:The remarkable Spooner collection of early British watercolors is
one of the finest of its kind and will be exhibited for the first
time since 1958 at the Hermitage Rooms, Somerset House, November
17-February 12. This rare opportunity will present some 80 works,
including outstanding landscape and figurative subjects by Thomas
Gainsborough, Paul Sandby, Francis Towne, Alexander and J.R.
Cozens, Thomas Girtin, John Constable, John Sell Cotman and
J.M.W. Turner, as well as numerous fine works by lesser-known
artists, many never previously exhibited.
The exhibition, titled "Gainsborough to Turner: British
Watercolors from the Spooner Collection," spans the "golden age"
of watercolor painting from around 1750 to 1850 and demonstrates
the inventiveness and imagination of artists working in the
medium during this extraordinary period of British art.
William Wycliffe Spooner (1882-1967) was the eldest son of Dr
William Archibald Spooner, the celebrated Warden of New College,
Oxford. An engineer and inventor of an industrial drying process,
he had always been interested in art and acquired his first
drawings while still struggling to make his mark as an engineer.
Although he had a good eye for drawings, he had little interest
in art scholarship and took guidance from friends and dealers and
especially from his wife, Mercie, whom he married in 1955, and
whose wide knowledge of the London art market was invaluable to
the formation of the collection. Spooner's close friendship with
Sir John Witt led him to bequeath the collection to the Courtauld
Institute of Art on his death in 1967.
A key work in the exhibition is one of Spooner's early purchases,
Edward Dayes' "Somerset House from the Thames." The fact that
this picture will now be on display in the very building depicted
would no doubt have given him immense pleasure.
Spooner's abiding love was for the countryside, which can be seen
from the numerous images kf mountains, lakes and rivers in the
collection, exemplified by Francis Towne's panoramic Welsh vistas
and Cozen's dramatic Alpine view, "In the Canton of Unterwalden."
Spooner owned a house near Dove Cottage in Grasmere and his
affection for the Lake District led him to purchase two
magnificent views of Borrowdale and Siddaw by John White Abbott.
John Warwick Smith (1749-1831), "On the Side of Lake Lugano,"
circa 1781, graphite, watercolor, pen and ink and body-color on
paper, 171/3 by 121/8 inches.
Spooner's choice of subject matter is reflected in the
exhibition's themes through which the theory and practice of
British watercolor are explored. The first room contains
architectural images, among them watercolors of London and the
Thames.
Rural landscapes dominate the collection, as evident from the
following two rooms in which the treatment of nature is
investigated, from Gainsborough's "invented" compositions of
woods, cattle and sheep of the early 1780s to closely observed
river scenes made "on the spot" in Wales by William James Muller
some 60 years later. Cozen's symbolic "Blasted Tree in a
Landscape" is one of a number of drawings in a section focusing
on trees.
The exhibition concludes with seascapes and figurative groups,
among them seven by Rowlandson whose work Spooner enjoyed. As a
guide to the technical development of watercolor, key works are
highlighted throughout the exhibition. The Eighteenth Century
view of watercolor as a less serious art than oil painting
persists to this day. The power and quality of the images shown
in this exhibition, however, dispel any notion of watercolor as
unglamorous and instead demonstrate the aesthetic appeal and
beauty of the medium.
The exhibition, a collaboration between the Courtauld Institute
of Art, the Huntington Library, Art Collections and Botanical
Gardens, California and the Wordsworth Trust, Grasmere, will be
held in the Hermitage Rooms at Somerset House.
For information, somerset-house.org.uk.