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Celebrating Blake
An unusual poet and artist, William Blake saw art and poetry as
two sides of the same coin. KAUSALYA SANTHANAM writes of an
exhibition on the works of a man who was neglected and derided
when alive, but richly feted years later.
"And I know this world is a World of Imagination and Vision. I
see Everything I paint in this world but Everybody does not see
alike. The tree which moves some to tears of joy is in the Eyes
of others only a Green thing that stands in the way. But to the
Eyes of the Man of Imagination, Nature is Imagination itself. To
me the world is all one continued Vision of Fancy or
Imagination."
THIS unbridled power of imagination was what made William Blake
(1757-1827) the most unusual of poets and artists. He was a
phenomenon - a poet whose words conjured up a mystical world few
have been given the gift to see and an artist whose works
reflected a vision so extraordinary we are awed by its
magnificent sweep.
An exhibition on the poet-prophet-printmaker at the Tate Britain
gallery in London that concluded recently, paid tribute to Blake
in a manner that would have made him exult. Richly sourced and
imaginatively conceived, it was a splendid show that brought
together his works from various museums, private collections and
libraries in Britain and abroad. Room after room was filled with
the etchings, engravings, paintings and illuminated books of a
man who, neglected and derided as insane, yet believed
steadfastly in his Visions and pursued his own truths.
"William Blake" is not an exhibition you can take in a few hours
or even in a day. As the professor of medieval art history at
Edinburgh University beside me remarks, "I've been here for five
hours already and I need many more to absorb it all."
The paintings and sketches are filled with an immense vitality
and seem to leap out of their frames to communicate the restless
passion and power of a man charged with the creative, inner fire
of genius. The perfectly proportioned naked forms remind us of
the art of Michelangelo. Blake greatly admired the great
Florentine artist as also Raphael and compared himself to them.
Serene-faced angels who float among the fan vaulting, bearded
patriarchs with wise eyes who look beyond, despairing men and
women bent over in anguish, and terrifying evil creatures that
threaten and taunt fill the walls with motion and energy. The
subtle colouring, the radiant use of lighting and the arrangement
of the figures distinguish Blake as one of the greatest artists
of his time. But he was not regarded so then and died in poverty.
As for his poetry, from the lyrical Poetical Sketches to the
complex and often incomprehensible epics "Milton" and
"Jerusalem", Blake delights, bewilders and awes but seldom
disappoints. It is this originality and individuality that
appeals to his readers in the 21st Century.
Strangely enough, this great artist's chosen profession was
engraving and not painting. Throughout his life, despite being
acutely conscious of his own gifts, he considered himself an
engraver first and hammered away on metal and sheet in his
determined effort to concretise his vision.
Born to a hosier, Blake belonged to a family of Dissenters and
this shaped his unconventional religious views. If his art
overflowed later with winged angels and mythical forms, these had
their origins in his childhood when he said he was first visited
by angels. These visitations continued through his life. Blake
was apprenticed to an engraver when he was 14. When his master
sent him to the Westminster Abbey to draw the figures on the
tombs, Blake fell under the spell of the Gothic that was to
remain the predominant influence on him. The drawings of the
efigies of the warrior king, Edward I and his saintly wife
Eleanor, the unfortunate Richard II and his queen Anne, and
others were executed by Blake for the book Sepulchral Monuments
in Great Britain. These sketches displayed in the exhibition
reveal his fine sense of perspective.
Blake's vision is an essentially religious and spiritual one.
"Joseph of Arimathea among the Rocks of Albion" was his earliest
engraving. The image shows the legendary figure who was supposed
to have brought Christianity and, according to Blake, art to
ancient Britain which he called Albion. Blake regarded England as
the womb of mankind.
To Blake, art and poetry were two sides of the same creative
urge. As he engraved masterpieces such as "The Laocoon as Jehovah
with Satan and Adam", he wrote prophetic books such as Tiriel
which he illustrated. Tiriel portrays the raging emotions of a
tyrannical father, but the theme is interwoven with myth and
metaphor.
Momentous historical events were taking place during Blake's
youth. The American War of Independence had begun in 1775
followed by the French revolution 14 years later and in-between
raged the Gordon riots of 1780 in London. Blake's radical views
were shaped by these events and led to his major literary works
and prophetic books, America, a Prophecy, The French Revolution
and Europe, a Prophecy as also his book of aphorisms, The
Marriage of Heaven and Hell and The Visions of the Daughters of
Albion. All these decried authoritarian forces using the language
of his mythology.
When on a visit to Batersea in 1781, Blake fell in love with the
simple and unschooled Catherine and married her a year later. It
was the beginning of an enduring partnership. Blake taught
Catherine to read, write and paint. Some of her paintings on
display at the exhibition are very like his. In an unhappy life
where few could understand him, Catherine believed in him
implicitly and provided unfailing support and strength: it was
natural that he should thank her, his "angel", on his deathbed.
Songs of Innocence and The Book of Thel were published in the
year before the Blakes moved into Hercules buildings in Lambeth
where they spent 10 happy years. ... Songs of Innocence contains
some of his best loved and understood poems: "Piping down the
valleys wild ...", "The Chimney Sweeper", "London" and "The
Tyger". The images are sharp and beautiful and ring through your
mind as the lines from "London" do when you walk through any
city,
"And mark in ever face I meet,
Marks of weakness, marks of woe."
Songs of Experience, written a few years later, was meant to be
read along with Songs of Innocence as "Two Contrary States of the
Human mind".
Relief etching was the special method developed by Blake to
illustrate his own poems. He called these exquisitely produced
works, which he published himself, illuminated books. Here, word
and image come together in a perfectly synthesised whole. The
beautiful calligraphy and the brilliantly conceived figures
painted in lovely, pastel hues are so attractive that you linger
over them. The exhibition's organisers have placed an old,
polished wooden printing press right in the middle of this room
and it serves as the evocative motif of this section, "The
printing house in hell".
Commercially unsuccessful despite advertising his work for sale,
the poet-artist watched frustrated as his less talented
contemporaries became well known and wealthy while he was forced
to earn a living by illustrating the works of writers who did not
possess a quarter of his talent. The poet Hayley, popular at that
time, commissioned Blake to illustrate his poems and in 1800 the
Blakes moved to Felpham, Sussex, to be near Hayley. Here too,
Blake worked indefatigably. He found the materialism of the times
stultifying and the science which gave rise to it revolting. His
painting of Isaac Newton is awesome. The naked figure of Newton
is seen seated on a rock in the sea, bent over a scroll which he
measures with a compass. Equally impressive is his figure of
Nebuchadnezzar.
The Bible was to the poet-artist "the embodiment of the whole
history of mankind" and Biblical themes remained the well-spring
of his creations - "The Raising of Lazarus", "The Agony in the
Garden", "Christ in the Wilderness" and others, culminating in
the magnificent "The Vision of the Last Judgment" which he
laboured on till his death.
Hayley's patronising air and a charge of sedition proved too much
for him and he returned to London. For the next few years he
escaped being dragged into poverty by the patronage of those like
the civil servant Thomas Butts. In 1808, he painted Chaucer's
"The Canterbury Pilgrims" to counter the one executed by his
rival, Thomas Stothard. Stothard's brilliantly coloured painting
and Blake's in deeper, sombre colours in Gothic style hang side
by side at the Tate.
Like others of his time, Blake thought Milton the greatest poet
who lived, greater even than Shakespeare, Dante or Chaucer. At
various points of his life, Blake illustrated the work of all
four, giving his own interpretation to the plays and epics.
Though he admired Dante and Milton, Blake the iconoclast differed
with their religious views. He did not believe in a vengeful God.
"I must create a system or be enslaved by another man's," felt
Blake. Blake was deeply influenced by the theologian Emmanuel
Swedenborg and his rejection of organised religion. He went on to
create a mythology which made his later poems, among them "The
Four Zoas", "The Book of Urizen" and the "The Song of Los"
incomprehensible to many. Among the characters that inhabit this
mythological world are Urizen, standing for reason, Vala, the
goddess of Nature, Urthona, representing the creative imagination
of the individual and Luvah, representing love and sexual energy.
To Blake, sexuality was a means of realising the divine and many
of his erotic sketches exemplify this belief. But ultimately to
many, Blake is a singer and seer, the writer of the beautiful
preface to Milton:
"And did those feet in ancient time
Walk upon Englands mountains green:
And was the holy lamb of God,
On England's pleasant pastures seen!"
The exhibition was complemented by a whole range of talks by
scholars of literature and art, film shows and concerts and every
conceivable way of celebrating Blake. If he were to see the
steady stream of visitors to the galleries and the tributes
pouring in, the eternal piper, once neglected and ignored, would
surely feel vindicated and redeemed by this overwhelming
recognition of his unusual gifts.
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