Jaffa, Recruiting of Turkish Soldiers in Palestine
It is
not often that a show comes to New York that is thematically rich, expertly
curated and deftly presented, but that is the case with Encountering the Orient: Masterworks from the Dahesh Museum of Art,
presented at Christie’s at 20
Rockefeller Plaza, here in New York. If
you can only make one show this season, this should be it.
Though most
New Yorkers know Christie’s primarily as an auction house, this venerable institution
is not just for New York’s financial elite.
Great works of art are to be seen by the public, whether they are on the
auction block or museum walls. Christie’s
is very welcoming to aesthetes of all stripes, and anyone who loves art should
become familiar with their galleries.
For Christie’s to host the Dahesh show is an indication of their
commitment to the greater artistic community, and is to be appreciated by all. Diana
Bramham, Assistant Vice President, Specialist 19th Century
European Art Old Master & 19th Century Art at Christie’s, worked
closely with the Dahesh to make this splendid show a reality.
Encountering
the Orient remains on view until April 15, 2013. The show celebrates the 19th
Century rediscovery of the East by Western artists, and offers a fresh approach
to Orientalism as a complex, highly contextual, cross-cultural encounter.
Curated by
Alia Nour, Associate Curator of the
Dahesh, Encountering the Orient is a compact, stunning tour de force for the perpetually travelling museum. Encountering the Orient touches upon many
fascinating themes to be found in 19th Century Orientalism,
including the hold Egypt (and perceptions of Egypt) have over the Western mind,
the role of women in North Africa and the Middle East, and the tradition of
swashbuckling artists who ventured into then-exotic places with little more
than paint and palette.
Readers of
the Jade Sphinx will appreciate that
there is something profoundly moving in standing before a great work of art and
just … gazing. I was deeply touched by
many of the works, all of which were colored with a deep strain of
romance. It is a show I intend to see
more than once.
Though filled
with fine works, perhaps the centerpiece is Jaffa, Recruiting of Turkish Soldiers in Palestine, painted in 1888
by Gustav Bauernfeind (1848 - 1904). Bauernfeind was a German painter who studied architecture at the Polytechnic Institute in Stuttgart and
later worked in the architectural firm of Professor
Wilhelm Bäumer. He journeyed to the
Levant from 1880 to 1882, and he became increasingly interested in the Orient
and returned again and again. In 1896 he moved with his wife and son to
Palestine and subsequently settled in Jerusalem in 1898. He also lived and
worked in Lebanon and Syria, and is considered to be one of the most notable
Orientalist painters from Germany.
On April
7, the Dahesh hosted a lecture on this stunning work by Dr. Roger Diederen, Director of the Kunsthalle der Hypo-Kulturstiftung, Munich. Dr. Diederen detailed how Bauernfeind was
enamored of Jaffa, and in an 1885 letter to his sister he described several
aspects included in this painting: . . .
what I saw here during the departure of the military conscripts, with the women
chasing after them in dinghies far out into the sea, and holding up their
infants so that they often could be rescued only at extreme peril; or the scene
in the streets where aged fathers wanted to embrace their sons for the last
time, and were beaten off with cudgels by the rough soldiery—would also furnish
material for some interesting pictures.
This enormous
picture fully dominated a whole wall of the exhibit, but it is not the only
thing to see. Also on hand are
masterworks by Rudolf Ernst, Ludwig Deutsch and Frederick Arthur Bridgman.
Kudos to
the Dahesh and Christie’s for putting together such a dynamic show, and for
hosting comments from Dr. Diederen. Both
institutions are working to keep our artistic heritage intact, and are in the
forefront of the revival of 19th Century Art.
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