Lot 38 | Jasmine
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Albert Joseph Moore, A.R.W.S. (1841-1893)
Jasmine
signed with anthemion (upper left)
oil on canvas
26 1/3 x 19 2/4 in. (66.6 x 50.1 cm)
Additional Lot Information & Condition Report
view moreArtist or Maker: Moore, Albert Joseph (1841-1893)
Provenance: G.R Titley; Christie's, London, 28 May 1887, lot 85, bought in at 200 gns.
Walter Fothergill by 1894.
with W.W. Sampson & Son, London.
Cecil French bequest to Watts Gallery, Compton, 1954.
Exhibited: London, Grosvenor Gallery, 1880, no. 95.
London, Grafton Gallery, Albert Moore Memorial Exhibition, 1894.
Newcastle upon Tyne, Laing Art Gallery, Albert Moore and his Contemporaries, 1972, no. 59.
Literature: 'The Grafton Gallery Collection', Art Journal, 1894, p. 89.
A.L. Baldry, Albert Moore, His Life and Works, London, 1894, pp. 49, 50, 53, 74, 96, 104, illustrated facing p. 96.
'Albert Moore', Art Journal, 1895, pp. 48-9, illustrated.
Robyn Asleson, Albert Moore, London, 2000, p. 158 and pl. 151.
Notes: The Property of the Watts Gallery, Compton
Sold to ensure the long-term care of the Watts Gallery Collection of works by and about G.F. and Mary Watts
'Since his death [G.F. Watts] I have come to regard the Gallery as in great part built and endowed to his memory, thinking that in all probability it is the only form of memorial he would have been pleased to know of... I find that visitors experience an added pleasure in passing from a collection of art into the beauty and peace of nature.'
So Mary Watts summarized the essence of Watts Gallery, as a living memorial to the visionary work of her late husband George Frederic Watts (1817-1904) and a rural idyll where visitors could experience art of the highest quality. Opened in 1904, it holds a large and exceptional collection of works by Watts and follows the artist's ethos of allowing 'art for all.' Over 100 years it has remained opened to all, but time has taken its toll; the Arts &Crafts Grade II* listed building is now deemed 'at risk'. Rain is coming in through the roof, the collection is damaged by the extreme conditions, and some of the galleries are not accessible to disabled people. This has meant difficult decisions and Watts Gallery Trustees have needed to assess the real importance of the Gallery and Watts. After careful thought and consultation, the Trustees chose 2004, the centenary of Watts's death and the founding of the Gallery, to launch the Watts Gallery Hope Project. This major initiative is inspired by Watts's poignant and iconic painting of a blindfold girl astride the globe, playing an instrument that has all but one string broken, yet still able to make a hopeful strain of music.
The Watts Gallery Hope Project has six aims. It seeks to save the building, rescue and conserve the collection, develop audiences, increase income, strengthen the role of the Gallery locally, nationally and internationally, and establish Watts Gallery as a centre for exploring Victorian art, social history and craft. Thankfully, this £10m project is now well advanced with support from the Heritage Lottery Fund and other generous donors. However, to ensure the future of the Gallery for another hundred years, the Watts Gallery Trustees have had to make the extremely difficult decision to sell two of its paintings for the long-term care of the core collection of works by and about G.F. and Mary. These are works that came into the collection after the founder's death and are not related to or by the artists whose work it aims to bring alive at the gallery. It is with reluctance that these are being sold, but we hope that they will, through their sale, preserve Watts Gallery for another hundred years.
Richard Ormond
Chair of Trustees of Watts Gallery
An artist of great originality and independence, Albert Moore defied contemporary Victorian expectations that a painting should be 'read' as one would a book - that is, in terms of narrative, expressive, or moral content - and insisted instead upon the exclusively visual character of painting, which he likened to the exclusively auditory character of music. During the late 1860s, in partnership with his close friend the American expatriate painter James McNeill Whistler, Moore developed provocative strategies for frustrating attempts to interpret his pictures in the conventional literary fashion. The title of Jasmine is a typical red herring, intended to draw attention away from the human figure toward a seemingly minor accessory, which in fact holds the key to the painting's colour scheme. Moore was equally provocative in his anachronistic combinations of stylistic influences and pictorial motifs. In Jasmine, the figure's ideal proportions and flowing drapery reflect the influence of fifth-century Greek sculpture, while the spatial flatness and all-over surface patterning attest to the impact of Japanese woodblock prints. These startling combinations signalled the painting's disjunction from any coherent reality, but also reflected Moore's belief that all instances of beauty were reducible to universal and timeless formal principles, and that therefore all beautiful things were in essential harmony with one another. In a review of 1867, the poet Algernon Charles Swinburne paid tribute to Moore's art as 'the faultless and secure expression of an exclusive worship of things formally beautiful.' In Moore's art, he claimed, 'the melody of colour, the symphony of form, is complete: one more beautiful thing is achieved, one more delight is born into the world; and its meaning is beauty; and its reason for being is to be.'
While mainstream critics complained of Moore's 'eccentricities', progressive commentators such as Swinburne recognized him as one of the principle architects of a progressive new phase of English art, which came to be associated with the phrase 'art for art's sake', or Aestheticism.
Jasmine is one of numerous paintings in which Moore portrayed beautiful women in a state of languor or placid unconsciousness. He had first explored the theme of feminine repose in the late 1860s in works such as Lilies (1866; Sterling and Francine Clark Institute, Williamstown). He revisited the theme throughout the 1870s and '80s in some of his most iconic paintings, including Beads (1875; National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh), Midsummer (1887; Russell-Cotes Art Gallery, Bournemouth), and Summer Night (1894-90; Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool). In the motionless, unconscious sleeping figure, Moore found an effective means of subverting attempts to read unintended narrative or expressive content into his works. In addition, the motif of the sleeping woman provided an apt embodiment of the ideal of beauty in repose that Moore discerned in classical art - not only as a literal motif in works such as the reclining goddesses of the Parthenon's west pediment, but also as a general formal principle, expressed through qualities such as parallelism, balance, and repetition. These were among the essential characteristics that Moore sought to convey through the geometric underpinnings of his paintings.
Exhibited at the Grosvenor Gallery in 1880, Jasmine originated as a study for the central figure in one of Moore's most ambitious and successful paintings, Dreamers, an arrangement of three languid female figures set against an elaborate background (fig. 1). Exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1882, Dreamers occupied Moore for at least three years.
In order to satisfy this demand and to finance his larger works, Moore habitually completed his preliminary oil studies as independent pictures, which he carried out on their own unique terms. Of the myriad differences that distinguish Jasmine from Dreamers, the most obvious is the entirely different colour scheme and distribution of tonal values. In Jasmine, Moore adopted a piquant combination of pale pinks, deep red, and charcoal grey, creating a fresh, vibrant effect that differs entirely from the shimmering golden sultriness of Dreamers. The drapery arrangements are also conceptualized very differently in accordance with the simplified format of Jasmine. The notable addition of the emphatic S-curve of pink drapery, which cascades in intricate ripples from the sofa and then snakes upward across the girl's knee, is echoed by the shortened swag of pink drapery suspended behind the girl's head. Moore made further experiments with alternative colour schemes, drapery patterns, and accessories in several other fully worked-up oil paintings that originated with Dreamers. Among these, A Workbasket , exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1879 (Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide) and Yellow Marguerites, exhibited at the Academy in 1881 (private collection), are studies of the same figure represented in Jasmine, carried out with very different arrangements of colour, tonal values, systems of drapery folds, and elements of décor.
The impression of serene calm conveyed by Jasmine owes as much to the painting's underlying geometric structure as it does to the literal representation of sleep. Yet because Moore fleshed out his geometric patterns in representational form, his dedication to abstract principles of formal composition has often been overlooked. Only with close analysis of surviving preparatory studies and underdrawing visible on his canvases has it been possible in recent years to reconstruct with some clarity Moore's pioneering compositional techniques. Elizabeth Prettejohn has argued recently that Moore's compositional use of a grid - the quintessential emblem of twentieth-century modernity, according to Rosalind Kraus - anticipates the practice of artists such as Piet Mondrian, and she has drawn convincing analogies between Moore's work and the cultivation of musical qualities in the paintings of Kandinsky.
We are grateful to Robyn Asleson for writing this catalogue entry.


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