's
-work is that his men and women, but more especially his women, are
-not in accordance with usually recognized classical standards. His
-favourite types are rather of the heavy build that would be connected
-more readily with Holland than with Rome, though in some of the
-portrait busts of empresses preserved in the Vatican, and other
-sculpture galleries, we see frequent precedents for this preference,
-a preference that became more and more emphasized after the artist's
-removal to England. In learning, in technical excellence, in the
-remarkable finish of all the multitudinous details, the work is
-admirable. Here, too, he has not permitted the details to distract
-our attention from the main intention of the picture; we think first
-and last of the procession and put the accessories, correct and
-wonderfully painted though they are, into their proper artistic
-place. Alma Tadema's pictures may at times seem to proclaim too
-loudly the equality of all visible things, and this equal attention
-to each object sometimes prevents the concentration of our attention
-upon the central point of interest. It is this peculiarity which led
-Ruskin to make his savage and most unfair onslaught upon the painter
-in his Academy Notes of 1875.
-
-The _Sculpture Gallery_, a newer and more skilful version of a
-previous picture on the same theme, painted in 1864, furnished the
-tag upon which Ruskin hung his attack. This later _Sculpture
-Gallery_ was the companion to the Picture Gallery exhibited at the
-Royal Academy in 1874, which was again a sort of extension of an
-earlier work called the _Roman Amateur_. In the atrium of a Roman
-house, a fat swarthy Roman, a man of little distinction, no doubt a
-_nouveau riche_ of his period, exhibits to his visitors a silver
-statue. There is an impressive pomposity about his manner, as though
-he were dilating upon the statue's intrinsic metallic worth rather
-than upon its artistic merits, and his guests seem to be on the level
-of his own artistic tastes.
-
-In the two versions of the _Sculpture Gallery_ this idea is extended.
-In the first version the famous Lateran statue of Sophocles was
-introduced, and indeed forms the central point of interest. Around
-it are grouped three Romans, one woman and two men, evidently eagerly
-discussing its artistic merits. All Tadema's fine draughtsmanship,
-all his unique skill in the painting of lucent surfaces is here to
-the fore.
-
-The second _Sculpture Gallery_ was yet more elaborate in design and
-purpose. The work of art exhibited in this instance is placed within
-a back shop of the epoch, the front towards the streets being
-reserved for smaller and less important objects. A company of rich
-amateurs has evidently sauntered in to behold the latest acquisitions
-of the dealer. A colossal vase, poised upon a revolving pedestal, is
-especially claiming their attention. A slave slowly turns it round
-that they may view it in every light. We know him to be a slave by
-the crescent-shaped token he wears suspended from his neck. The
-effect of in-door and out-door illumination, and of reflected light
-from the shimmering surfaces of the objects in the shop is rendered
-with scientific accuracy and rare technical ability. Full of
-ingenious and most difficult light effects, too, is the _Picture
-Gallery_, in which we see a crowd of noble Roman dames and knights
-admiring the triptychs of the period wherewith the walls are hung and
-the easels loaded.
-
-This theme, with considerable variants, had been treated once before
-by Tadema. Indeed, he is fond of repeating his initial idea in
-different shape. This time the work is called _Antistius Labeon_.
-It represents an amateur Roman painter, a contemporary of Vespasian,
-showing off his latest productions to the friends who have dropped
-into his studio. It seems, so Tadema tells us, that the gentleman
-painter, who was a Roman pro-consul, was rather looked down upon by
-his contemporaries for his amateur tastes. It was thought
-gentlemanly in those days to admire art but not to practise it, an
-idea that even in early Victorian days we find not quite extinct.
-
-[Illustration: AT THE SHRINE OF VENUS.]
-
-It was on these two fine works, _The Sculpture Gallery_ and _The
-Picture Gallery_, that Alma Tadema's world-wide reputation was first
-based. A great continental dealer bought them, and as engravings as
-well as in the widely exhibited originals they became familiar to all
-lovers of the beautiful. From this time onward Alma Tadema could not
-paint fast enough to satisfy the demands made upon his brush; but
-this success only increased the rigidity of the demands he made upon
-himself. The more successful Alma Tadema has been, the more
-conscientious has he become, a rare quality, and one that cannot be
-too highly praised or too much admired. His passionate love of
-colour, a passion that seems to have grown upon him as time passed,
-and as he abandoned more and more his earlier drier manner, found
-expression after his election as associate to the Royal Academy in a
-number of small but most perfect little canvases that often dealt
-with nothing in particular, and to which the artist was at times
-embarrassed to give names, or whose titles, when found, were not
-specially distinctive, but which each in their kind was a perfect gem
-of technique of radiant tints. And after all, why need a picture
-have a name, _à tout prix_? Whistler was not so wrong when he
-labelled some of his works as "Symphonies" and "Harmonies" of colour.
-Such titles would best describe many of Alma Tadema's smaller colour
-creations.
-
-And now, his own line fully found, Tadema worked on steadily, without
-haste or pause. In a _milieu_ far distant indeed from the scene of
-their creation, a London atmosphere, a London sky, he caused to live
-again for a while in effigy the men and maidens of Magna Graecia, of
-Rome, of Parthenope, and above all of Sicily, for Tadema's out-door
-scenes are too southern in feeling and in tone even for the furthest
-shores of the Peninsula, and belong by rights to the Syren isle.
-Here alone are found the unclouded sapphire skies, the seas
-sun-bathed and innocent of angry waves, the luxuriant vegetation, the
-mad wealth of roses that seem to spring by magic from Tadema's brush,
-and are the outcome of his fervid imagination that can behold these
-things with his mental vision while fog and grim winter are raging
-outside. It is one of Tadema's rare and precious gifts that he can
-see his picture finished before he has put brush to canvas. It is
-this gift which makes it unnecessary for him to execute the usual
-amount of sketching, indeed, Tadema may be said not to sketch at all;
-it is this that lends to his hand his rare security, and this that
-helps towards his precision of execution. Everything is clearly,
-sharply outlined in his art. His canvases show no quiet, slumberous
-distances, no mysterious twilights of life or nature. All is
-evident, all is distinct, all sharply defined as in the meridional
-landscape that he loves, and all this is rendered with that accuracy,
-with those small touches of extreme sharpness, which recall the
-precise methods of his Dutch pictorial ancestors. These are merits,
-but they are merits that also contain hidden within their excellence
-the germs of what by some may be considered as defects. There is apt
-to be a lack of repose about a picture of Alma Tadema's, our eye is
-not necessarily led at once to the central purpose of the work, each
-action seems of equal importance, and is painted in the same scheme
-of values.
-
-As an example of Alma Tadema's painstaking, and of how he lets no
-trouble or expense stand in the way of making his pictures just as
-perfect as possible, it may be mentioned that during the whole of the
-winter when he was at work on his _Heliogabalus_ the artist sent
-twice a week for boxes of fresh roses from the Riviera. Thus each
-flower may be said to have been painted from a different model.
-
-Only once in his life did Alma Tadema paint a life-size nude figure.
-This was the work called _A Sculptor's Model_. It was inspired by
-the Venus of the Esquiline, then but lately unearthed; the painter's
-intention was to show, as far as possible, the conditions under which
-such a masterpiece might have been created. It was also painted as a
-model for his pupil John Collier, one of the very few pupils whom
-Alma Tadema has ever received into his studio.
-
-It should be mentioned that Alma Tadema at times paints in water
-colours as well as in oils, a medium he manipulates most
-successfully, and which lends itself most admirably to his limpid
-effects of sea and sky. He has also of late years taken to portrait
-painting. His wonderfully careful technique has here full play, and
-the perfection of finish fills us with admiration. But, despite
-their merits, it is hard to think of these portraits as Alma
-Tadema's; with his name, whether we will or no, we are forced to
-associate blue skies, placid seas, spring flowers, youths and maidens
-in the heyday of life, and a sense of old-world happiness and
-distance from our less beautiful modern existence and surroundings.
-
-
-
-
-THE ART OF ALMA TADEMA
-
-It is fortunately not possible to define with real precision the
-position Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema occupies in art, since happily he
-is still living and working among us--and long may he so live to turn
-out yet other scores of sun-filled joyous canvases, speaking to a
-weary and hard-driven generation, of vanished and more placid times,
-when existence was less restless and more æsthetically conceived!
-Nor, though he has had imitators by the dozen, is it as yet possible
-to determine the exact nature of the influence he has exerted upon
-the art of his age, for with rare exceptions these imitators have
-turned out frigid, lifeless works that bear the same relation to the
-master's style and manner as oleographs bear to original paintings.
-Neither is it quite possible to classify Alma Tadema's manner. A
-number of influences, partly extraneous, or accidental, partly the
-result of birth and atavism, have resulted in causing his art to be
-_sui generis_. If he must be classed at all, although a much younger
-man, he might be grouped with those artists who came to the fore on
-the continent soon after the upheaving epoch of 1848, men who
-endeavoured to revive the more intimate life of Greece and Rome upon
-their canvas, and who in France went by the name of neo-Greeks or
-Pompeists. This trend was a reaction from the older classical school
-that was headed by Jacques Louis David, whose productions were
-distinguished by a certain austere dignity of conception, by
-elaborate accuracy of form, but, on the other hand, were generally
-cold and unreal in sentiment, unpleasantly monotonous in colouring,
-and defective in their arrangement of light and shade.
-
-It has been most felicitously remarked, that if David may be named
-the Corneille of the Roman Empire, Alma Tadema may be said to be its
-Sardou. He has made his ancients more living, he has resuscitated
-them with less visible effort; he seems to have an instinctive
-comprehension of antiquity. His is not the Rome of Ingres, of
-Poussin, of grand public ceremonies, of battles, of the Forum and the
-rostrum, of actions that upheaved the world; he gives us instead the
-home life of this people, Rome such as we divine it to have been from
-Cicero's letters to Atticus, the life of the ancients as presented to
-us in the plays of Terence and Plautus. It is not mere historical
-painting that he aims at, indeed his art bears the same relation to
-history as does the anecdote to serious narrative, a lighter species
-which nevertheless often throws a brighter light upon the past than
-scores of learned tomes. And this result is largely achieved by his
-love of detail, which causes him to crowd his canvas with masses of
-those authentic bibelots which ancient and recent excavations and the
-aid of photography have brought within the reach of all.
-
-The elder classical painters thought to render their work more truly
-classical by placing their protagonists in large empty monumental
-spaces, just as Corneille and Racine thought to give the true
-classical ring to their plays when they removed them from every-day
-emotions, and rolled out high-sounding and rhetorical phrases. Alma
-Tadema, instead, is convinced that these dead-and-gone folk were in
-all fundamental essentials like to ourselves, that they lived, loved,
-joked and chattered just as we do, and this conviction has found
-expression in his pictures that deal less and less with the graver,
-grander moments of their existence, and more with the petty intimate
-details of their home life. His pictures might almost be said to be
-a series of instantaneous reproductions of the life of the Roman
-patricians. The plebs have no interest for him, they rarely figure
-in his canvases, and when they do their figures are entirely
-subordinate. The Roman of Alma Tadema's pictures abides in a world
-of idle luxury, in which nothing matters much unless it ministers to
-sensuous enjoyment. It is the outward seeming of life and objects
-that attracts him, their inner deeper meaning matters to him as
-little as their subject. The life aim of his men and women seems to
-be to exist happily and placidly, untroubled by material cares or
-disturbing emotions.
-
-In his method of composing his pictures Alma Tadema's manner is also
-the absolute antithesis of what is commonly regarded as the classic
-method. So far is he from putting his principal personages well into
-the middle of his canvas, from following a pyramidal arrangement,
-that in his effort to be natural and unconventional, he even at times
-commits extravagances in order to escape from the beaten path, as,
-for example, in his portrait of Dr. Epps, in which there are shown
-one head and a bust, no arms, but three hands, the third being that
-of the unseen patient whose pulse the physician is supposed to feel.
-This is an extreme instance, but a tendency to dismember his figures,
-to show us only half a figure, a detached head, a hand without a
-body, a foot without a visible leg, occurs every now and again, and
-not certainly to the detriment of a realistic effect, but most
-certainly to the detriment of composition as classically understood.
-This tendency, no doubt, results from his love of Japanese art, an
-art that has had a visible influence upon his methods of disposing
-his composition. Indeed, it might almost be said that Alma Tadema
-does not compose his pictures at all. He certainly does not do so
-according to the ordinary acceptance of the term in art, he rather
-disposes his personages about his canvas, apparently at hazard, much
-as they might group themselves in real life. But under this seeming
-negligence, is hidden great care, immense painstaking, a striving to
-give to his pictures their maximum of expressive force, for in Alma
-Tadema's work, everything as well as every person, has its suggestive
-purpose. As M. de la Sizeranne has well said, few painters have less
-of that element which in the jargon of the studio is known as _poids
-mort_. But this very merit causes his pictures to lack
-concentration. There is no point on which our eye fixes at once as
-the central, most important, and the meaning of the whole may often
-be hidden in some accessory that the ordinary observer is apt to
-overlook. Thus, for example, in one of his Claudius series is seen,
-poised on a cippus, a head of Augustus, dominating as it were the
-whole bloody, rowdy, undignified scene. How many who see the work
-have remarked that the bust is turned toward a picture that
-represents a naval engagement, and that underneath this picture is
-written the single word "Actium," suggestive of a vast antithesis.
-Subtle little touches such as these often render Alma Tadema's more
-important works a puzzle to those unversed in classic lore, and
-oblige us to class him, if classed he must be, among the erudite
-artists whose roots are planted in the soil of literature. Yet,
-surely, if there exists a domain where erudition should take a
-secondary place it is that of art, which shares with poetry the high
-privilege of soaring so high as to have the right to disdain the mere
-minutiae of history, the petty details of life.
-
-Happily, Alma Tadema is saved from being a cold, unattractive
-antiquarian painter by his rare keen sense of beauty, and here again
-we come in contact with the difficulty of ranging him as we might
-range his pseudo-classic brethren. The spectator who misses the
-allusions, the meaning of his subject-pictures, nevertheless finds
-matter for full and intense enjoyment as he contemplates the lovely
-fabrics, the cool half-shades, the clear sunlight, the exquisite
-flowers, the heat-saturated sea and sky, the marbles and the
-bric-à-brac that appear on almost every canvas, and are painted with
-a skill, a consummate science that captivates the connoisseur, and
-with a reality that delights the uninstructed crowd.
-
-Briefly, Alma Tadema's double nationality, his Dutch birth, his long
-English residence, coupled with his classic tastes, his admiration
-for the Japanese, have contributed to render his art a curious
-complex of conflicting tendencies, tendencies that in themselves are
-again welded into a harmonious whole by the idiosyncrasy of the man.
-We seem to feel, even through the medium of his pictures, his
-kind-heartedness, his quick appreciation of all that is good and
-beautiful, his dislike of mystery, of vain searchings in dark mental
-places, his love of sunshine, moral and real. Others might paint his
-portraits as well, but none can paint those exquisite southern idylls
-of which such numbers have issued from his brush and brain. He has
-been called the painter of repose. I should rather be inclined to
-style him the painter of gladness, of the joy of life. The artistic
-world has certainly been rendered the sunnier by his works.
-
-
-
-
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-Amongst the many famous and popular pictures by Alma Tadema it is a
-little difficult to know which to select, and our object has been to
-make a representative collection, while avoiding those which are
-already familiar to all through the windows of the print shops. A
-work that shows him in one of his most tragic moments, a mood he does
-not often exhibit, for this master of sunny nature prefers to paint
-sunny themes, is the _Ave Caesar! Iò Saturnalia!_ The story of
-Caligula's tragic ending and the election of Claudius as Emperor
-seems to have had a curious attraction for the artist. He painted
-the theme three times, though with considerable variants, first as
-the _Claudius_, then as _The Roman Emperor_, and finally, and in its
-finest version, as the _Ave Caesar! Iò Saturnalia!_
-
-The first of the series on the subject simply styled _Claudius_
-though full of life, solemnity and graphic force, was surpassed by
-its successors, into which the artist infused more of his wonderful
-genius for archæological indivination. This first Claudius belonged
-to a set of pictures ordered from Alma Tadema by the dealer M.
-Gambart.
-
-The second, _The Roman Emperor_, was painted after his removal to
-London. In this new version Alma Tadema also adopted a scheme of
-colour that was absolutely new to him, to the consternation, it is
-said, of some of his clients, who saw in this departure an alarming
-tendency towards pre-Raphaelitism. According to them it was
-distinctly unfair to the public for this artist to change his style.
-Where were the white marbles, the dresses of pale, soft tints to
-which they were accustomed in his canvases? Here he had boldly
-introduced a girl of the Roman people with hair of pure copper tints,
-and even the corpse was clad in a dress of brilliant blue and vivid
-purple, while the purity of the marble pavement was stained not only
-with the blood of the slain, but was also a confusion of restless
-coloured mosaics that distracted the eye from the picture's main
-purpose. Criticism waxed hot around this canvas which seemed to
-threaten a revolution in the artist's methods.
-
-But it was only a passing phase and proved of no real import. Alma
-Tadema's pictures continued as before to be distinguished by a
-certain calm and majestic solemnity, such as suits best the Roman
-people whom by choice he represented. Still this third and finest
-version of the Claudius story can scarcely be classed among his
-calmer works. It is dramatic and full of movement. For brilliant
-colouring, for vigorous drawing, for its admirable archæological
-verity this picture is distinguished even among Alma Tadema's many
-distinguished works. Note too that it is painted in proportions so
-small as would hardly suffice a latter-day Italian artist for the
-depicting of a cauliflower. But Alma Tadema, far from thinking that
-a canvas must be large in proportion to the importance of his
-subject, is of the opinion that minute dimensions tend to excite the
-imagination and give to a work a more poetic and ideal character.
-
-
-[Illustration: "AVE CÆSAR! IO SATURNALIA."]
-
-In this _Ave Caesar! Iò Saturnalia!_ we look upon the man whose
-supposed imbecility saved him from the cruel fate to which Caligula
-subjected his relations, found by the soldiery in a corner of the
-palace where he had hid himself in his dread, a hiding place whence
-the Praetorians dragged him forth and proclaimed him their ruler. We
-see the elected Emperor, his face blanched with terror, holding for
-support to the curtain which has lately hid his trembling form from
-the pursuing soldiers and the populace. These ironically salute him
-as Imperator. Especially obsequious and excellent in rendering is
-the figure of the guard who has drawn aside the heavy drapery. A
-confused heap of corpses, all that is left of those who have been
-slain in defence of their murdered master, litter the marble
-pavement. Above them, laurel crowned, smile down in marble
-indifference the portrait busts of other Caesars now dead and gone to
-their account. In the far corner is huddled the populace mingled
-with the lance-bearing soldiers. They are sarcastically amused by
-Claudius's undignified election to the great Roman throne. Tragedy
-and comedy are most felicitously fused. Furthermore, wonderful
-though the details be, as they always are with Alma Tadema, in this
-case the accessories do not withdraw our attention for one moment
-from the human interest. Marbles and draperies, metals and flowers,
-though so perfectly rendered, take their natural place in the
-composition without detracting from the central interest.
-
-And yet how exquisite in their archæological and æsthetic perfection
-are these accessories. No wonder that in a picture from Alma
-Tadema's hand we look quite as much for the marbles, the hangings,
-the stuffs, the mosaics, the trees, and the flowers, as for the faces
-of his creations. It would almost seem at times as though he had
-painted these accessories with even more care than he bestowed upon
-his men and women, as if they interested him more. Indeed, where
-flowers are concerned Alma Tadema seems to give to them an inner
-life, a very physiognomy, his flowers are inimitable, both as
-suggestions and as realities. Even in the choice made it is quite
-remarkable how there is always a peculiar fitness to the picture's
-theme. Is there not, for example, to note but a few instances, a
-tragic impress about the poppy beds in his picture of _Tarquinius
-Superbus_? Have not his red and pink oleanders a bloom and blush as
-fitting as that on the faces of the young lovers they shade? Do not
-the cypresses and the stone pines in his _Improvisatore_ adumbrate
-all the solemn mournfulness of a Roman garden? Is there not a
-sensual note in the prodigality of roses that inundates his
-_Heliogabalus_? Are they not almost arch in his _Love's Missile_, in
-_Shy_, to name but a few of the many pictures in which trees and
-flowers figure as the very embodiment of the summer of life and
-nature.
-
-Indeed, so exquisitely, so superbly painted are these flowers that in
-some of Alma Tadema's minor pictures they actually assume the upper
-hand, though of course unconsciously to the painter, and become the
-protagonists in the composition. There is one picture which he calls
-simply _Oleanders_, showing that he recognized himself how the
-flowers had impressed his imagination and gained precedence over the
-human beings with whom they were associated. Tadema's flowers are
-very poems, and had he painted nothing but these he would have been a
-great artist.
-
-
-[Illustration: SPRING.]
-
-It was of course inevitable that when he chose _Spring_ as his theme
-the composition should be rich in the delineation of such blossoms.
-In this picture all the perfumed profusion of a southern May is
-summed up within the space of one little canvas. A bevy of matrons,
-maidens and children precedes what was probably an ecclesiastical
-procession. They wend their way through the marble-paved streets of
-Imperial Rome to some temple shrine, therein to celebrate the rites
-of joy due to the newly awakened season. Flower-crowned are the fair
-human blossoms, flower-laden their garments, flower-filled the
-"offering-platters" they are about to lay on the altar of the god.
-The house-tops, those fair flat house-tops of Southern Italy, the
-spaces between the columns, the loggias and the porticoes, are
-crowded with eager spectators. These, too, are flower-wreathed and
-flower-laden. Joy-filled, spring-intoxicated, they rain down upon
-the gay procession beneath, posies and blossoms in glad and
-multi-coloured abundance. Marble and flowers, sunshine and blue
-skies, all life's gladness is here embodied by a painter's loving
-brush.
-
-And how easy it all looks. We feel as if the painter had just thrown
-all this lovely profusion with rapid hand upon the canvas. But those
-who have the privilege of knowing Alma Tadema intimately and have
-watched the genesis of his pictures, watched them as they grow from
-under his brush, know how long and patiently he worked at this very
-canvas which gives an effect of spontaneity as though created _d'un
-seul jet_. Again and again did he scrape down his work, erasing
-recklessly the most exquisite little figures, the most perfectly
-modelled heads, because they failed to satisfy the exigencies of the
-painter. Hence in this finished form the _Spring_ represents the
-work of two or three pictures. And this is constantly the case in
-Alma Tadema's paintings. From each canvas has been erased some gem,
-under each picture is hidden some exquisite detail, painted over
-regardlessly by the artist; no matter how lovely it may be in itself,
-if it fails to fit into the _ensemble_ it is always destroyed. Hence
-there is in his pictures no corner or space that is neglected or
-hastily blocked in. All is as perfect as he knows how to make it,
-and I have heard him say, not rarely, that a little glimpse of sky,
-some little peep into the open, has given him as much labour as the
-entire picture.
-
-For this excessive scrupulousness, this difficulty to be satisfied
-with his own work Alma Tadema has often been criticised by critics.
-Quite unjustly so, surely. Without this quality half of his power
-would be absent. It is due to this great attention to detail, this
-ceaseless searching after ever greater perfection, that Alma Tadema
-has made for himself a style of his own. Thus, for example, when he
-perceived that his colouring was too sombre, he reformed it by dint
-of diligence and care. He has never deceived himself regarding his
-own limitations--for who has not limitations, even among the
-greatest?--nor has he ever juggled with his æsthetic conscience.
-
-An emancipation from the conventional codes that is almost Japanese
-is another feature of his work. Alma Tadema does not hesitate to
-show us some of his personages as standing half outside the canvas,
-or cut through mid-body, or strangely placed in corners, or at the
-edge of the composition. Neither does he deem it needful that the
-principal action, as laid down by academic canons, should be placed
-in the very centre of the picture. It is this that gives the unusual
-note to many of his compositions, that was unusual in the days when
-they were still unknown, for since those days his work has been
-subjected to that imitation which the old proverb tells us is the
-sincerest form of flattery.
-
-
-[Illustration: AN AUDIENCE AT AGRIPPA's.]
-
-Sterner and more stately than _Spring_, indeed grand in its
-conception and execution, is _An Audience at Agrippa's_, in which a
-whole historic epoch is crystallized and rendered concrete. Here
-fidelity to archæological truth has but enhanced the importance of
-the scene and helped to throw it into prominence; nor are the details
-unduly emphasized to the detriment of the whole. In some respects
-this is one of Tadema's best conceived and most satisfactorily
-executed pictures. From an atrium on a high level, down a broad
-flight of steps, majestically descends Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, the
-greatest and mightiest burgher of his day. He is clad in imperial
-red, and stands out marvellously against the white marble of the
-stairs. His face is set with a look of stern determination that
-speaks of unbending will. He is followed by a crowd of persons, some
-of whom are still bowing, though Agrippa has passed by. Upon the
-landing at the bottom of the stairs--a marvel of blue mosaics with a
-tiger skin lying across it--there is a table. On this stands a
-silver Mars and materials for writing, for the use of two scribes
-standing behind it. Note the character in these heads, the
-close-cropped hair that denotes their servile rank, the cringing
-salute, each trying to outbid the other in humility of manner. Just
-before these figures, at the foot of the staircase, stands the
-world-famed Vatican statue of Augustus Imperator, the only man whose
-supremacy proud Agrippa would acknowledge, his device being, "To obey
-in masterly fashion, but obedience to one person only." Below this
-statue, where the staircase seems to turn at the landing, is another
-group. These three suitors, father, son, and daughter, are about to
-render a gift to accompany their petition, for they know it is well
-to conciliate even the wealthy with gifts. Behind the whole shimmers
-one of those wonderful effects of light and sky that Tadema rarely
-fails to introduce. Like his Dutch ancestors, he is never happy
-unless he can get some peep into the open through a window or a
-terrace. He welcomes any device by which is accomplished an outlet
-to the sky, producing thus an enhanced sense of space and atmosphere.
-
-The greater part of this picture was painted in 1875, when the artist
-spent the winter in Rome, being driven out of England by the wreck of
-his lovely house in Regent's Park. I well remember those days in the
-Eternal City, and one little incident connected with this picture
-illustrates a delightful trait in Alma Tadema's character and his
-naive enjoyment of his own work. He had finished the tiger skin
-which lies at the foot of the stairs, and in his delight over its
-successful achievement, he asked me in boyish glee, "Don't you see
-him wag his tail?"
-
-
-Even in the indoor picture called _An Earthly Paradise_ (see
-_frontispiece_), the sense of atmosphere and space is not absent.
-The tale is here told with direct simplicity, a young mother adoring
-her firstborn as mothers have done since time began. The dress, the
-furniture, the surroundings are classic, the sentiment is of all
-times and all ages.
-
-
-_A Reading from Homer_ (see illustration, p. 16) reproduces some of
-Tadema's favourite devices,--a marble semicircular bench, a distant
-glimpse of tranquil sapphire seas, lustrous garments, and
-flower-wreathed characters. With eager enthusiasm the reader seated
-on his chair recites from a roll of papyrus that rests upon his
-knees. Of his four auditors only the woman, daffodil-wreathed, sits
-upon the marble exedra. One hand rests upon a tambourine, beside
-which is flung a bunch of flowers. The other holds that of a youth
-who sits upon the ground beside her. His other hand touches a lyre
-idly, but without sound, his entire interest is centred upon the
-reciter, whose words he follows with the eyes of his soul and of his
-intellect. Yet another youth lies prone upon the marble floor, his
-chin resting upon his hand. He, too, gazes in entranced wonder as he
-listens to the immortal verses of the Hellenic bard. On the left
-stands another figure, also flower-garlanded and wrapped in a toga.
-His face reveals that his, too, is a keen appreciation of the power
-of the words being recited. Rarely has even Tadema's magic brush
-painted a more luminous work, so suggestive of sunlight, so truly
-transfigured and remote from life's grosser moments. Here, too, his
-flesh treatment is above his own high average. The modelling of the
-woman's figure and of the lover is especially fine.
-
-It seems incredible, and yet it is true, that this composition, a
-large one for Alma Tadema, with its five figures and innumerable
-accessories, was entirely painted in the brief space of two months.
-Still, though completed in so short a time, the preliminary studies,
-including an abandoned picture, which was to have been called
-_Plato_, filled eight months of close application.
-
-
-[Illustration: SAPPHO.]
-
-Not unlike in general treatment and in general purpose to the
-_Reading from Homer_ is the picture simply entitled _Sappho_. In
-order to properly comprehend this work, however, some knowledge of
-the life story of the Greek poetess is required. Not a few visitors
-to the Royal Academy, where the picture was exhibited, imagined, with
-pardonable inaccuracy, that the seated figure playing the lute, and
-which certainly, at first sight, seems the most prominent, filled the
-title role. Instead, this is Alcaeus, the man who desired to gain
-the support of the mighty and gifted Sappho, for a political scheme
-of which he was the chief promoter. But besides being a political
-rhymer, Alcaeus was also Sappho's lover, and as he is here rendered,
-it is the lover who is most emphasized. Sappho herself sits behind a
-species of desk, on which rests the wreath, bound with ribands, that
-was the crown of poets. She is robed in pale green and gray, and in
-accordance with tradition, her raven black hair is filleted with
-violets. Beside her stands a young girl, her daughter, a sweetly
-graceful form, less lovely than the mother, but suggestive of
-maidenhood's enchantments. The poetess is seated on the lowest tier
-of the marble triple-rowed exedra, on which, at a respectful
-distance, are also disposed some of the pupils of her school. Dark,
-wide-branched fir trees spread their crowns above this bench. We are
-made to realize that their trunks are rooted far below, there where
-the deep blue sea, shimmering in the background, laps the earth that
-supports this scene. Through the branches is seen the sky, a sky of
-purest sapphire, a blue distinct from that of the tideless tranquil
-ocean, but no less glorious or intense. Nowhere perhaps better than
-here has Tadema reproduced the effects of summer seas and skies in
-their brilliant ardour, their palpitating delicacy of hue and
-texture. The very air that pervades the picture is hot and light,
-saturated and quivering with the quickening pulsation of a southern
-sun.
-
-
-The intimate life of the Roman women has often attracted Alma
-Tadema's brush. We see this again and again in _Well-protected
-Slumber_, in _Quiet Pets_, in _Departure_, the scene suggested by
-Theocritus's fifteenth Idyll, in _The Bath_, in _Apodyterium_ (or
-women's disrobing-room), and it is also accentuated in the _Shrine of
-Venus_, a scene in a Roman hairdresser's shop. This picture was
-exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1889, where it attracted
-considerable attention, not only because of the perfection of its
-painting, the beauty of marbles and metals and textiles, the richness
-of its soft, full colour, its yellows and blues, but because of the
-masterly skill with which the human figures were painted (see
-illustration, p. 32).
-
-Two beautiful young girls, one awaiting her turn to be _coiffée_,
-caressing the masses of her thick, dark, loosened hair, the other
-already dressed, lingering to gossip with her friend, are reclining
-on a marble bench. These are so entirely absorbed in their own
-beauty that they pay but slight attention to the entrance of a tall,
-simply attired matron, who, glancing inquiringly in their direction,
-passes on to an inner apartment. In sweeping by she has carelessly
-plucked one from a mass of blossoms heaped upon a coloured marble
-table in the outer shop, and her hand, holding the flower, falls
-heavily beside the warm white folds of her gown. At the open lunette
-shop window, exposing to view coils and twists of hair, some
-attendants are distributing vases and lotions to the customers, whose
-heads appear above the marble balustrade, on which stands a deep blue
-vase, encrusted with exquisite enamel figures. The figure of the
-attendant who is reaching down an alabaster pot is especially
-graceful and free in poise.
-
-Although the marble screen, surmounted by fluted columns, and the
-lunette window are sliced off at the top, the picture gives no
-impression of confinement. This sense of space is increased by the
-rim of a marble basin in the immediate foreground, the reclining
-figures which lower the eye level, and the skilful introduction
-through the open window, above the heads of the passers-by, of the
-entrance columns and intricate façade of an adjoining building. The
-triangle of blue sky and the blue glass vase standing out against the
-distant columns of the building across the square form one of Alma
-Tadema's many happy combinations.
-
-
-In some respects the most important picture painted by Alma Tadema of
-late years is called _The Coliseum_, which excited wondering praise
-for its masterly handling, its colour scheme, its archæological
-knowledge, when exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1896. Attached to
-the title in the catalogue was this motto from Lord Byron's "Don
-Juan" that gave the keynote to that which the artist desired to
-express:
-
- "And here the buzz of eager nations ran
- In murmured pity, or loud-roared applause,
- As man was slaughtered by his fellow man,
- And wherefore slaughtered, wherefore, but because
- Such were the bloody circus' genial laws,
- And the Imperial pleasure. Wherefore not?"
-
-Dominating the whole picture, and occupying more than half of its
-canvas, is the huge Flavian Amphitheatre colloquially known
-throughout the whole world as _the_ Coliseum. Even in the title
-therefore in this case the inanimate object takes the first place,
-relegating to a secondary rank the human interest. Very wonderfully
-does the artist convey to our eyes a sense of the gigantic bulk and
-height of the huge Amphitheatre, and with accurate archæological
-knowledge has he reconstructed its form upon his canvas. Here are
-its two tiers of arcades, whose arches, we learn from the evidence of
-tradition, inscriptions and ancient coins, were filled, as in the
-painting, with groups of colossal white marble statues. Above these
-arcades rose a series of pilasters, and above these again, supported
-on the topmost parapet, were stout poles that held the velarium or
-canvas awning which sheltered from the sun or rain the thousands of
-spectators gathered to witness the bloody deeds which took place in
-the arena below. These supporting poles stand out distinct against
-the glowing sky, a sky always introduced if possible by Alma Tadema.
-The hour chosen is late afternoon, when from out the Amphitheatre
-pour the thousands who have lately thronged the tiers upon tiers of
-seats that surrounded the arena, high functionaries and proletariat,
-tender-born ladies and women of the market-place, all equally eager
-to witness the orgies of blood that were here enacted. Outside the
-broad walk that encircled the Amphitheatre stood the famous Baths of
-Titus, second only in magnificence to the Coliseum itself. Alma
-Tadema has imagined for it a balcony of white marble, raised high
-above the road. On its parapet stand tall wide-mouthed sculptured
-vases, connected together with thick festoons of yellow daffodils
-proving that the season of the year is Alma Tadema's favourite one of
-early spring. A nude bronze statue of a nymph wreathing her tresses,
-in accordance with the usages of the Baths, crowns the parapet of the
-balcony. Around her feet too, are twined the wreaths of yellow
-flowers that give such a sunny note to the whole scheme of colour.
-Two ladies and a child have taken up their station on this festively
-decorated parapet, evidently come thither to witness some spectacle
-of quite unusual importance that has called to the arena not only the
-populace, but even the Consul himself, who, preceded by his clients,
-and attended by his lictors, is seen issuing from the main exit of
-the Coliseum, which was almost in front of the Baths. To keep the
-way clear for the grandees, some guards are roughly pushing back the
-dense crowd that is packed on either side of the roadway. Yet
-another crowd is issuing from the side door of the Coliseum. This
-mob is chiefly composed of plebs, though among them are mingled
-palanquin bearers plying for hire. Yet further off again is seen the
-Arch of Constantine and the famous goal known as the Meta Sudans.
-
-[Illustration: THE COLISEUM.]
-
-It is not quite evident what it is that chiefly interests these lady
-spectators. We are told that the dark-haired and elder of the two is
-the little girl's mother. For safety's sake she plucks at the
-child's gown for fear the little one in her excitement should fall
-over the low parapet. The younger lady is more eager in her
-interest. She, who is supposed to be the child's governess, has
-evidently recognized some one, friend or lover, in the crowd
-immediately below to whom the child is excitedly pointing. The
-"Athenæum," when describing this picture on its first exhibition,
-wrote concerning it:
-
-"It would be difficult to do justice to the breadth, brilliance and
-homogeneity (in spite of its innumerable details) of this splendid
-picture. The painting of the minutest ornaments, the folds of the
-ladies' garments, even the huge festoons we have referred to, and the
-delicate sculptor's work of the vases and mouldings on the balcony
-are equally noteworthy. Even more to be admired are the faces, of
-which that of the maiden in blue is undoubtedly the sweetest and
-freshest of all Mr. Alma Tadema's imaginings. Her companion (the
-more stately matron) who wears a diadem of silver in her black hair,
-illustrates a pure Greek type of which the painter has given us
-several examples, but none so fine as this one, which is very
-skilfully relieved against the peacock fan of gorgeous colours which
-she holds in her hand. It is easy to imagine that in her noble
-spirit some thought of the victims of the Amphitheatre arose, which
-explains the painter's intention in choosing the motto of the
-Coliseum."
-
-The picture is certainly in every respect worthy of Alma Tadema's
-high reputation and is a perfect example of his style, a brilliant
-work, true and complete in every touch.
-
-
-
-
- THE PRINCIPAL PICTURES
-
- BY
-
- SIR LAWRENCE ALMA TADEMA
-
- WITH THE NAMES OF THEIR OWNERS AS
- FAR AS CAN BE ASCERTAINED
-
-
- Clotilde at the Tomb of Her Grandchildren. _M. Jules Verspreeuwen._
- Education of the Children of Clovis. _H.M. King of the Belgians._
- Venantius. _A. G. Hill, Esq._
- Fortunatus and Radegonda. _A. G. Hill, Esq._
- Gonthran Bose. _A. G. Hill, Esq._
- Egyptians Three Thousand Years Ago. _J. Dewhurst, Esq._
- The Chess-players. _Sir Henry Thompson._
- The Egyptian at His Doorway. _Sir Henry Thompson._
- The Mummy. _John Foster, Esq._
- Agrippina with the Ashes of Germanicus. _N. G. Clayton, Esq._
- A Roman Family. _John Pender, Esq._
- Lesbia. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- Entrance to a Roman Theatre. _John Straker, Esq._
- Roman Dance. _John Straker, Esq._
- The Discourse. _Henry Mason, Esq._
- Glaucus and Nydia. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- Claudius. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- Tarquinius Superbus. _Sir Henry Thompson._
- The Visit to the Studio. _M. X. Puttermans Bonnefoy._
- Phidias and the Elgin Marbles. _D. Price, Esq._
- The Siesta. _M. Gambart._ (?)
- A Roman Amateur. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- The Convalescent. _Hon. W. F. D. Smith, M.P._
- Confidences. _F. W. Cosens, Esq._
- The Pyrrhic Dance. _C. Gassiot, Esq._
- The Chamberlain of Sesostris. _H. Hilton Phillipson, Esq._
- A Visit. _W. Houldsworth, Esq._
- In the Peristyle. _C. R. Fenwick, Esq._
- The Silver Statue. The Marquis de Santurce.
- A Soldier of Marathon. _Alfred Harris, Esq._
- Exedra. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- The Wineshop. _R. Christy, Esq._
- Tibullus at Delia's. _M. Gambart._ (?)
- A Juggler. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- The First Whisper. _James Hall, Esq._
- The Vintage Festival. _Baron Schroeder._
- Hush. _Mariano de Murrieta, Esq._
- Une Fete Intime. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- The Widow. _M. Gambart._ (?)
- The Improvisatore. _Alfred Harris, Esq._
- The Death of the First-born. _Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema._
- The Nurse. _Baron Schroeder._
- Fishing. _Baron Schroeder._
- The Siesta. _W. Lee, Esq._
- Between Hope and Fear. _T. G. Sandeman, Esq._
- After the Dance. _H. F. Makins, Esq._
- At Lesbia's. _W. J. Newall, Esq._
- Cherry Blossom. _Wilberforce Bryant, Esq._
- Hide and Seek. _John Fielden, Esq._
- Pleading. _C. Gassiot, Esq._
- The Kitchen Garden. _W. Lee, Esq._
- The Bath. _Baron Schroeder._
- Pandora. _Royal Society of Painters in Water Colours._
- The Garland Seller. _A. D. Halford, Esq._
- Balneatrix. _H. F. Morton, Esq._
- A Roman Artist. _H. J. Carr, Esq._
- A Garden Altar. _A. Macdonald, Esq._
- The First Reproach. _H. Hilton Phillipson, Esq._
- The Last Roses. _Sir James Joicey, Bart. M.P._
- On the Steps of the Capitol. _Baron Schroeder._
- The Sculptor. _John Foster, Esq._
- Grecian Wine. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- Cleopatra. _Sir Henry Thompson._
- The Question. _D. Price, Esq._
- Fregonda at the Death-bed of Praetextatus. _D. Price, Esq._
- Water Pets. _W. Lee, Esq._
- The Siesta. _W. Lee, Esq._
- The Architect. _John Foster, Esq._
- A Sculpture Gallery. _M. Gambart._ (?)
- An Audience at Agrippa's. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- After the Audience. _Henry Mason, Esq._
- A Picture Gallery. _M. Gambart._ (?)
- Wine. _W. Lee, Esq._
- In the Time of Constantine. _J. W. Knight, Esq._
- A Hearty Welcome. _Sir Henry Thompson._
- A Sculptor's Model. _Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Collier._
- In the Temple. _Angus Holden, Esq., J.P._
- Play. _J. G. Sandeman, Esq._
- A Well-Protected Slumber. _J. S. Forbes, Esq._
- Antistius Labeon. _The Marquis de Santurce._
- Love's Missile. _John Fielden, Esq._
- Cherry Blossom. _Wilberforce Bryant, Esq._
- A Torch Dance. _John Paton, Esq._
- Ave Caesar! Ió Saturnalia. _J. Dyson Perrins, Esq._
- Quiet Pets. _M. Verstolk Volekin._
- Reflections. _Lord Battersea._
- A Harvest Festival. _James Barrow, Esq._
- A Pastoral. _Wakefield Christy, Esq._
- An Audience. _G. H. Boughton, Esq., A.R.A._
- The Tepidarium. _Sharpley Bainbridge, Esq._
- Cleopatra. _-- Hawk, Esq._
- Young Affections. _Henry Joachim, Esq._
- Sappho. _M. Coquelin._
- Repose. _M. Coquelin._
- Oleanders.
- On the Way to the Temple.
- Shy.
- Who Is It?
- Hadrian Visiting a British Pottery.
- Expectations.
- A Reading from Homer.
- An Apodyterium.
- Not at Home.
- Down to the River.
- Pomona's Festival,
- Departure.
- The Seasons.
- The Silent Counsellor.
- A Bacchante.
- At the Shrine of Venus.
- Heliogabalus.
- The Women of Amphissa.
- Spring. _Herr Robert Mendelssohn._
- The Benediction.
- Past and Present Generations.
- Love's Jewelled Fetter. _Geo. McCulloch, Esq._
- Fortune's Favourite. _Herr Robert Mendelssohn._
- Unwelcome Confidence. _America._
- A Coign of Vantage. _America._
- Whispering Noon. _Sir Samuel Montagu._
- The Coliseum. _America._
- A Difference of Opinion. _America._
- "Nobody asked you, Sir, she said" (water colour). _Australia._
- Watching. "Her eyes are with her thoughts and
- they are far away." _America._
- Wandering Thoughts. _America._
- Melody. _America._
- Roses, Love's Delight. _The Czar of Russia._
- The Conversion of Paula. _America._
- Hero. _America._
- A Listener. _The Tate Gallery._
- Thermae Antoninae. _America._
- Goldfish. _Sir Ernest Cassell._
- Vain Courtship. _Sir Ernest Cassell._
- "Under the roof of Blue Ionian Weather." _Sir Ernest Cassell._
- "The year's at the Spring
- . . . . . . . . . . . . .
- All's well with the world." _Alfred de Rothschild, Esq._
-
-
-
-
- THE PRINCIPAL PORTRAITS
- BY
- SIR LAWRENCE ALMA TADEMA.
-
-
- Dr. and Mrs. Hueffer.
- Dr. W. Epps.
- Prof. G. B. Amendola.
- L. Lowenstam, Esq.
- My Youngest Daughter.
- My Children.
- Herr Henschel.
- Dr. and Mrs. Semon.
- Herr Hans Richter.
- Ludwig Barnay as Mark Antony.
- Sir Henry Thompson.
- Herbert Thompson, Esq.
- Mrs. Rowland Hill and Children.
- George Simonds and Family.
- Mrs. Marcus Stone.
- A Family Group.
- Miss Enid Ford.
- Maurice Sons.
- Portrait of Himself for Uffizi.
- Lady Waterlow.
- Miss Tina Mavis.
- Mrs. George Lewis and Miss Elizabeth Lewis.
- Mrs. George Armour of Princetown.
- Prof. George Aitchison, R.A.
- Max Waechter.
-
-
-
- CHISWICK PRESS: PRINTED BY CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR LAWRENCE ALMA TADEMA ***
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema</p>
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-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 22, 2022 [eBook #69208]</p>
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-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SIR LAWRENCE ALMA TADEMA ***</div>
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-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-front.jpg" alt="AN EARTHLY PARADISE. (&quot;ALL THE HEAVENS OF HEAVEN IN ONE LITTLE CHILD.&quot;)">
-<br>
-AN EARTHLY PARADISE. <br>
-(&quot;ALL THE HEAVENS OF HEAVEN IN ONE LITTLE CHILD.&quot;)
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- Bell's Miniature Series of Painters<br>
-</p>
-
-<h1>
-<br><br>
- SIR LAWRENCE<br>
- ALMA TADEMA<br>
-</h1>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- R. A.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- BY<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="t2">
- HELEN ZIMMERN<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- LONDON<br>
- GEORGE BELL & SONS<br>
- 1902<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- CHISWICK PRESS: CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.<br>
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap01">Life of the Artist</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap02">The Work of Alma Tadema</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap03">The Art of Alma Tadema</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap04">Our Illustrations</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap05">List of the Principal Pictures by Alma
-Tadema, with Owners' Names</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#chap06">List of the Principal Portraits painted
-by Alma Tadema</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3b">
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-front">An Earthly Paradise.</a> ("All the Heavens
-of Heaven in one little child") <i>Frontispiece</i>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-016">A Reading from Homer</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-032">At the Shrine of Venus</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-048">"Ave Caesar! Iò Saturnalia!"</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-050">Spring</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-054">An Audience at Agrippa's</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-058">Sappho</a>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-<a href="#img-064">The Coliseum</a>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="t3">
- All the illustrations are reproduced by special permission<br>
- of the Berlin Photographic Company.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
- LIFE OF
-<br><br>
- SIR LAWRENCE ALMA TADEMA
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Laurens Alma Tadema was born
-on January 8th, 1836, at Dronryp, a little
-town in the very heart of the Frisian province
-of Holland. Hence by birth Tadema is Dutch,
-though by residence and naturalization he is now
-an Englishman. His Dutch birth, as we shall
-see later, was not without significant effect upon
-the development and character of his art. The
-father, Pieter Tadema, was an intelligent lawyer
-with a pronounced taste for music. Unfortunately,
-while the young Laurens was still a baby,
-this parent died, and his education and upbringing
-were left entirely in the hands of the mother.
-A woman of unusual capacity, she found herself
-at an early age with four children upon her
-hands&mdash;two, a girl and our painter, being her own
-offspring, and two her husband's by a previous
-marriage. The means at her disposal were
-small; but undaunted, she put herself to fight
-single-handed the battle of life, and with such
-success, that by her unassisted efforts she was
-able to place all her children well. Laurens, her
-youngest, was also something of her darling, and
-even as a child he realized all his mother was
-doing on her children's behalf. To her early
-example no doubt are due his great powers of
-perseverance, his undaunted application, his
-high-minded sense of duty.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the very first his favourite plaything was
-a pencil and paper; he drew as by instinct. A
-family tradition survives to the effect that before
-he was five years old, Laurens had corrected an
-error in a drawing-master's design. Nature
-herself, therefore, seems to have pointed out his
-future career. But so the mother and guardians
-did not think. Art was regarded in those days
-as a profession which savoured of a discreditable
-character, and certainly not as one that could
-be rendered lucrative. It was therefore resolved
-that Laurens should follow in his father's footsteps.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This choice he found irksome to the last degree,
-and irksome, too, were the preliminary steps.
-For the dead languages he had no taste, for all
-dry-bone studies he had little use. His spare
-hours, and often his lesson hours too, were spent
-in drawing, and many a time he would have
-himself awakened before daybreak in order that he
-might devote the hours before school time to
-working at his favourite pastime. He had no
-masters and little encouragement, nevertheless
-he plodded on, and with such good results that
-already, in 1851, he was able to exhibit in a Dutch
-gallery a portrait he had painted of his sister, a
-work that even in its immaturity betrays some
-of the qualities that distinguish his later and
-greater efforts in this department.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But the dual effort imposed on this young
-soul by the fight between duty and inclination
-was too heavy a physical burden for the juvenile
-shoulders to bear. A collapse of health
-occurred just as Laurens was growing up, and so
-serious did it seem that the doctors told the
-mother and guardians how, seeing the young
-man was not long for this world, it seemed needless
-to mar his few remaining months of existence
-by forcing him to continue his hated legal studies.
-For this short period at least he might be allowed
-to be happy following his bent. But what was
-the surprise of doctors and guardians when
-Laurens, as soon as the heavy strain was removed,
-recovered as though by magic, and rapidly
-became the sturdy, robust man he has remained
-all his life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was now at last evident to those in authority
-that Tadema was a genius whose advance must
-not be thwarted or coerced; art, therefore, was
-reluctantly acknowledged to be his proper
-profession, and to prepare himself for this he sought
-admission to an art academy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Strange, nay almost incredible though it sounds,
-he could gain no admission to those of his native
-land. Antwerp, at that time a noted artistic
-centre, proved more discerning and less
-inhospitable. It chanced that Tadema entered at a
-moment when the rival claims of French
-pseudo-classicism and Belgian naturalism were dividing
-the Academy into factions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The one, the Pseudo-classic, was headed by
-Louis David, who at that time was living in
-Antwerp in exile. The other, called the
-Belgian-Flemish School, aimed at reviving the ancient
-local art of the Low Countries. Alma Tadema
-was not made of the stuff to become a pseudo-classic
-or a pseudo anything. It was, therefore,
-quite natural that the young student ranged
-himself at once with those who sought to revive the
-best traditions of the Dutch and Flemish schools.
-This native section was led by Wappers, and
-Tadema soon became one of his most enthusiastic
-partisans.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-A friend who knew him in those days has said,
-"Tadema did not work at Antwerp, he slaved
-in his efforts to make up for all the precious time
-that had been lost." Of his early efforts, however,
-none have survived. Tadema has no severer
-critic than Tadema himself, and to this day he
-will not allow a picture to leave his studio until
-he has made it as perfect as he knows how, so
-that he mercilessly destroyed all his tentative
-canvases that could not yet reproduce the perfected
-ideals of the master. Even in those early
-days the subjects belonged either to history
-proper or that ancient history which is half
-enveloped in myth.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was about this time that Tadema added the
-prefix Alma to the paternal surname. Alma was
-the name of his godfather, and such a proceeding
-was, it seems, not unusual in Holland. Tadema's
-reason for taking this step was that in this wise
-his name in artistic catalogues was ranged among
-the A's instead of further down among the T's.
-Undoubtedly such apparent trifles do prove of
-consequence in helping or hindering a career.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-From the Academy of Antwerp Alma Tadema
-passed into the studio of Hendrick van Leys,
-the great Belgian archæologist and historical
-painter; his teaching, coming at the moment it
-did, proved of great value to Alma Tadema.
-Van Leys was just then busy decorating the
-Grand Town Hall of Antwerp with frescoes.
-In this work Alma Tadema was allowed to
-assist the master, and while so doing the young
-artist gained knowledge that proved of immense
-importance to his own after career. To van
-Leys' influence he owes his own historical
-accuracy and his attention to detail even the most
-minute. It also helped him to see objects
-truthfully and, what is equally important, to see
-them in mass. It is true that for a time van
-Leys' example was somewhat pernicious, since
-some of Alma Tadema's works of the period are
-visibly influenced by his master's dryness and
-harshness of execution. But the young man's
-own native bias toward rich and full colour was
-too strong for any influence long to repress the
-remarkable and idiosyncratic capacity that
-throbbed within him and was yearning to find
-full expression.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The subjects treated by van Leys in the
-Antwerp Guildhall were all taken from the
-history of the Low Countries. It was thus that
-Alma Tadema became acquainted with their
-early annals by which his own first pictures
-were inspired.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was the sale of one of these, <i>The Education
-of the Children of Clovis</i>, bought by the
-King of the Belgians, that made it possible for
-the young artist to call his mother and sister to
-live with him in Antwerp. This removal of his
-family gave Alma Tadema intense joy, for he is
-one of those wholesomely constituted beings
-to whom family life is an absolute necessity. In
-order for him to be happy and to have his mind
-free to work at his congenial occupation, it is
-needful to his nature that outside circumstances
-be calm, and that his existence be surrounded
-by an atmosphere of tenderness and affection.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Four years after joining her son, Madame
-Tadema died. It is sad to think that this good
-parent did not live to witness her son's world-wide
-fame, but pleasant to know that she still
-heard the praise aroused by some of his first
-exhibited pictures, and to see him the recipient
-of his first gold medal, that accorded to him at
-Amsterdam in 1862. In 1865 Tadema married
-a French lady, and removed to Brussels, where
-he remained until his wife's death. This occurred
-in 1869, when he was left alone with his sister
-and two little girls, the eldest, Laurence, who
-has developed into a gifted writer, and the
-second, Anna, the delicate, dainty artist who has
-inherited so much of her father's power for
-reproducing detail.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was during the lifetime of his first wife that
-Alma Tadema paid his first visit to Italy and
-saw with his own eyes the homes of those
-Romans who were destined to become his most
-familiar friends.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This journey, as might be expected, exerted a
-strong influence upon his art, but it did not
-entirely reverse all his views and methods, as
-has been the case with many other artists. The
-fact is that Alma Tadema had of set purpose
-avoided going to Italy before this date. On this
-point he had, and has always had, a very
-pronounced opinion. According to him the influence
-of Italy is so potent, so epoch-making in
-the life of an artist, that he should never go there
-until he is himself mature and has already found
-his own road. Otherwise all he sees in that
-magic land only helps to unsettle him, and hence
-hinders rather than helps forward the evolutionary
-development of the man's own artistic
-idiosyncrasy.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And indeed Alma Tadema's opinion would
-seem right on this point, though it is in direct
-opposition to the practice of all the art schools
-and academies of the world. It is certainly
-strange how few of those who gain travelling
-scholarships, of those who are Prix de Rome
-and are sent to the Villa Medici, become great
-and original artists.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Speaking on this theme one day Tadema
-remarked, "Of what use is it to try and graft a
-branch laden with fruit upon a sapling. If the
-sapling has no trunk how is it possible to effect
-a graft? Rubens followed the right principle,
-and so after having extracted from foreign travel
-the best it could give he still remained Rubens.
-But what would have happened if he had undertaken
-his journey prematurely, that is to say
-before the artist inside him was fully developed?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-On another occasion Alma Tadema expressed
-his views on the same subject: "It is my belief
-that an art student ought not to travel. When
-once he has become an artist, conscious of his
-own aim, of his own wants, he will certainly
-profit by seeing the works of the great masters,
-because he will then be able to understand them,
-and can then, if necessary, appropriate such
-things as may appear useful to him. With one
-or two exceptions the Prix de Rome men are
-not the foremost of their day. Meissonier,
-Gerome, van Leys, remained at home till they
-had become consummate artists. Rembrandt
-never left Amsterdam, and Rubens, when travelling
-through Italy, made some sketches after
-Lionardo da Vinci which might pass as original
-Rubens, because Rubens was already Rubens
-when he did them. Vandyck and Velasquez
-travelled when they were already Vandyck and
-Velasquez, but not before."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The great picture dealer in those early days of
-Alma Tadema's art life was the Frenchman,
-M. Gambart, "Prince Gambart," as he used to be
-called in playful irony, for it was he who
-controlled and regulated the picture market of
-Europe, to the immense benefit of his own pocket.
-It is but fair, however, to add that he was a
-generous as well as a discerning dealer. When
-he was visiting any city in his commercial
-capacity, the whisper "Gambart is here!" would
-run round all the studios, and many a plot did
-unknown young artists lay in order to wile him
-into their workshops, and keen was the
-disappointment if the great man left the city after
-visiting only the studios of one or two of the
-most noted men, ignorant of all the schemes and
-plans that had been laid to entrap him.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The young Alma Tadema was among those
-who plotted to secure a visit from the great
-Gambart, and he too was doomed to see his
-hopes dashed. At last, however, these hopes
-were fulfilled. It was thanks to van Leys, who
-had purposely given a wrong address to
-Gambart's coachman, directed to carry his master
-to the studio of a painter then much <i>en vogue</i>.
-Hence it came that the great dealer found
-himself in front of Alma Tadema's modest studio
-instead. In the doorway stood the young artist
-palpitating with excitement. Gambart, who by
-this time had perceived his error, was too
-good-natured to turn back without entering. After
-he had looked at the work upon the easel in
-silence, he suddenly asked in brusque tones,
-"Do you mean to tell me you painted this
-picture?" Alma Tadema bowed his acquiescence,
-he was too overcome to speak. "Well," replied
-the dealer, after asking the price and a few other
-details, "turn me out twenty-four other pictures
-of this kind and I will pay for them at progressive
-prices, raising the figure after each half dozen."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This was indeed an unexpected stroke of good
-fortune for Alma Tadema, who at once set to work
-to fulfil his commission. It was not all plain
-sailing however. Gambart wished to pin down the
-wings of the artist's fantasy, and it was only after
-long discussion and bargaining that he permitted
-the painter to choose his themes from among
-classical subjects instead of remaining among
-those of the Middle Ages in which he had first
-found him engaged.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was thus that some of the most famous of
-the artist's earlier works were included in this
-series ordered at so much the half dozen, as if
-they had been gloves or any article of haberdashery.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It took Alma Tadema four years to carry out
-Gambart's first commission. When he was at
-the finish of his task, Gambart once more
-appeared upon the scene.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"I want you to paint me another twenty-four
-pictures," was the quaint order given by this
-dealer&mdash;Maecenas again offering to remunerate
-Alma Tadema at an ascending rate of payment,
-only this time the starting point was a very much
-higher figure.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Once more the artist consented. The first
-work of the new series was the famous <i>Vintage</i>.
-When the dealer saw it he perceived that it was
-a far more important canvas than any of its
-predecessors, a work, too, that had cost the artist
-far more time and labour, and he at once insisted
-upon paying for it the figure which was to have
-been given for the last half dozen. For Gambart,
-despite his profession and his bizarre ways, was
-liberal and generous, and perhaps he understood
-too that it paid to be honest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Alma Tadema is fond of telling the tale how,
-when he had finished his second two dozen
-pictures, Gambart invited him and the whole
-artistic colony of Brussels to dinner. To our
-artist's no small surprise, he found that it was he
-who was the guest of honour. In front of his
-plate there shone a silver goblet bearing a most
-flattering inscription, while into his table-napkin
-was folded a large cheque, a sum accorded to
-him by Gambart beyond the stipulated price.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An accident brought Tadema to London in
-1870, and here he at once took root. A year
-later he remarried, his wife this time being Miss
-Laura Theresa Epps, a woman of rare beauty,
-and herself a painter of distinction.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For many years Tadema's home was in
-Regent's Park Road, a modest London residence
-which by his ingenuity he transformed into a
-fairy palace. He afterwards moved into larger
-quarters in Grove End Road, where he has
-reared a house entirely upon his own designs
-that repeats on a larger and more sumptuous
-scale the beauties of the earlier residence.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In Alma Tadema's case the environment does
-indeed explain the man. His keen sense of
-beauty, his classic tastes, his love of flowers,
-make themselves felt in every nook and corner
-of his abode; in the silver-walled studio with its
-onyx windows, in its mosaic atrium, in which
-a fountain splashes, in Lady Tadema's special
-room with its oak-beamed ceiling, its Dutch
-panelling, its old Dutch furniture, in its
-low-windowed library packed with splendid illustrated
-works on artistic themes, in its pretty garden
-ever gay with blossoms, with its fish pond and
-trellised colonnade. In almost every room can
-be reconstructed the scenes of his pictures; the
-lustrous marble basin in the sky-lit atrium bears
-upon its sloping rim a heap of withered rose
-leaves, faintly recording that rich shower of
-fragrance which once suggested a striking detail
-in the Heliogabalus picture. The burnished
-brass steps appearing at frequent intervals figure
-over and over again in the pictures of Roman
-villas and classical environments. Perhaps one
-of the most striking features of this house, which
-is filled with objects of priceless worth, is its
-unevenness of pavement. There are such endless
-nooks and alcoves, each room is conceived upon
-a different scale and may be lower or higher
-than its immediate neighbour, and yet, most
-marvellous of all, the cluster of beautiful
-apartments perfectly harmonize one with another.
-From the oblong entrance hall, over whose
-fireplace runs the greeting,
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- "I count myself in nothing else so happy<br>
- As in a soul remembering my good friends",<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-whose wall decorations consist in panels painted
-for the artist by his friends, to the low-lying
-dining-room, looking upon the garden and
-shaded by the great tree which it is Tadema's
-delight to watch in its leaf unfolding, its full
-summer verdure and its winter gauntness, all is
-beautiful, all is sympathetic, and all is the result
-of an ardent appreciation of the artistic possibilities
-of the most humble objects of domestic life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Through all the rooms are scattered portraits
-of its beautiful women inmates, here a statue of
-Lady Alma Tadema, there a window into whose
-delicately coloured panes are fashioned the
-likenesses of the quaint little girls who have now
-grown to women, outside under the window of
-these same daughters' room is a beautiful bit of
-sculptured frieze bearing the interwoven tulips
-of Holland, lilies of France, and English roses.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most frequent guest finds continual surprises
-in this house whose every accessory is as
-carefully conceived as one of the details of its
-master's pictures.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Holland, Greece, London and Rome have all
-contributed their quota to render this house <i>sui
-generis</i>, and once we have passed the postern
-gate that leads from Grove End Road into the
-garden we instinctively feel ourselves incorporated
-into another world, another clime, and London
-and its squalor, its fogs and cold, are
-forgotten for a time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is in this congenial <i>milieu</i> that the artist
-works, a <i>milieu</i> helpful and suggestive to the
-special character of his art. His life since his
-removal to England has been uneventful. The
-saying, "Happy those who have no history"
-might be applied to Tadema. Hard work, persistent
-study, unremitting efforts after ever greater
-perfection of style and treatment, sum up Alma
-Tadema's artistic existence.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-016"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-016.jpg" alt="A READING FROM HOMER.">
-<br>
-A READING FROM HOMER.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-He is essentially a sociable man, a lover of his
-kind. His work is only interrupted by visits
-from friends, by weekly afternoon and evening
-receptions, so charming that the entrée is greatly
-coveted, by the claims upon his time as Professor
-at the Royal Academy and member of the
-Council; demands all of which he fulfils with
-his characteristic strenuousness and high sense
-of duty. In 1876 he became an Associate
-Member of the Royal Academy, and in 1879 a
-Royal Academician. In 1899 he received the
-well-merited honour of knighthood at the hands
-of Queen Victoria.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not often that Alma Tadema leaves the
-house to which he is devoted, both for its beauty
-and because it harbours all whom he holds dear,
-for he is essentially a domestic man. Occasional
-visits to the English country, which he greatly
-admires, and rare trips to Italy, which he naturally
-loves, are all the holidays he allows himself,
-and even during such changes of place he does
-not permit himself rest, but is ever studying fresh
-effects of light and colour, fresh combinations,
-imbibing fresh artistic suggestions. Nothing
-escapes Tadema's wide-open eyes; he is never
-too weary to receive a new impression.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As a man he has about him no trace of the
-pedantry which might be anticipated from the
-archaic character of his work. He is generous,
-genial, warm-hearted, a lover of jokes and
-anecdotes good and bad, a cheery optimist, a boon
-companion in the best sense of that term. He
-is also the truest and most faithful of friends, and
-the kindest and most large-hearted of teachers.
-His appreciation of the works of others is wide
-and sincere, and, no matter how different this
-work may be from his own style and taste, he
-gives to it its due meed of praise, provided it be
-executed with honest intent.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-London society is familiar with this wiry,
-strong-set figure, with this face of kindly
-comeliness, with the cheery voice, with the frank,
-observant eye, the merry quips and pranks, the
-energy, the intense love of all that is great, and
-good, and lovely. To be with him is to feel
-invigorated, for he seems to have so much superfluous
-vitality that he is able to dispense it to his
-surroundings.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Of his art he rarely speaks, and still more
-rarely of his art-theories. Indeed he is no
-theorist, though he knows perfectly well at what
-ends he aims, and his art, like his personality, is
-homogeneous throughout. But it is not in his
-nature to analyze, he follows his instincts, and
-these are true and right. "To thine own self
-be true," has been his life motto, and faithfully
-has he served it.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-THE WORK OF ALMA TADEMA
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-The first in date of Alma Tadema's
-preserved paintings is a cycle of pictures
-dealing with Merovingian times. To these
-Merovingians he was early attracted, partly
-perhaps because in his old home and birthplace
-relics, such as coins, medals, armour belonging
-to that epoch were the only antiquities the soil
-could boast. Added to this, chance threw into
-his way Gregory of Tours' History of the Franks
-and the quaint old chronicler completely
-captivated his fancy. From this treasure-house of
-fact and fiction he drew a series of pictures which,
-if no more historically correct than Gregory
-himself, were nevertheless carefully pondered
-pieces of archæological improvisation in which
-the minute studies of accessories made while
-still in Frisia stood Alma Tadema in good
-stead. <i>Clotilde at the Grave of her Grandchildren</i>
-was an incident entirely without foundation
-in fact, but one of Gregory's stories had
-suggested the situation, and Tadema at once
-realized its dramatic and pictorial possibilities.
-In treatment this canvas was still a little hard
-and dry, the influence of van Leys' somewhat arid
-manner was too apparent. The same criticism
-applies, but in a less degree, to its successor, the
-work that won for Alma Tadema his first success,
-<i>The Education of the Children of Clovis</i>. This,
-too, was inspired by the old Prankish chronicler,
-and here also, as often in Alma Tadema's art, a
-good deal of previous knowledge is requisite in
-order fully to appreciate the composition. It
-cannot be denied that this is one of the difficulties
-of truly understanding the painter's work.
-His subjects are apt to be at times a little too
-archæological, a little too literary for immediate
-or easy explanation. Their atmosphere is
-inclined to be somewhat remote from common
-knowledge or interest. Nevertheless in this
-canvas the tale is sufficiently told, and already
-the real Alma Tadema is making himself felt in
-the greater richness of the colouring and in the
-skilful disposition of the figures. Quite especially
-free and energetic is the figure of the eldest
-boy throwing his axe at the mark, and that of
-his teacher looking on intently to see how his
-charge conducts himself during this public
-exposition of his prowess. This work, which is
-now the property of the King of the Belgians,
-was bought by the Antwerp Society for the
-Encouragement of the Fine Arts for the paltry sum
-of one thousand six hundred francs, an amount
-which at the time seemed a large remuneration
-to its painter.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This picture was followed by yet others, all
-inspired by the Merovingian chronicles that had
-taken such a firm hold upon the artist's imagination.
-In each successive picture the scheme of
-colour grew fuller and warmer, the dull manner
-of the master van Leys was more and more
-abandoned, the real Alma Tadema made himself
-more and more felt. His own individuality, his
-own methods of conception became manifest.
-This is especially the case in a picture called
-<i>Gonthram Bose</i>, another of the Merovingian
-series. We here see Alma Tadema already
-applying his peculiar capacity of filling in every
-inch of the canvas, thus often giving to the
-tiniest space a sense of vastness, of distance, of
-immensity, that renders his smallest works such
-marvellous gems of concentrated beauty. Of
-course it took time to learn to do this without
-arousing a sense of overcrowding, a fault that
-occurs even in one or two of his later works,
-but more and more as he advanced this danger
-was eliminated and the capabilities hidden in
-this artifice became ever more manifest. The
-little figures with which he peopled his pictures
-also steadily advanced in correctness of movement
-and bore about them a local physiognomy
-that revived an entire historical epoch in a few
-square inches of canvas. The whole Merovingian
-period seemed incarnated in these works.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This same capacity of resuscitating a remote
-historical time was yet more pleasantly revealed
-when Alma Tadema at last turned from painting
-these gorgeous but bloodthirsty barbarians, and
-applied himself instead to the mysterious land
-of Egypt, the source of all culture and all
-knowledge, the land he has never seen, but
-which he has apprehended so wonderfully with
-the eye of his brain. The German Egyptologist
-and novelist, George Ebers, a friend of Alma
-Tadema's, to whom he dedicated one of his
-historical tales, once asked him what it was that had
-turned him from his Franks towards the land of
-Isis. Alma Tadema replied, "Where else should
-I have begun as soon as I became acquainted
-with the life of the ancients? The first thing a
-child learns of ancient history is about the Court
-of Pharaoh, and if we go back to the source of
-art and science must we not return to Egypt?"
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This migration to the Nile closed what may
-be termed Alma Tadema's first artistic period,
-which embraces the ten years that lie between
-1852 and 1862. In 1863 he exhibited his
-<i>Egyptians Three Thousand Years Ago</i>. Here,
-though archæological knowledge was manifest,
-Tadema did not sacrifice his picture to a pedantic
-display of learning. On the contrary, it rather
-seemed his object to show that these dead and
-gone old Egyptians, whom we are too inclined
-to think of as the stiff, lifeless figures that greet
-us from the temples and stone carvings of their
-native land, were men and women like to
-ourselves. A work such as this exhibited great
-study, more perhaps than that demanded by his
-Merovingians. But from the outset it was
-evident that Alma Tadema would not covenant
-with prevailing fashions in art in order to buy
-public favour at a cheap price. He would take
-up no task which did not commend itself to his
-æsthetic faith, to his individual inclination, to
-the particular preferences of his taste. Never,
-even at the outset of his career, when financial
-success had not yet come, did Alma Tadema
-convert his function of artist into an easy or
-lucrative profession.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In <i>The Mummy, The Widow, The Egyptian
-at his Doorway</i>, Tadema for the first time applies
-the methods of genre painting to the treatment
-of antique themes. This novel manner of dealing
-with archæology, which is really of his creation,
-has found a large school of imitators, none
-of whom, however, approach the master either
-for spontaneity of conception or skill of execution.
-This leaning towards genre and its application
-to subjects that had hitherto not invited
-treatment in this manner, may probably be traced
-to Tadema's Dutch origin, seeing that the Dutch
-were past masters in this form of composition,
-which by them was chiefly used to illustrate
-trivial moments of their immediate environment.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The most remarkable of these works is the
-<i>Death of the First-born</i>; indeed, Tadema ranks
-it as his best picture, and has never yet accepted
-any offer for its purchase. It hangs permanently
-in his studio, and is looked upon by his family
-as a priceless possession. The date of this work
-is 1873, when the artist had already begun to
-turn his attention to those Greco-Roman themes
-with which his fame has since been so closely
-associated. As the picture is not familiar to the
-world from reproductions, we will describe it at
-length.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this picture of the last, worst plague of Egypt,
-we find pathos, despair, and that silent grief
-which "whispers to the o'er-fraught heart and
-bids it break."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-We enter a great Egyptian temple where
-darkness and gloom, oppressive in their
-intensity, are only relieved by the gleam of
-moonlight seen through a distant doorway, and by
-a single lamp which makes the surrounding
-shadows more deep. In the foreground is a
-pillar with hieroglyphics inscribed upon it, its
-capital lost in the darkness gives a strange sense
-of awe, but the pervading influence, the power
-of the scene, is the apprehension of death which
-seems to rest over the mighty columns, which
-fills the great temple, which bows to the earth
-Pharaoh himself, for it is his first-born who lies
-dead before him. Priests and musicians are
-gathered round lamps standing on the floor.
-The priests are chanting their prayers, and the
-musicians are touching strange-looking instruments.
-The entire effect is gloomy and awe-inspiring
-in the extreme. The colouring is
-sombre with its inimitable use of greens and
-browns. The surroundings fitly prepare us for
-the central group of four persons who cluster
-round the figure of the desolate king. It is one
-of the extraordinary effects of this picture that
-the accessories strike the observer first, and in
-their mournful disposition prepare him for the
-chief interest, although both spiritually and
-actually, Pharaoh and his attendants hold the
-centre of the canvas. The king sits upon a low
-stool, and across his knees lies the slender body
-of his first-born. The dead face of the almost
-nude youth is indescribably sweet, and around
-his neck hangs limply a strangely-fashioned
-golden chain, probably bearing some amulet to
-shield the king's son from harm. The king,
-upon whose figure the light falls, wears his crown,
-the brilliant jewels of which seem to mock his
-helpless grief. He sits rigid, immovable, the
-strong, proud man will make no sign, but there
-is one feature which even his powerful will cannot
-control, his mouth trembles ever so slightly, so
-faintly that at first it is not distinguishable. But
-what grief it expresses, this faint indistinctness
-of outline! This figure might be taken as the
-embodiment of grief, grief fixed and immutable,
-and like all true emotion, truly expressed, with
-not a hint of morbidness. The mother sits near,
-bowed to the earth in her sorrow. She, too, has
-striven to be strong, and even in this outburst
-of despair, shows self-restraint. At the other
-side of Pharaoh sits the physician whose powers
-have been useless in this combat. Outside the
-temple door two figures approach. They are
-Moses and Aaron coming to behold their work.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This is a truly marvellous picture, and it is
-not strange that Alma Tadema retains it in his
-own hands. It is so true, so complex, so alive,
-that at every view, with every changing light it
-reveals new features, new aspects of sorrow, and
-yet with its profundity of sorrow it is not too
-tragic to live with. It is so true, so human, so
-beautiful, and so deep, that it does not repel.
-About Alma Tadema's art there is nothing false
-or strained; he is always healthy, there is in his
-nature no strain of morbidness, and hence
-whatever he paints appeals direct to the truest
-feelings, whether he paints the glad, sensuous
-world of the ancients, or the tragedies which
-befell them, there is never in his work the sickly
-introspection, the hyper-analysis of modern days.
-Just as in his <i>Tarquinius and Emperor</i>, Alma
-Tadema proved that he could express tragedy,
-so here he has shown conclusively that he can
-express pathos and that he is possessed of a
-deep imagination, which, unfortunately, he puts
-forth all too rarely. Had Alma Tadema created
-but this one superb work he would be among
-the greatest artists of our time.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This <i>Death of the First-born</i> is a true representation
-of Egyptian life, and, as if to prove how
-accurate are the artist's instincts, it is noteworthy
-that he placed at the feet of the dead a wreath
-of flowers which strikingly resembles a like
-garland, found ten years after the picture was
-painted, in the royal tombs of Deir el Bahari.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Meantime however, as we have said, he had
-begun to paint genre pictures of Greek and
-Roman life, and so numerous are these, so
-rapidly did he produce them, that it is
-impossible in our limited space to enumerate even
-the most important. We have chosen a few at
-random, taking care however to select from
-among the most noteworthy. One of his finest
-early Roman pictures is, beyond question, the
-<i>Tarquinius Superbus</i>, in which Tadema has
-shown what tragic power he could wield when
-he wished. But his general inclination leads
-him to let us see his men and women merely as
-they present their outward faces. He cares not
-to look beyond, to apprehend the informing
-intention, the psychic force of his creations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This idiosyncrasy is based on the artist's
-character which is singularly direct, and to which
-introspection and analytic research is distasteful.
-Of quite a different character is the
-<i>Pyrrhic Dance</i>, a wonderful <i>tour de force</i>. We
-are made to feel that these Dorian fighters,
-executing a war-dance, are heavily armed, and
-that it is only their skill and agility which makes
-their choregraphic evolutions appear light under
-such heavily handicapped conditions. Indeed,
-as we know from history, but few could execute
-with grace and skill this "mimic warrior armour
-game" as Plato calls it, it might so easily
-become ridiculous and it is not the least of
-Tadema's merits in this canvas that he has
-treated it without the least touch of exaggeration,
-and with a gravity and dignity that are
-truly admirable.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-<i>The Vintage</i>, painted just before Tadema's
-removal to England, is in some respects one of
-his most important and most characteristic works.
-It has been objected that Alma Tadema is
-essentially a painter of repose. To this picture
-as well as to the <i>Pyrrhic Dance</i> this criticism
-cannot be applied. The first thing that strikes
-us as we look at the work is the sense of motion
-and music which it imparts. Another of the
-objections sometimes made to Alma Tadema's
-work is that his men and women, but more
-especially his women, are not in accordance with
-usually recognized classical standards. His
-favourite types are rather of the heavy build that
-would be connected more readily with Holland
-than with Rome, though in some of the portrait
-busts of empresses preserved in the Vatican, and
-other sculpture galleries, we see frequent
-precedents for this preference, a preference that
-became more and more emphasized after the
-artist's removal to England. In learning, in
-technical excellence, in the remarkable finish of all
-the multitudinous details, the work is admirable.
-Here, too, he has not permitted the
-details to distract our attention from the main
-intention of the picture; we think first and
-last of the procession and put the accessories,
-correct and wonderfully painted though they
-are, into their proper artistic place. Alma
-Tadema's pictures may at times seem to proclaim
-too loudly the equality of all visible things, and
-this equal attention to each object sometimes
-prevents the concentration of our attention upon
-the central point of interest. It is this peculiarity
-which led Ruskin to make his savage and most
-unfair onslaught upon the painter in his Academy
-Notes of 1875.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The <i>Sculpture Gallery</i>, a newer and more
-skilful version of a previous picture on the same
-theme, painted in 1864, furnished the tag upon
-which Ruskin hung his attack. This later
-<i>Sculpture Gallery</i> was the companion to the
-Picture Gallery exhibited at the Royal Academy
-in 1874, which was again a sort of extension of
-an earlier work called the <i>Roman Amateur</i>. In
-the atrium of a Roman house, a fat swarthy
-Roman, a man of little distinction, no doubt a
-<i>nouveau riche</i> of his period, exhibits to his visitors
-a silver statue. There is an impressive pomposity
-about his manner, as though he were dilating
-upon the statue's intrinsic metallic worth rather
-than upon its artistic merits, and his guests seem
-to be on the level of his own artistic tastes.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In the two versions of the <i>Sculpture Gallery</i>
-this idea is extended. In the first version the
-famous Lateran statue of Sophocles was
-introduced, and indeed forms the central point of
-interest. Around it are grouped three Romans,
-one woman and two men, evidently eagerly
-discussing its artistic merits. All Tadema's fine
-draughtsmanship, all his unique skill in the
-painting of lucent surfaces is here to the fore.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The second <i>Sculpture Gallery</i> was yet more
-elaborate in design and purpose. The work of
-art exhibited in this instance is placed within a
-back shop of the epoch, the front towards the
-streets being reserved for smaller and less
-important objects. A company of rich amateurs
-has evidently sauntered in to behold the latest
-acquisitions of the dealer. A colossal vase,
-poised upon a revolving pedestal, is especially
-claiming their attention. A slave slowly turns
-it round that they may view it in every light.
-We know him to be a slave by the crescent-shaped
-token he wears suspended from his neck. The
-effect of in-door and out-door illumination, and
-of reflected light from the shimmering surfaces of
-the objects in the shop is rendered with scientific
-accuracy and rare technical ability. Full of
-ingenious and most difficult light effects, too, is
-the <i>Picture Gallery</i>, in which we see a crowd
-of noble Roman dames and knights admiring
-the triptychs of the period wherewith the walls
-are hung and the easels loaded.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-This theme, with considerable variants, had
-been treated once before by Tadema. Indeed,
-he is fond of repeating his initial idea in different
-shape. This time the work is called <i>Antistius
-Labeon</i>. It represents an amateur Roman
-painter, a contemporary of Vespasian, showing
-off his latest productions to the friends who have
-dropped into his studio. It seems, so Tadema
-tells us, that the gentleman painter, who was a
-Roman pro-consul, was rather looked down upon
-by his contemporaries for his amateur tastes. It
-was thought gentlemanly in those days to admire
-art but not to practise it, an idea that even in early
-Victorian days we find not quite extinct.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-032"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-032.jpg" alt="AT THE SHRINE OF VENUS.">
-<br>
-AT THE SHRINE OF VENUS.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was on these two fine works, <i>The Sculpture
-Gallery</i> and <i>The Picture Gallery</i>, that Alma
-Tadema's world-wide reputation was first based.
-A great continental dealer bought them, and as
-engravings as well as in the widely exhibited
-originals they became familiar to all lovers of the
-beautiful. From this time onward Alma Tadema
-could not paint fast enough to satisfy the demands
-made upon his brush; but this success only
-increased the rigidity of the demands he made
-upon himself. The more successful Alma
-Tadema has been, the more conscientious has he
-become, a rare quality, and one that cannot be
-too highly praised or too much admired. His
-passionate love of colour, a passion that seems
-to have grown upon him as time passed, and as
-he abandoned more and more his earlier drier
-manner, found expression after his election as
-associate to the Royal Academy in a number of
-small but most perfect little canvases that often
-dealt with nothing in particular, and to which the
-artist was at times embarrassed to give names,
-or whose titles, when found, were not specially
-distinctive, but which each in their kind was a
-perfect gem of technique of radiant tints. And
-after all, why need a picture have a name, <i>à tout
-prix</i>? Whistler was not so wrong when he labelled
-some of his works as "Symphonies" and "Harmonies"
-of colour. Such titles would best describe
-many of Alma Tadema's smaller colour
-creations.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And now, his own line fully found, Tadema
-worked on steadily, without haste or pause. In
-a <i>milieu</i> far distant indeed from the scene of
-their creation, a London atmosphere, a London
-sky, he caused to live again for a while in
-effigy the men and maidens of Magna Graecia, of
-Rome, of Parthenope, and above all of Sicily, for
-Tadema's out-door scenes are too southern in
-feeling and in tone even for the furthest shores
-of the Peninsula, and belong by rights to the
-Syren isle. Here alone are found the unclouded
-sapphire skies, the seas sun-bathed and
-innocent of angry waves, the luxuriant vegetation,
-the mad wealth of roses that seem to spring by
-magic from Tadema's brush, and are the outcome
-of his fervid imagination that can behold these
-things with his mental vision while fog and grim
-winter are raging outside. It is one of Tadema's
-rare and precious gifts that he can see his picture
-finished before he has put brush to canvas. It
-is this gift which makes it unnecessary for him
-to execute the usual amount of sketching, indeed,
-Tadema may be said not to sketch at all;
-it is this that lends to his hand his rare security,
-and this that helps towards his precision of
-execution. Everything is clearly, sharply
-outlined in his art. His canvases show no quiet,
-slumberous distances, no mysterious twilights of
-life or nature. All is evident, all is distinct, all
-sharply defined as in the meridional landscape
-that he loves, and all this is rendered with that
-accuracy, with those small touches of extreme
-sharpness, which recall the precise methods of
-his Dutch pictorial ancestors. These are merits,
-but they are merits that also contain hidden
-within their excellence the germs of what by
-some may be considered as defects. There is
-apt to be a lack of repose about a picture of
-Alma Tadema's, our eye is not necessarily led at
-once to the central purpose of the work, each
-action seems of equal importance, and is painted
-in the same scheme of values.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-As an example of Alma Tadema's painstaking,
-and of how he lets no trouble or expense stand
-in the way of making his pictures just as perfect
-as possible, it may be mentioned that during the
-whole of the winter when he was at work on his
-<i>Heliogabalus</i> the artist sent twice a week for boxes
-of fresh roses from the Riviera. Thus each
-flower may be said to have been painted from a
-different model.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Only once in his life did Alma Tadema paint
-a life-size nude figure. This was the work called
-<i>A Sculptor's Model</i>. It was inspired by the Venus
-of the Esquiline, then but lately unearthed; the
-painter's intention was to show, as far as possible,
-the conditions under which such a masterpiece
-might have been created. It was also painted
-as a model for his pupil John Collier, one of the
-very few pupils whom Alma Tadema has ever
-received into his studio.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It should be mentioned that Alma Tadema
-at times paints in water colours as well as in oils,
-a medium he manipulates most successfully, and
-which lends itself most admirably to his limpid
-effects of sea and sky. He has also of late years
-taken to portrait painting. His wonderfully
-careful technique has here full play, and the
-perfection of finish fills us with admiration. But,
-despite their merits, it is hard to think of these
-portraits as Alma Tadema's; with his name,
-whether we will or no, we are forced to associate
-blue skies, placid seas, spring flowers, youths and
-maidens in the heyday of life, and a sense of
-old-world happiness and distance from our less
-beautiful modern existence and surroundings.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-THE ART OF ALMA TADEMA
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-It is fortunately not possible to define with
-real precision the position Sir Lawrence
-Alma Tadema occupies in art, since happily he
-is still living and working among us&mdash;and long
-may he so live to turn out yet other scores of
-sun-filled joyous canvases, speaking to a weary
-and hard-driven generation, of vanished and more
-placid times, when existence was less restless and
-more æsthetically conceived! Nor, though he
-has had imitators by the dozen, is it as yet
-possible to determine the exact nature of the
-influence he has exerted upon the art of his age,
-for with rare exceptions these imitators have
-turned out frigid, lifeless works that bear the
-same relation to the master's style and manner
-as oleographs bear to original paintings. Neither
-is it quite possible to classify Alma Tadema's
-manner. A number of influences, partly extraneous,
-or accidental, partly the result of birth
-and atavism, have resulted in causing his art to
-be <i>sui generis</i>. If he must be classed at all,
-although a much younger man, he might be
-grouped with those artists who came to the fore
-on the continent soon after the upheaving epoch
-of 1848, men who endeavoured to revive the more
-intimate life of Greece and Rome upon their
-canvas, and who in France went by the name of
-neo-Greeks or Pompeists. This trend was a
-reaction from the older classical school that was
-headed by Jacques Louis David, whose productions
-were distinguished by a certain austere
-dignity of conception, by elaborate accuracy of
-form, but, on the other hand, were generally cold
-and unreal in sentiment, unpleasantly monotonous
-in colouring, and defective in their arrangement
-of light and shade.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It has been most felicitously remarked, that if
-David may be named the Corneille of the Roman
-Empire, Alma Tadema may be said to be its
-Sardou. He has made his ancients more living,
-he has resuscitated them with less visible effort;
-he seems to have an instinctive comprehension
-of antiquity. His is not the Rome of Ingres, of
-Poussin, of grand public ceremonies, of battles,
-of the Forum and the rostrum, of actions that
-upheaved the world; he gives us instead the
-home life of this people, Rome such as we
-divine it to have been from Cicero's letters to
-Atticus, the life of the ancients as presented to
-us in the plays of Terence and Plautus. It is
-not mere historical painting that he aims at,
-indeed his art bears the same relation to history
-as does the anecdote to serious narrative, a
-lighter species which nevertheless often throws a
-brighter light upon the past than scores of learned
-tomes. And this result is largely achieved by
-his love of detail, which causes him to crowd his
-canvas with masses of those authentic bibelots
-which ancient and recent excavations and the
-aid of photography have brought within the reach
-of all.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The elder classical painters thought to render
-their work more truly classical by placing their
-protagonists in large empty monumental spaces,
-just as Corneille and Racine thought to give the
-true classical ring to their plays when they
-removed them from every-day emotions, and
-rolled out high-sounding and rhetorical phrases.
-Alma Tadema, instead, is convinced that these
-dead-and-gone folk were in all fundamental
-essentials like to ourselves, that they lived, loved,
-joked and chattered just as we do, and this
-conviction has found expression in his pictures
-that deal less and less with the graver, grander
-moments of their existence, and more with the
-petty intimate details of their home life. His
-pictures might almost be said to be a series of
-instantaneous reproductions of the life of the
-Roman patricians. The plebs have no interest
-for him, they rarely figure in his canvases, and
-when they do their figures are entirely subordinate.
-The Roman of Alma Tadema's pictures
-abides in a world of idle luxury, in which nothing
-matters much unless it ministers to sensuous
-enjoyment. It is the outward seeming of life
-and objects that attracts him, their inner deeper
-meaning matters to him as little as their subject.
-The life aim of his men and women seems to
-be to exist happily and placidly, untroubled by
-material cares or disturbing emotions.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In his method of composing his pictures Alma
-Tadema's manner is also the absolute antithesis
-of what is commonly regarded as the classic
-method. So far is he from putting his principal
-personages well into the middle of his canvas,
-from following a pyramidal arrangement, that in
-his effort to be natural and unconventional, he
-even at times commits extravagances in order to
-escape from the beaten path, as, for example, in
-his portrait of Dr. Epps, in which there are
-shown one head and a bust, no arms, but three
-hands, the third being that of the unseen patient
-whose pulse the physician is supposed to feel.
-This is an extreme instance, but a tendency to
-dismember his figures, to show us only half a
-figure, a detached head, a hand without a body,
-a foot without a visible leg, occurs every now and
-again, and not certainly to the detriment of a
-realistic effect, but most certainly to the detriment
-of composition as classically understood. This
-tendency, no doubt, results from his love of
-Japanese art, an art that has had a visible
-influence upon his methods of disposing his
-composition. Indeed, it might almost be said
-that Alma Tadema does not compose his pictures
-at all. He certainly does not do so according to
-the ordinary acceptance of the term in art, he
-rather disposes his personages about his canvas,
-apparently at hazard, much as they might group
-themselves in real life. But under this seeming
-negligence, is hidden great care, immense
-painstaking, a striving to give to his pictures
-their maximum of expressive force, for in Alma
-Tadema's work, everything as well as every
-person, has its suggestive purpose. As M. de la
-Sizeranne has well said, few painters have less of
-that element which in the jargon of the studio is
-known as <i>poids mort</i>. But this very merit causes
-his pictures to lack concentration. There is no
-point on which our eye fixes at once as the
-central, most important, and the meaning of the
-whole may often be hidden in some accessory
-that the ordinary observer is apt to overlook.
-Thus, for example, in one of his Claudius series
-is seen, poised on a cippus, a head of Augustus,
-dominating as it were the whole bloody, rowdy,
-undignified scene. How many who see the
-work have remarked that the bust is turned
-toward a picture that represents a naval engagement,
-and that underneath this picture is written
-the single word "Actium," suggestive of a vast
-antithesis. Subtle little touches such as these
-often render Alma Tadema's more important
-works a puzzle to those unversed in classic lore,
-and oblige us to class him, if classed he must be,
-among the erudite artists whose roots are planted
-in the soil of literature. Yet, surely, if there
-exists a domain where erudition should take a
-secondary place it is that of art, which shares
-with poetry the high privilege of soaring so high
-as to have the right to disdain the mere minutiae
-of history, the petty details of life.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Happily, Alma Tadema is saved from being a
-cold, unattractive antiquarian painter by his
-rare keen sense of beauty, and here again we
-come in contact with the difficulty of ranging him
-as we might range his pseudo-classic brethren.
-The spectator who misses the allusions, the
-meaning of his subject-pictures, nevertheless finds
-matter for full and intense enjoyment as he
-contemplates the lovely fabrics, the cool half-shades,
-the clear sunlight, the exquisite flowers, the
-heat-saturated sea and sky, the marbles and the
-bric-à-brac that appear on almost every canvas, and
-are painted with a skill, a consummate science
-that captivates the connoisseur, and with a reality
-that delights the uninstructed crowd.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Briefly, Alma Tadema's double nationality,
-his Dutch birth, his long English residence,
-coupled with his classic tastes, his admiration
-for the Japanese, have contributed to render his
-art a curious complex of conflicting tendencies,
-tendencies that in themselves are again welded
-into a harmonious whole by the idiosyncrasy of
-the man. We seem to feel, even through the
-medium of his pictures, his kind-heartedness,
-his quick appreciation of all that is good and
-beautiful, his dislike of mystery, of vain searchings
-in dark mental places, his love of sunshine,
-moral and real. Others might paint his portraits
-as well, but none can paint those exquisite southern
-idylls of which such numbers have issued
-from his brush and brain. He has been called
-the painter of repose. I should rather be inclined
-to style him the painter of gladness, of the joy
-of life. The artistic world has certainly been
-rendered the sunnier by his works.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
-OUR ILLUSTRATIONS
-</h3>
-
-<p>
-Amongst the many famous and popular
-pictures by Alma Tadema it is a little
-difficult to know which to select, and our object
-has been to make a representative collection,
-while avoiding those which are already familiar
-to all through the windows of the print shops.
-A work that shows him in one of his most
-tragic moments, a mood he does not often
-exhibit, for this master of sunny nature prefers to
-paint sunny themes, is the <i>Ave Caesar! Iò
-Saturnalia!</i> The story of Caligula's tragic
-ending and the election of Claudius as Emperor
-seems to have had a curious attraction for the
-artist. He painted the theme three times, though
-with considerable variants, first as the <i>Claudius</i>,
-then as <i>The Roman Emperor</i>, and finally, and
-in its finest version, as the <i>Ave Caesar! Iò
-Saturnalia!</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The first of the series on the subject simply
-styled <i>Claudius</i> though full of life, solemnity and
-graphic force, was surpassed by its successors, into
-which the artist infused more of his wonderful
-genius for archæological indivination. This first
-Claudius belonged to a set of pictures ordered
-from Alma Tadema by the dealer M. Gambart.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The second, <i>The Roman Emperor</i>, was
-painted after his removal to London. In this
-new version Alma Tadema also adopted a
-scheme of colour that was absolutely new to
-him, to the consternation, it is said, of some of
-his clients, who saw in this departure an alarming
-tendency towards pre-Raphaelitism. According
-to them it was distinctly unfair to the
-public for this artist to change his style. Where
-were the white marbles, the dresses of pale, soft
-tints to which they were accustomed in his
-canvases? Here he had boldly introduced a girl
-of the Roman people with hair of pure copper
-tints, and even the corpse was clad in a dress of
-brilliant blue and vivid purple, while the purity
-of the marble pavement was stained not only
-with the blood of the slain, but was also a
-confusion of restless coloured mosaics that
-distracted the eye from the picture's main purpose.
-Criticism waxed hot around this canvas which
-seemed to threaten a revolution in the artist's
-methods.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-But it was only a passing phase and proved of
-no real import. Alma Tadema's pictures continued
-as before to be distinguished by a certain
-calm and majestic solemnity, such as suits best
-the Roman people whom by choice he represented.
-Still this third and finest version of the
-Claudius story can scarcely be classed among
-his calmer works. It is dramatic and full of
-movement. For brilliant colouring, for vigorous
-drawing, for its admirable archæological verity
-this picture is distinguished even among Alma
-Tadema's many distinguished works. Note too
-that it is painted in proportions so small as
-would hardly suffice a latter-day Italian artist
-for the depicting of a cauliflower. But Alma
-Tadema, far from thinking that a canvas must
-be large in proportion to the importance of his
-subject, is of the opinion that minute
-dimensions tend to excite the imagination and give
-to a work a more poetic and ideal character.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-048"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-048.jpg" alt="&quot;AVE CÆSAR! IO SATURNALIA.&quot;">
-<br>
-&quot;AVE CÆSAR! IO SATURNALIA.&quot;
-</p>
-
-<p>
-In this <i>Ave Caesar! Iò Saturnalia!</i> we look
-upon the man whose supposed imbecility saved
-him from the cruel fate to which Caligula
-subjected his relations, found by the soldiery in a
-corner of the palace where he had hid himself
-in his dread, a hiding place whence the
-Praetorians dragged him forth and proclaimed him
-their ruler. We see the elected Emperor, his
-face blanched with terror, holding for support to
-the curtain which has lately hid his trembling
-form from the pursuing soldiers and the populace.
-These ironically salute him as Imperator.
-Especially obsequious and excellent in rendering
-is the figure of the guard who has drawn aside
-the heavy drapery. A confused heap of corpses,
-all that is left of those who have been slain in
-defence of their murdered master, litter the
-marble pavement. Above them, laurel crowned,
-smile down in marble indifference the portrait
-busts of other Caesars now dead and gone to
-their account. In the far corner is huddled
-the populace mingled with the lance-bearing
-soldiers. They are sarcastically amused by
-Claudius's undignified election to the great
-Roman throne. Tragedy and comedy are
-most felicitously fused. Furthermore,
-wonderful though the details be, as they always are
-with Alma Tadema, in this case the accessories
-do not withdraw our attention for one moment
-from the human interest. Marbles and draperies,
-metals and flowers, though so perfectly rendered,
-take their natural place in the composition
-without detracting from the central interest.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And yet how exquisite in their archæological
-and æsthetic perfection are these accessories. No
-wonder that in a picture from Alma Tadema's
-hand we look quite as much for the marbles, the
-hangings, the stuffs, the mosaics, the trees, and
-the flowers, as for the faces of his creations. It
-would almost seem at times as though he had
-painted these accessories with even more care
-than he bestowed upon his men and women, as
-if they interested him more. Indeed, where
-flowers are concerned Alma Tadema seems to
-give to them an inner life, a very physiognomy,
-his flowers are inimitable, both as suggestions
-and as realities. Even in the choice made it is
-quite remarkable how there is always a peculiar
-fitness to the picture's theme. Is there not, for
-example, to note but a few instances, a tragic
-impress about the poppy beds in his picture of
-<i>Tarquinius Superbus</i>? Have not his red and
-pink oleanders a bloom and blush as fitting as
-that on the faces of the young lovers they shade?
-Do not the cypresses and the stone pines in his
-<i>Improvisatore</i> adumbrate all the solemn
-mournfulness of a Roman garden? Is there not a
-sensual note in the prodigality of roses that
-inundates his <i>Heliogabalus</i>? Are they not almost
-arch in his <i>Love's Missile</i>, in <i>Shy</i>, to name but
-a few of the many pictures in which trees and
-flowers figure as the very embodiment of the
-summer of life and nature.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Indeed, so exquisitely, so superbly painted are
-these flowers that in some of Alma Tadema's
-minor pictures they actually assume the upper
-hand, though of course unconsciously to the
-painter, and become the protagonists in the
-composition. There is one picture which he
-calls simply <i>Oleanders</i>, showing that he
-recognized himself how the flowers had impressed
-his imagination and gained precedence over the
-human beings with whom they were associated.
-Tadema's flowers are very poems, and had he
-painted nothing but these he would have been
-a great artist.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-050"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-050.jpg" alt="SPRING.">
-<br>
-SPRING.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It was of course inevitable that when he chose
-<i>Spring</i> as his theme the composition should
-be rich in the delineation of such blossoms.
-In this picture all the perfumed profusion of a
-southern May is summed up within the space of
-one little canvas. A bevy of matrons, maidens
-and children precedes what was probably an
-ecclesiastical procession. They wend their way
-through the marble-paved streets of Imperial
-Rome to some temple shrine, therein to celebrate
-the rites of joy due to the newly awakened
-season. Flower-crowned are the fair human
-blossoms, flower-laden their garments, flower-filled
-the "offering-platters" they are about to lay
-on the altar of the god. The house-tops, those
-fair flat house-tops of Southern Italy, the spaces
-between the columns, the loggias and the
-porticoes, are crowded with eager spectators.
-These, too, are flower-wreathed and flower-laden.
-Joy-filled, spring-intoxicated, they rain down
-upon the gay procession beneath, posies and
-blossoms in glad and multi-coloured abundance.
-Marble and flowers, sunshine and blue skies, all
-life's gladness is here embodied by a painter's
-loving brush.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-And how easy it all looks. We feel as if the
-painter had just thrown all this lovely profusion
-with rapid hand upon the canvas. But those
-who have the privilege of knowing Alma Tadema
-intimately and have watched the genesis of his
-pictures, watched them as they grow from under
-his brush, know how long and patiently he
-worked at this very canvas which gives an
-effect of spontaneity as though created <i>d'un seul
-jet</i>. Again and again did he scrape down his
-work, erasing recklessly the most exquisite little
-figures, the most perfectly modelled heads,
-because they failed to satisfy the exigencies of the
-painter. Hence in this finished form the <i>Spring</i>
-represents the work of two or three pictures.
-And this is constantly the case in Alma Tadema's
-paintings. From each canvas has been erased
-some gem, under each picture is hidden some
-exquisite detail, painted over regardlessly by the
-artist; no matter how lovely it may be in itself,
-if it fails to fit into the <i>ensemble</i> it is always
-destroyed. Hence there is in his pictures no
-corner or space that is neglected or hastily
-blocked in. All is as perfect as he knows how
-to make it, and I have heard him say, not rarely,
-that a little glimpse of sky, some little peep into
-the open, has given him as much labour as
-the entire picture.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-For this excessive scrupulousness, this
-difficulty to be satisfied with his own work Alma
-Tadema has often been criticised by critics.
-Quite unjustly so, surely. Without this quality
-half of his power would be absent. It is due
-to this great attention to detail, this ceaseless
-searching after ever greater perfection, that Alma
-Tadema has made for himself a style of his
-own. Thus, for example, when he perceived
-that his colouring was too sombre, he reformed
-it by dint of diligence and care. He has never
-deceived himself regarding his own limitations&mdash;for
-who has not limitations, even among the
-greatest?&mdash;nor has he ever juggled with his
-æsthetic conscience.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-An emancipation from the conventional codes
-that is almost Japanese is another feature of his
-work. Alma Tadema does not hesitate to show
-us some of his personages as standing half
-outside the canvas, or cut through mid-body, or
-strangely placed in corners, or at the edge of
-the composition. Neither does he deem it
-needful that the principal action, as laid down
-by academic canons, should be placed in the
-very centre of the picture. It is this that gives
-the unusual note to many of his compositions,
-that was unusual in the days when they were
-still unknown, for since those days his work has
-been subjected to that imitation which the old
-proverb tells us is the sincerest form of flattery.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-054"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-054.jpg" alt="AN AUDIENCE AT AGRIPPA's.">
-<br>
-AN AUDIENCE AT AGRIPPA's.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Sterner and more stately than <i>Spring</i>, indeed
-grand in its conception and execution, is
-<i>An Audience at Agrippa's</i>, in which a whole
-historic epoch is crystallized and rendered
-concrete. Here fidelity to archæological truth has
-but enhanced the importance of the scene and
-helped to throw it into prominence; nor are the
-details unduly emphasized to the detriment of
-the whole. In some respects this is one of
-Tadema's best conceived and most satisfactorily
-executed pictures. From an atrium on a high
-level, down a broad flight of steps, majestically
-descends Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, the greatest
-and mightiest burgher of his day. He is clad in
-imperial red, and stands out marvellously against
-the white marble of the stairs. His face is set
-with a look of stern determination that speaks of
-unbending will. He is followed by a crowd of
-persons, some of whom are still bowing, though
-Agrippa has passed by. Upon the landing at
-the bottom of the stairs&mdash;a marvel of blue
-mosaics with a tiger skin lying across it&mdash;there
-is a table. On this stands a silver Mars and
-materials for writing, for the use of two scribes
-standing behind it. Note the character in these
-heads, the close-cropped hair that denotes their
-servile rank, the cringing salute, each trying to
-outbid the other in humility of manner. Just
-before these figures, at the foot of the
-staircase, stands the world-famed Vatican statue
-of Augustus Imperator, the only man whose
-supremacy proud Agrippa would acknowledge,
-his device being, "To obey in masterly fashion,
-but obedience to one person only." Below this
-statue, where the staircase seems to turn at the
-landing, is another group. These three suitors,
-father, son, and daughter, are about to render a
-gift to accompany their petition, for they know
-it is well to conciliate even the wealthy with
-gifts. Behind the whole shimmers one of those
-wonderful effects of light and sky that Tadema
-rarely fails to introduce. Like his Dutch
-ancestors, he is never happy unless he can get
-some peep into the open through a window or
-a terrace. He welcomes any device by which is
-accomplished an outlet to the sky, producing
-thus an enhanced sense of space and atmosphere.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The greater part of this picture was painted in
-1875, when the artist spent the winter in Rome,
-being driven out of England by the wreck of his
-lovely house in Regent's Park. I well remember
-those days in the Eternal City, and one little
-incident connected with this picture illustrates
-a delightful trait in Alma Tadema's character
-and his naive enjoyment of his own work. He
-had finished the tiger skin which lies at the foot
-of the stairs, and in his delight over its
-successful achievement, he asked me in boyish glee,
-"Don't you see him wag his tail?"
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-Even in the indoor picture called <i>An Earthly
-Paradise</i> (see <i>frontispiece</i>), the sense of
-atmosphere and space is not absent. The tale is here
-told with direct simplicity, a young mother
-adoring her firstborn as mothers have done since
-time began. The dress, the furniture, the
-surroundings are classic, the sentiment is of all times
-and all ages.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-<i>A Reading from Homer</i> (see illustration, p. 16)
-reproduces some of Tadema's favourite devices,&mdash;a
-marble semicircular bench, a distant glimpse
-of tranquil sapphire seas, lustrous garments,
-and flower-wreathed characters. With eager
-enthusiasm the reader seated on his chair recites
-from a roll of papyrus that rests upon his
-knees. Of his four auditors only the woman,
-daffodil-wreathed, sits upon the marble exedra.
-One hand rests upon a tambourine, beside which
-is flung a bunch of flowers. The other holds
-that of a youth who sits upon the ground beside
-her. His other hand touches a lyre idly, but
-without sound, his entire interest is centred
-upon the reciter, whose words he follows with
-the eyes of his soul and of his intellect. Yet
-another youth lies prone upon the marble floor,
-his chin resting upon his hand. He, too, gazes
-in entranced wonder as he listens to the
-immortal verses of the Hellenic bard. On the
-left stands another figure, also flower-garlanded
-and wrapped in a toga. His face reveals that
-his, too, is a keen appreciation of the power of
-the words being recited. Rarely has even
-Tadema's magic brush painted a more luminous
-work, so suggestive of sunlight, so truly
-transfigured and remote from life's grosser moments.
-Here, too, his flesh treatment is above his own
-high average. The modelling of the woman's
-figure and of the lover is especially fine.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It seems incredible, and yet it is true, that
-this composition, a large one for Alma Tadema,
-with its five figures and innumerable accessories,
-was entirely painted in the brief space of
-two months. Still, though completed in so short
-a time, the preliminary studies, including an
-abandoned picture, which was to have been
-called <i>Plato</i>, filled eight months of close application.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-058"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-058.jpg" alt="SAPPHO.">
-<br>
-SAPPHO.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Not unlike in general treatment and in general
-purpose to the <i>Reading from Homer</i> is the picture
-simply entitled <i>Sappho</i>. In order to properly
-comprehend this work, however, some knowledge
-of the life story of the Greek poetess is required.
-Not a few visitors to the Royal Academy, where
-the picture was exhibited, imagined, with
-pardonable inaccuracy, that the seated figure
-playing the lute, and which certainly, at first sight,
-seems the most prominent, filled the title role.
-Instead, this is Alcaeus, the man who desired
-to gain the support of the mighty and gifted
-Sappho, for a political scheme of which he
-was the chief promoter. But besides being
-a political rhymer, Alcaeus was also Sappho's
-lover, and as he is here rendered, it is the lover
-who is most emphasized. Sappho herself sits
-behind a species of desk, on which rests the
-wreath, bound with ribands, that was the crown
-of poets. She is robed in pale green and gray,
-and in accordance with tradition, her raven
-black hair is filleted with violets. Beside her
-stands a young girl, her daughter, a sweetly
-graceful form, less lovely than the mother, but
-suggestive of maidenhood's enchantments. The
-poetess is seated on the lowest tier of the marble
-triple-rowed exedra, on which, at a respectful
-distance, are also disposed some of the pupils
-of her school. Dark, wide-branched fir trees
-spread their crowns above this bench. We are
-made to realize that their trunks are rooted far
-below, there where the deep blue sea, shimmering
-in the background, laps the earth that
-supports this scene. Through the branches is
-seen the sky, a sky of purest sapphire, a blue
-distinct from that of the tideless tranquil ocean,
-but no less glorious or intense. Nowhere
-perhaps better than here has Tadema reproduced
-the effects of summer seas and skies in their
-brilliant ardour, their palpitating delicacy of hue
-and texture. The very air that pervades the
-picture is hot and light, saturated and quivering
-with the quickening pulsation of a southern sun.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-The intimate life of the Roman women has
-often attracted Alma Tadema's brush. We see
-this again and again in <i>Well-protected Slumber</i>,
-in <i>Quiet Pets</i>, in <i>Departure</i>, the scene suggested
-by Theocritus's fifteenth Idyll, in <i>The Bath</i>, in
-<i>Apodyterium</i> (or women's disrobing-room), and
-it is also accentuated in the <i>Shrine of Venus</i>,
-a scene in a Roman hairdresser's shop. This
-picture was exhibited at the Royal Academy in
-1889, where it attracted considerable attention,
-not only because of the perfection of its
-painting, the beauty of marbles and metals and
-textiles, the richness of its soft, full colour, its
-yellows and blues, but because of the masterly
-skill with which the human figures were painted
-(see illustration, p. 32).
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Two beautiful young girls, one awaiting her
-turn to be <i>coiffée</i>, caressing the masses of her
-thick, dark, loosened hair, the other already
-dressed, lingering to gossip with her friend, are
-reclining on a marble bench. These are so
-entirely absorbed in their own beauty that they pay
-but slight attention to the entrance of a tall,
-simply attired matron, who, glancing inquiringly
-in their direction, passes on to an inner apartment.
-In sweeping by she has carelessly plucked
-one from a mass of blossoms heaped upon a
-coloured marble table in the outer shop, and her
-hand, holding the flower, falls heavily beside the
-warm white folds of her gown. At the open
-lunette shop window, exposing to view coils and
-twists of hair, some attendants are distributing
-vases and lotions to the customers, whose heads
-appear above the marble balustrade, on which
-stands a deep blue vase, encrusted with exquisite
-enamel figures. The figure of the attendant who
-is reaching down an alabaster pot is especially
-graceful and free in poise.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-Although the marble screen, surmounted by
-fluted columns, and the lunette window are
-sliced off at the top, the picture gives no
-impression of confinement. This sense of space is
-increased by the rim of a marble basin in the
-immediate foreground, the reclining figures which
-lower the eye level, and the skilful introduction
-through the open window, above the heads of
-the passers-by, of the entrance columns and
-intricate façade of an adjoining building. The
-triangle of blue sky and the blue glass vase
-standing out against the distant columns of the
-building across the square form one of Alma Tadema's
-many happy combinations.
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p>
-In some respects the most important picture
-painted by Alma Tadema of late years is called
-<i>The Coliseum</i>, which excited wondering praise for
-its masterly handling, its colour scheme, its
-archæological knowledge, when exhibited at the
-Royal Academy in 1896. Attached to the title
-in the catalogue was this motto from Lord
-Byron's "Don Juan" that gave the keynote to
-that which the artist desired to express:
-</p>
-
-<p class="poem">
- &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"And here the buzz of eager nations ran<br>
- In murmured pity, or loud-roared applause,<br>
- As man was slaughtered by his fellow man,<br>
- And wherefore slaughtered, wherefore, but because<br>
- Such were the bloody circus' genial laws,<br>
- And the Imperial pleasure. Wherefore not?"<br>
-</p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
-Dominating the whole picture, and occupying
-more than half of its canvas, is the huge Flavian
-Amphitheatre colloquially known throughout
-the whole world as <i>the</i> Coliseum. Even in the
-title therefore in this case the inanimate object
-takes the first place, relegating to a secondary
-rank the human interest. Very wonderfully
-does the artist convey to our eyes a sense of the
-gigantic bulk and height of the huge Amphitheatre,
-and with accurate archæological knowledge
-has he reconstructed its form upon his
-canvas. Here are its two tiers of arcades, whose
-arches, we learn from the evidence of tradition,
-inscriptions and ancient coins, were filled, as in
-the painting, with groups of colossal white marble
-statues. Above these arcades rose a series of
-pilasters, and above these again, supported on
-the topmost parapet, were stout poles that held
-the velarium or canvas awning which sheltered
-from the sun or rain the thousands of spectators
-gathered to witness the bloody deeds which took
-place in the arena below. These supporting
-poles stand out distinct against the glowing sky,
-a sky always introduced if possible by Alma
-Tadema. The hour chosen is late afternoon,
-when from out the Amphitheatre pour the
-thousands who have lately thronged the tiers upon
-tiers of seats that surrounded the arena, high
-functionaries and proletariat, tender-born ladies
-and women of the market-place, all equally eager
-to witness the orgies of blood that were here
-enacted. Outside the broad walk that encircled
-the Amphitheatre stood the famous Baths of
-Titus, second only in magnificence to the
-Coliseum itself. Alma Tadema has imagined for it
-a balcony of white marble, raised high above the
-road. On its parapet stand tall wide-mouthed
-sculptured vases, connected together with thick
-festoons of yellow daffodils proving that the
-season of the year is Alma Tadema's favourite
-one of early spring. A nude bronze statue of a
-nymph wreathing her tresses, in accordance with
-the usages of the Baths, crowns the parapet of
-the balcony. Around her feet too, are twined
-the wreaths of yellow flowers that give such a
-sunny note to the whole scheme of colour. Two
-ladies and a child have taken up their station
-on this festively decorated parapet, evidently
-come thither to witness some spectacle of quite
-unusual importance that has called to the arena
-not only the populace, but even the Consul
-himself, who, preceded by his clients, and
-attended by his lictors, is seen issuing from the
-main exit of the Coliseum, which was almost
-in front of the Baths. To keep the way clear
-for the grandees, some guards are roughly pushing
-back the dense crowd that is packed on
-either side of the roadway. Yet another crowd
-is issuing from the side door of the Coliseum.
-This mob is chiefly composed of plebs, though
-among them are mingled palanquin bearers plying
-for hire. Yet further off again is seen the
-Arch of Constantine and the famous goal known
-as the Meta Sudans.
-</p>
-
-<p class="capcenter">
-<a id="img-064"></a>
-<br>
-<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-064.jpg" alt="THE COLISEUM.">
-<br>
-THE COLISEUM.
-</p>
-
-<p>
-It is not quite evident what it is that chiefly
-interests these lady spectators. We are told that
-the dark-haired and elder of the two is the little
-girl's mother. For safety's sake she plucks at
-the child's gown for fear the little one in her
-excitement should fall over the low parapet.
-The younger lady is more eager in her interest.
-She, who is supposed to be the child's
-governess, has evidently recognized some one,
-friend or lover, in the crowd immediately below
-to whom the child is excitedly pointing. The
-"Athenæum," when describing this picture on
-its first exhibition, wrote concerning it:
-</p>
-
-<p>
-"It would be difficult to do justice to the
-breadth, brilliance and homogeneity (in spite of
-its innumerable details) of this splendid picture.
-The painting of the minutest ornaments, the
-folds of the ladies' garments, even the huge
-festoons we have referred to, and the delicate
-sculptor's work of the vases and mouldings on
-the balcony are equally noteworthy. Even more
-to be admired are the faces, of which that of the
-maiden in blue is undoubtedly the sweetest and
-freshest of all Mr. Alma Tadema's imaginings.
-Her companion (the more stately matron) who
-wears a diadem of silver in her black hair,
-illustrates a pure Greek type of which the painter
-has given us several examples, but none so fine
-as this one, which is very skilfully relieved against
-the peacock fan of gorgeous colours which she
-holds in her hand. It is easy to imagine that in
-her noble spirit some thought of the victims
-of the Amphitheatre arose, which explains the
-painter's intention in choosing the motto of the
-Coliseum."
-</p>
-
-<p>
-The picture is certainly in every respect
-worthy of Alma Tadema's high reputation and
-is a perfect example of his style, a brilliant
-work, true and complete in every touch.
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
- THE PRINCIPAL PICTURES
-<br>
- BY<br>
-<br>
- SIR LAWRENCE ALMA TADEMA<br>
-</h3>
-
-<p class="t3b">
- WITH THE NAMES OF THEIR OWNERS AS<br>
- FAR AS CAN BE ASCERTAINED<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- Clotilde at the Tomb of Her Grandchildren. <i>M. Jules Verspreeuwen.</i><br>
- Education of the Children of Clovis. <i>H.M. King of the Belgians.</i><br>
- Venantius. <i>A. G. Hill, Esq.</i><br>
- Fortunatus and Radegonda. <i>A. G. Hill, Esq.</i><br>
- Gonthran Bose. <i>A. G. Hill, Esq.</i><br>
- Egyptians Three Thousand Years Ago. <i>J. Dewhurst, Esq.</i><br>
- The Chess-players. <i>Sir Henry Thompson.</i><br>
- The Egyptian at His Doorway. <i>Sir Henry Thompson.</i><br>
- The Mummy. <i>John Foster, Esq.</i><br>
- Agrippina with the Ashes of Germanicus. <i>N. G. Clayton, Esq.</i><br>
- A Roman Family. <i>John Pender, Esq.</i><br>
- Lesbia. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- Entrance to a Roman Theatre. <i>John Straker, Esq.</i><br>
- Roman Dance. <i>John Straker, Esq.</i><br>
- The Discourse. <i>Henry Mason, Esq.</i><br>
- Glaucus and Nydia. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- Claudius. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- Tarquinius Superbus. <i>Sir Henry Thompson.</i><br>
- The Visit to the Studio. <i>M. X. Puttermans Bonnefoy.</i><br>
- Phidias and the Elgin Marbles. <i>D. Price, Esq.</i><br>
- The Siesta. <i>M. Gambart.</i> (?)<br>
- A Roman Amateur. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- The Convalescent. <i>Hon. W. F. D. Smith, M.P.</i><br>
- Confidences. <i>F. W. Cosens, Esq.</i><br>
- The Pyrrhic Dance. <i>C. Gassiot, Esq.</i><br>
- The Chamberlain of Sesostris. <i>H. Hilton Phillipson, Esq.</i><br>
- A Visit. <i>W. Houldsworth, Esq.</i><br>
- In the Peristyle. <i>C. R. Fenwick, Esq.</i><br>
- The Silver Statue. The Marquis de Santurce.<br>
- A Soldier of Marathon. <i>Alfred Harris, Esq.</i><br>
- Exedra. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- The Wineshop. <i>R. Christy, Esq.</i><br>
- Tibullus at Delia's. <i>M. Gambart.</i> (?)<br>
- A Juggler. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- The First Whisper. <i>James Hall, Esq.</i><br>
- The Vintage Festival. <i>Baron Schroeder.</i><br>
- Hush. <i>Mariano de Murrieta, Esq.</i><br>
- Une Fete Intime. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- The Widow. <i>M. Gambart.</i> (?)<br>
- The Improvisatore. <i>Alfred Harris, Esq.</i><br>
- The Death of the First-born. <i>Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema.</i><br>
- The Nurse. <i>Baron Schroeder.</i><br>
- Fishing. <i>Baron Schroeder.</i><br>
- The Siesta. <i>W. Lee, Esq.</i><br>
- Between Hope and Fear. <i>T. G. Sandeman, Esq.</i><br>
- After the Dance. <i>H. F. Makins, Esq.</i><br>
- At Lesbia's. <i>W. J. Newall, Esq.</i><br>
- Cherry Blossom. <i>Wilberforce Bryant, Esq.</i><br>
- Hide and Seek. <i>John Fielden, Esq.</i><br>
- Pleading. <i>C. Gassiot, Esq.</i><br>
- The Kitchen Garden. <i>W. Lee, Esq.</i><br>
- The Bath. <i>Baron Schroeder.</i><br>
- Pandora. <i>Royal Society of Painters in Water Colours.</i><br>
- The Garland Seller. <i>A. D. Halford, Esq.</i><br>
- Balneatrix. <i>H. F. Morton, Esq.</i><br>
- A Roman Artist. <i>H. J. Carr, Esq.</i><br>
- A Garden Altar. <i>A. Macdonald, Esq.</i><br>
- The First Reproach. <i>H. Hilton Phillipson, Esq.</i><br>
- The Last Roses. <i>Sir James Joicey, Bart. M.P.</i><br>
- On the Steps of the Capitol. <i>Baron Schroeder.</i><br>
- The Sculptor. <i>John Foster, Esq.</i><br>
- Grecian Wine. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- Cleopatra. <i>Sir Henry Thompson.</i><br>
- The Question. <i>D. Price, Esq.</i><br>
- Fregonda at the Death-bed of Praetextatus. <i>D. Price, Esq.</i><br>
- Water Pets. <i>W. Lee, Esq.</i><br>
- The Siesta. <i>W. Lee, Esq.</i><br>
- The Architect. <i>John Foster, Esq.</i><br>
- A Sculpture Gallery. <i>M. Gambart.</i> (?)<br>
- An Audience at Agrippa's. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- After the Audience. <i>Henry Mason, Esq.</i><br>
- A Picture Gallery. <i>M. Gambart.</i> (?)<br>
- Wine. <i>W. Lee, Esq.</i><br>
- In the Time of Constantine. <i>J. W. Knight, Esq.</i><br>
- A Hearty Welcome. <i>Sir Henry Thompson.</i><br>
- A Sculptor's Model. <i>Rt. Hon. Sir Robert Collier.</i><br>
- In the Temple. <i>Angus Holden, Esq., J.P.</i><br>
- Play. <i>J. G. Sandeman, Esq.</i><br>
- A Well-Protected Slumber. <i>J. S. Forbes, Esq.</i><br>
- Antistius Labeon. <i>The Marquis de Santurce.</i><br>
- Love's Missile. <i>John Fielden, Esq.</i><br>
- Cherry Blossom. <i>Wilberforce Bryant, Esq.</i><br>
- A Torch Dance. <i>John Paton, Esq.</i><br>
- Ave Caesar! Ió Saturnalia. <i>J. Dyson Perrins, Esq.</i><br>
- Quiet Pets. <i>M. Verstolk Volekin.</i><br>
- Reflections. <i>Lord Battersea.</i><br>
- A Harvest Festival. <i>James Barrow, Esq.</i><br>
- A Pastoral. <i>Wakefield Christy, Esq.</i><br>
- An Audience. <i>G. H. Boughton, Esq., A.R.A.</i><br>
- The Tepidarium. <i>Sharpley Bainbridge, Esq.</i><br>
- Cleopatra. <i>&mdash; Hawk, Esq.</i><br>
- Young Affections. <i>Henry Joachim, Esq.</i><br>
- Sappho. <i>M. Coquelin.</i><br>
- Repose. <i>M. Coquelin.</i><br>
- Oleanders.<br>
- On the Way to the Temple.<br>
- Shy.<br>
- Who Is It?<br>
- Hadrian Visiting a British Pottery.<br>
- Expectations.<br>
- A Reading from Homer.<br>
- An Apodyterium.<br>
- Not at Home.<br>
- Down to the River.<br>
- Pomona's Festival,<br>
- Departure.<br>
- The Seasons.<br>
- The Silent Counsellor.<br>
- A Bacchante.<br>
- At the Shrine of Venus.<br>
- Heliogabalus.<br>
- The Women of Amphissa.<br>
- Spring. <i>Herr Robert Mendelssohn.</i><br>
- The Benediction.<br>
- Past and Present Generations.<br>
- Love's Jewelled Fetter. <i>Geo. McCulloch, Esq.</i><br>
- Fortune's Favourite. <i>Herr Robert Mendelssohn.</i><br>
- Unwelcome Confidence. <i>America.</i><br>
- A Coign of Vantage. <i>America.</i><br>
- Whispering Noon. <i>Sir Samuel Montagu.</i><br>
- The Coliseum. <i>America.</i><br>
- A Difference of Opinion. <i>America.</i><br>
- "Nobody asked you, Sir, she said" (water colour). <i>Australia.</i><br>
- Watching. "Her eyes are with her thoughts and<br>
- they are far away." <i>America.</i><br>
- Wandering Thoughts. <i>America.</i><br>
- Melody. <i>America.</i><br>
- Roses, Love's Delight. <i>The Czar of Russia.</i><br>
- The Conversion of Paula. <i>America.</i><br>
- Hero. <i>America.</i><br>
- A Listener. <i>The Tate Gallery.</i><br>
- Thermae Antoninae. <i>America.</i><br>
- Goldfish. <i>Sir Ernest Cassell.</i><br>
- Vain Courtship. <i>Sir Ernest Cassell.</i><br>
- "Under the roof of Blue Ionian Weather." <i>Sir Ernest Cassell.</i><br>
- "The year's at the Spring<br>
- . . . . . . . . . . . . .<br>
- All's well with the world." <i>Alfred de Rothschild, Esq.</i><br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br></p>
-
-<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
-
-<h3>
- THE PRINCIPAL PORTRAITS
-<br>
- BY
-<br>
- SIR LAWRENCE ALMA TADEMA.<br>
-</h3>
-
-<p><br></p>
-
-<p class="noindent">
- Dr. and Mrs. Hueffer.<br>
- Dr. W. Epps.<br>
- Prof. G. B. Amendola.<br>
- L. Lowenstam, Esq.<br>
- My Youngest Daughter.<br>
- My Children.<br>
- Herr Henschel.<br>
- Dr. and Mrs. Semon.<br>
- Herr Hans Richter.<br>
- Ludwig Barnay as Mark Antony.<br>
- Sir Henry Thompson.<br>
- Herbert Thompson, Esq.<br>
- Mrs. Rowland Hill and Children.<br>
- George Simonds and Family.<br>
- Mrs. Marcus Stone.<br>
- A Family Group.<br>
- Miss Enid Ford.<br>
- Maurice Sons.<br>
- Portrait of Himself for Uffizi.<br>
- Lady Waterlow.<br>
- Miss Tina Mavis.<br>
- Mrs. George Lewis and Miss Elizabeth Lewis.<br>
- Mrs. George Armour of Princetown.<br>
- Prof. George Aitchison, R.A.<br>
- Max Waechter.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br></p>
-
-<p class="t4">
- CHISWICK PRESS: PRINTED BY CHARLES WHITTINGHAM AND CO.<br>
- TOOKS COURT, CHANCERY LANE, LONDON.<br>
-</p>
-
-<p><br><br><br><br></p>
-
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