 |
| |
 |
"Between
Street and Mirror: The Drawings of James Ensor"
The Drawing Center, New York, 27 April-21 July 2001
Catherine de Zegher, ed., with essays by
Robert Hoozee, Susan M. Canning, Marcel de Maeyer, Herwig Todts,
and chronology by Xavier Tricot
Between Street and Mirror: The Drawings of James Ensor
New York: The Drawing Center; and Minneapolis: University of Minnesota
Press, 2001
256 pp.; 71 b/w and/or halftone ills., 80 color ills.; $34.95
ISBN: 081664012 |
 |
| |
|
|
| |
James Ensor's triumphal reentry into
New York this past spring took place at the Drawing Center, a relatively
small but innovative arts institution in a city filled with museums
(fig. 1). The exhibition "Between Street and Mirror: The Drawings
of James Ensor" comprised ninety-six works on paper created between
1880 and 1901. In an era that witnesses multiple shows of the works
by French Impressionists in any given year, Belgian artists active
during the same period have fared less well in the popular imagination
in the United States. Indeed, Ensor remained virtually unknown in
this country until 1987, when the Getty Museum acquired Christ
Entering the City of Brussels in 1889 (1888). Since that time,
museum visitors have flocked to the museum in Los Angeles to see this
Ensor painting along with the other works by Belgian artists that
have been accessioned since then. It nonetheless continued to be a
rare moment when Ensor's work was exhibited in this country. This
oversight changed radically and positively with the opening of "Between
Street and Mirror." Easily one of the more popular shows the
Drawing Center has organized in the last few years, it was a revelation
for the public and scholars of Belgian art alike. |
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
Although Ensor's etchings formed part
of a small exhibition two years ago at the Museum of Modern Art, New
York, and a group of his hand-colored etchings were shown last year
at Shepherd Gallery, also in New York, there have been no major retrospectives
devoted to his drawings in the United States until now. The last large-scale
Ensor show in this country was held forty years ago at MOMA.1
Part of this neglect has been based in the general primacy given to
painting over drawing and in the dominance overall of Ensor's monumental
canvas at the Getty, which has overshadowed the diversity of theme,
medium, and technique in his oeuvre. The Drawing Center show demonstrated
handily that Ensor's investigations in drawing were not only vast
and fundamentally productive for the artist but also constitute an
important contribution to the history of late-nineteenth-century art.
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
"Between Street and Mirror"
focused on Ensor's most creative period, between 1880 and 1895, when
he was a crucial figure at the center of Belgium's avant-garde activities.
It documented both Ensor's role as an innovator and his status as
a precursor of many early-twentieth-century experiments into abstraction.
The show was curated by Catherine de Zegher, director of the Drawing
Center, and Robert Hoozee, director of the Museum voor Schone Kunsten
in Ghent, with the assistance of Susan M. Canning, professor of art
history at the College of New Rochelle. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
The normally white walls of the large
gallery of the typical Soho building were painted a blood red, a tone
found in many of Ensor's drawings that echoes the nineteenth-century
bourgeois interiors he explored and often mocked. The installation
was ordered around five major themes in Ensor's art. The show opened
with the artist's early renderings of street scenes seen from the
window of his studio above his parents' home and the extended family's
mask shop in Ostend. Ensor's first drawings were created mainly in
charcoal and document both the artist's training at the Brussels Academy
of Fine Art (1877-80) and his early adherence to the tenets of both
academic art and its rival, realism. Many of these drawings contain
a bird's-eye view of street life or are copies after works by earlier
masters, including Daumier and Courbet; others begin to presage Ensor's
later forays into bizarre and unexpected juxtapositions of scale and
subject.2 His incorporation of cross-hatching, dark tonalities,
and other traditional touches gives way, within a short time, to the
introduction of color and a freer hand, beginning with the sketch
for his first major mask painting, Scandalized Masks (1883;
Courtesy Sabine Tavernier, Ghent and Faggionato Fine Arts, London). |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
From here, a large group of his investigations
into the divergent styles of Impressionism and its aftermath were
presented. Ensor inserted his likeness into many of his most biting
images. An early example is the Düreresque/Courbetian My Portrait
(1884; Musées Royaux des Beaux-Arts de Belgique, Brussels),
in which he literally and figuratively points to himself as part of
an impressive artistic continuum. Later, in The Dangerous Cooks
(1896; Museum Plantin Moretus, Antwerp), Ensor's decapitated head
is served up on a bed of smoked herring (hareng saur) by Octave
Maus, the impresario of Les XX. This image documents Ensor's frustration
with Maus, who had, beginning in 1886, switched his allegiance from
the Belgian to the Neo-Impressionist Georges Seurat and his Belgian
and French followers as the most important apporteurs de neuf.
|
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Ensor also inserted his likeness in
many of his images of Christ. In the section devoted to the series
"Visions: The Aureoles of Christ," his spare yet frenetic
line comes into play most dramatically. All but one of the drawings
from this cycle was included in the installation. The magisterial,
monumental drawing The Lively and the Radiant: The Entry of Christ
into Jerusalem (1885) was probably excluded from the show because
of its delicate condition and its importance to the Museum voor Schone
Kunsten in Ghent.3 Despite this crucial absence, the show
contained some real gems. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
No exhibition
of Ensor would be complete without his justifiably famous images of
masks and skulls. The organizers did a fine job of presenting the
range of technique and commentary found in these subjects. The show
ended with a large grouping of Ensor's visual social critiques-among
them, the always shocking hand-colored etching Doctrinaire Nourishment
(1889; Ghent Museum voor Schone Kunsten) (fig. 2), and the magisterial
The Strike; or, Massacre of the Ostend Fishermen (1888; Royal
Museum of Fine Arts, Antwerp). |
|
| |
|
|
| |
This exhibition provided one of those
rare opportunities, in an era of blockbusters, in which one could
actually learn a great deal. Many of the drawings have been reproduced
in publications over the years, but Ensor is an artist whose works
are best examined up close and personal-especially those images in
which he used a technique of layering imagery to create almost apparition-like
details. Many of these drawings have been exhibited less frequently
during the recent spate of Ensor exhibitions in Europe, and, even
if they are familiar from reproductions, their freshness and intricacy
inevitably made it seem as if they were being shown almost for the
first time. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
The accompanying catalogue was lavishly
produced and contains color or halftone illustrations of each of the
drawings on display. All but one of the texts were published previously
in conjunction with exhibitions of Ensor's work in Europe. Normally,
one might argue that such duplication is a problem, yet in this case
the essays by the European scholars Robert Hoozee, Marcel de Maeyer,
Herwig Todts, and Xavier Tricot are now available in English for the
first time. Hoozee's "Drawings and Etchings"4
acts as an overview of Ensor's career as a painter and a draftsman,
exploring the many shifts Ensor's art took over his long and productive
career. De Maeyer's "Mystic Death of a Theologian"5
focuses on the problem of dating Ensor's first monumental drawing
of the same title. This large work was rendered, at least in part,
while the artist was still a student at the Brussels art academy in
1880. Ensor returned to the piece half a decade later and both expanded
it and overlaid it with new imagery. In the process, he transformed
the image from an homage to Rembrandt and other Old masters into a
work that presages many of his most creative subjects. Ensor exhibited
the reworked version of the drawing at Les XX in 1886 to great acclaim.
Its presence confirmed the artist as a leader of the new art in Belgium. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
As much a prolegomenon for future
studies on Ensor as it is an analysis of his tightrope walk between
realism and the grotesque, Todt's "The Grotesque in Ensor's Oeuvre"6
argues that any simplistic notion of either approach falls apart when
examining Ensor's oeuvre. He argues against a view of the artist as
a cynical, misunderstood martyr,7 and proposes, instead,
the necessity of situating Ensor within a much larger artistic and
social discourse. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Taking up the challenge in Todt's
essay, Susan Canning's "The Devil's Mirror: Private Fantasy and
Public Vision," written expressly for the catalogue, provides
the panoply of contextual analyses needed to understand Ensor's drawings.
This text also comprises a synthetic overview of recent scholarship
on Ensor and caricature, crowd theory, scatology, and the social history
of Belgium at the turn of the twentieth century. By focusing on the
binary oppositions of public and private spheres, reality and visionary,
high and low culture, male and female, contemporary and historical,
Canning presents a nuanced view of Ensor's art. She argues that his
self-portraits and images of women are neither more nor less revealing
of his autobiography or of the often-recounted "facts" of
his supposed misogyny. When he turned his pencil to the world of contemporary
social and political concerns, Canning argues, "his drawings
provide a model of the engaged activist artist at his most bitingly
humorous and satirical best while challenging the ways in which social
critique can be presented and perceived" (p. 73). As an ensemble,
the essays in this volume provide an important contribution to Ensor
studies. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
One can hope that the popularity and
success of "Between Street and Mirror" is an indication
of things to come. If so, then perhaps museum visitors in other cities
will soon have an opportunity to become acquainted with the woefully
underappreciated yet crucial figures of early modernism who hailed
from Belgium. |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
Sura Levine
Hampshire College
Amherst, Massachusetts |
|
| |
|
|
|
| |
|
1. Libby Tannenbaum, James Ensor (New York: Museum of Modern
Art, 1951; reprint 1966).
2. Throughout his career, Ensor drew from illustrated journals
and made copies after Renaissance, Baroque, Rococo, and modern masters.
Some of his drawings include references to other paintings in a
kind of method of visual sampling, such as The Dream: Vision
toward Futurism (1886; private collection; courtesy of Bounameaux
SPRL, London), in which the decapitated heads of the sixteenth-century
Belgian heroes Egmont and Hoorne, depicted to great acclaim in 1851
by the academic artist Louis Gallait, are translated into terrified
dreamers of the chaos and grotesqueries of the future.
3. Easily one of Ensor's most famous works on paper, this drawing
is also the artist's largest (206 x 150.3 cm [81 1/16 x 59 3/16
in.]). It is an important precursor to Christ Entering the City
of Brussels.
4. Robert Hoozee, "James Ensor: Tekeningen en etsen,"
in James Ensor, 1860-1949: Schilderijen, tekeningen en grafiek-een
selectie uit Belgisch en Nederlands bezit, ed. Jos. de Meyere
(exh. cat., Utrecht: Centraal Museum, 1993), pp. 27-49.
5. Marcel de Maeyer, "De mystike dood van een godgeleerde
van James Ensor," Jahrbuch der Koninklijk Museum voor Schone
Kunsten, 1962-1963 (1963), pp. 54-155.
6. Herwig Todts, "Le grotesque dans l'oeuvre d'Ensor,"
in James Ensor, ed. Thérèse Burollet and Lydia
M. A. Schoonbaert (exh. cat., Paris: Musée du Petit Palais,
1990), pp. 43-49.
7. See, for example, Michael Kimmelman, "The James Ensor Show:
A Haunting Beauty in a Carnival of Follies," New York Times,
11 May 2001, section E, p. 31.
|
|
|
 |
|