Local to National: Victorian Industrialist Art Collectors’ Geographies

Julie Codell
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Abstract

After 1850, the middle and working classes sought cultural education, which John Ruskin, among others, identified as a signifier of civilization and national greatness. Working Men’s Colleges, three 1870 university Slade Professorships in art history, proliferating art publications, and emerging regional museums offered opportunities to become conversant with visual art were then equated with social mobility and Englishness. Amid this cultural nationalism, critic F. G. Stephens’s 100+ Athenaeum series, “The Private Collections of England” (1873–1887), transformed collectors into national heroes. Scholars have noted the rising profile of collectors in 19th-century Europe and the US, in which Stephens’s series participated. Stephens detailed these collections’ expanded geography in England’s industrial north, turning local art collecting into a national, unifying force, a transformation made possible by his periodical serialization itself. These collectors, industrialists, merchants and bankers exemplified a new middle-class social, cultural and political authority. Most of them intended to bequeath their collections philanthropically to museums, thus shaping public tastes and the canon. They were personally and socially networked with artists and with each other, often working in complementary industries. Stephens interspersed his detailed descriptions of artworks with exhibition histories across translocal and transnational spaces, using the power of the press to weave a network between collectors and the public and a shared cultural history that endorsed collectors’ new public identity. However, Stephens also raised tensions about the geography of collecting, emphasizing collectors’ local places while presenting them as shaping a national space in their homogeneous taste and support of the same living artists and even the same pictorial subjects. In this way, Stephens straddled and flattened differences between national and regional market forces when, ironically, England’s art market was be coming increasingly international. This geographical layering is explored here in the context of the rise of provincial art institutions, the period’s notion of national schools and in anticipating the features of the current geohistory of art. I will explore two devices associated with the periodical press: ekphrasis and serialization, both of which Stephens deploys. Stephens wrote long ekphrases on works in these collection and omitted illustrations, noting in several comments that the Athenaeum’s middle-class readers were already familiar with artists’ works. This presumption and his use of 19th-century serialization, used by novelists whose chapters appeared across multiple issues of periodicals, combing to create a powerful force binding readers to his elevation of collectors’ social, national and cultural roles.
从本地到全国:维多利亚时期工业家艺术品收藏家的地理位置
1850 年后,中产阶级和工人阶级开始寻求文化教育,约翰-罗斯金等人认为文化教育是文明和国家伟大的标志。工人学院、1870 年三所大学的斯莱德艺术史教授职位、不断涌现的艺术出版物以及新兴的地区博物馆为人们提供了通晓视觉艺术的机会,这在当时等同于社会流动性和英国身份。在这种文化民族主义中,评论家 F. G. 史蒂芬斯(F. G. Stephens)的 100 多部《雅典娜》系列丛书《英国私人收藏》(1873-1887 年)将收藏家变成了民族英雄。学者们注意到,在 19 世纪的欧洲和美国,收藏家的地位不断提高,斯蒂芬斯的系列丛书也参与其中。斯蒂芬斯详细描述了这些藏品在英格兰北部工业区扩大的地理范围,将当地的艺术品收藏变成了一种全国性的、统一的力量,而他的期刊连载本身又使这种转变成为可能。这些收藏家、实业家、商人和银行家体现了一种新的中产阶级社会、文化和政治权威。他们中的大多数人都打算将自己的藏品捐赠给博物馆,从而塑造公众的品味和经典。他们在个人和社会方面都与艺术家建立了联系,而且相互之间也有联系,通常从事互补性行业。斯蒂芬斯将对艺术品的详细描述与跨地方和跨国空间的展览历史穿插在一起,利用新闻的力量编织了一个收藏家与公众之间的网络和共同的文化历史,为收藏家的新公众身份背书。然而,斯蒂芬斯也提出了关于收藏地理的紧张关系,他强调收藏家的地方性,同时又将他们的同质化品味和对相同在世艺术家甚至相同绘画主题的支持表现为对国家空间的塑造。具有讽刺意味的是,当英格兰的艺术市场日益国际化时,斯蒂芬斯却以这种方式跨越并拉平了国家和地区市场力量之间的差异。在此,我们将结合省级艺术机构的兴起、当时的国家学校概念以及对当前艺术地理史特征的预测来探讨这种地理分层。我将探讨与期刊报刊相关的两种手段:咏叹调和连载,斯蒂芬斯都采用了这两种手段。斯蒂芬斯为这些作品集的作品撰写了长长的咏叹调,并省略了插图,他在多篇评论中指出,《雅典娜》的中产阶级读者已经熟悉了艺术家的作品。他的这一推断和 19 世纪小说家使用的连载方式(其章节在多期期刊中出现)相结合,形成了一股强大的力量,将读者与他对收藏家的社会、国家和文化角色的提升联系在一起。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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