Each time I visit The National Gallery, usually for a temporary exhibition, I make a point of visiting some of the permanent collection and trying to broaden my art knowledge and this afternoon was no exception. In fact, I was so inspired by David Hockney's love and admiration for the Renaissance painter Piero della Francesca that I ended up taking a deep dive into the works of fellow Renaissance artists.
David Hockney - My Parents (1977)
Raphael, Titian, Mantegna, Palma Vecchio, Masaccio, El Greco. I could hardly get enough (though I did - Renaissance complacence is a very real thing as I discovered on a Tuscan holiday twenty years ago) but it's not those 'old masters' I'm hear to talk about now. It's David Hockney, Piero della Francesca and the National Gallery itself. Which is currently hosting the free Hockney and Piero:A Longer Look exhibition. There were pretty long queues to get in to the gallery but this room was not too crowded so I did, indeed, enjoy 'a longer look'.
The National is celebrating its 200th birthday this year and since it opened it has always worked with living artists, many of whom have sketched, taught, or exhibited within the collection. Living painters were consulted regarding new gallery acquisitions and access has been granted to artists to inspire their own creativity. In fact, until the 1940s the gallery was shut for two days week (except for paying customers - there's always the bottom line to consider) so that artists could enjoy a private view.
Since then, contemporary artists of their time have been involved in curating exhibitions and making works for special displays although this little show is something quite different. The newest works in it are, of course, the pair of Hockney paintings and they are already forty-seven years old. It's also a rare case of the more modern painter, Hockney, being a bigger draw at the moment than Piero. At least in London. The story, of course, may be quite different in Florence.
Hockney is on record as saying he's had a life long admiration of Piero della Francesca and to look at his paintings here that would be hard to deny. Piero's Baptism of Christ features in reflection in Hockney's painting of his parents, Laura and Kenneth, along with a book about the 18c French painter Chardin and a drape by fellow Tuscan Renaissance bigwig Fra Angelico. The Baptism of Christ appears again in Looking at Pictures on a Screen. This time along with works by Van Gogh, Vermeer, and Degas.
While I'm not a believer in supernatural and all seeing deities. I do enjoy a lot of nominally spiritual and religious things. I love church architecture (mosques too), I love gospel music, and I love these old religious paintings. Unlike the people who created these things, or most of them, I don't ascribe their creation to a god or a team of gods but to humanity. Although religion in a way is the worst thing that humans ever invented it has to be said it shows how remarkable and complex we are as a species that we have been able to construct these incredible stories and narratives and then build buildings, write books, write songs, and create paintings to celebrate them. With that I went for my gallery walkabout. I had a longer look.
Piero della Francesca - The Baptism of Christ (about 1437-1445)
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