Tuesday, August 24, 2021

National Maritime Museum

I don't know what accounts for my interest in maritime matters. Between my proneness to seasickness and my mal de debarquement syndrome, you'd think I would avoid maritime museums. I probably watched too many episodes of Victory at Sea as a child (it was the music, I insist), read Alfred Thayer Mahan's The Influence of Seapower on History in high school, and am probably one of five persons, authors and editors not included, to have read all 15 volumes (including appendices) of Samuel Eliot Morison's History of United States Naval Operations in World War II. I've also read his Admiral of the Ocean Sea. And much, much more, now that I think of it, generally naval stuff or exploration stuff, most recently Captain Cook's voyages. I've toured a dozen historic ships and toured navy bases. I'm even fascinated by container ships. This is probably the eighth or tenth maritime museum we've visited since retiring--Stockholm, Rotterdam, Barcelona, Wellington, Dubrovnik, Bodrum--Vicki usually sits quietly and patiently in the museum lobby, as she did this time. I've cut the number of pix way down. Nevertheless...

Main entrance

The place is hardly dumbed-down, but there is much for kids
to enjoy

Prince Frederick's Thames barge; built 1732, last used by Prince
Albert in 1849

Assorted figureheads

In a big room devoted to Turner's Trafalgar painting: his only
royal commission, but rejected probably for being insufficiently
patriotic and glorious

Better photo, off the web: rather than the heroics of Nelson, and
national glory, it depicted the calamity and suffering of war

The Baltic Exchange Memorial Glass, from a 20th century 
building in London that survived the Blitz but not the IRA's
bombs; painstakingly repaired and reassembled here, it
memorializes members of the Exchange killed in WWI, but
also exults the national, the seafaring, and the commercial; one
of the largest stained glass works we have seen

In a large hall devoted to a variety of miscellaneous seafaring
devices, accoutrements, and stuff

Ditto

South Seas dress

Many south sea islanders do not regard the British
fondly nor think of the (European) age of exploration
as glorious; the Brits are way ahead of some other 
nations in recognizing the errors of their ways in former
times...

Johann Zoffany, Death of Captain James Cook, 1798; killed
by Hawaiians who finally figured out he wasn't a god

Cooks's anchorage at Tahiti, to observe the transit of Venus; the
description speaks of the "warm" welcome by the Tahitians;
"warm" indeed, inasmuch as the crew got VD, transmitted from 
the French who had preceded them

Hodges' famous portrait of of Cook

The upper floor of the great building is given to the Great Map,
essentially a play/exercise area for the kiddies

Among the many things that fascinate me are the ship-building
efforts that must have occupied the Brits from Elizabethan times
onward into the age of discovery and imperialism...here William
Daniell, The Mast House and Brunswick Dock at Blackwall, 1803

Some of the goodies brought back from the "new" world and
the Pacific

As one might expect, the place is loaded with ship models...

Bust of John Paul Jones...what he's doing here is
a mystery; he went to sea at the age of 13, worked
on slave ships, quit in revulsion and emigrated to
the Colonies; was their naval hero in the American
revolution

Francis Holman, Blackwall Yard from the Thames, 1784; private
ship-building yard

Nicholas Pocock, Plymouth Dockyard, 1798; ship-building on
a mammoth scale (for then); even larger was the yard at Portsmouth

John Clevely the Elder, The Royal George at Deptford Showing
the Launch of the Cambridge in 1755
, 1757; I guess I am not the
only person fascinated by the ship-building

Not as Hollywood has portrayed it...


Oops! I uncharacteristically forgot to note the titles and painters
for these two battle scenes


Naval battles in these times were as much about guns, knives,
hand-to-hand stuff as cannons; Nelson said the best a captain could
do was to get his ship alongside his foe; Errol Flynn said "It's
cutlasses now, lads!"

Nevertheless, the things fired from cannons were pretty nasty...

He really liked his medals and "did not fear to show
them to the enemy," which made him an easy target
for the French sharpshooters at Trafalgar; another Abbot
portrait of Nelson

Portrait of Nelson after the battle of the Nile, 
attributed to Guy Head, c. 1800

Nelson's combination fork and knife

Elizabeth's chief privateers/swashbucklers: Cavendish, Drake, and
Hawkins; pirates to their victims, heroes back home; not pictured:
Captain Geoffrey Thorpe...


Sunday, August 22, 2021

The Queen's House

If you have an interest in British architectural history, the Queen's House in Greenwich should be on your "must" list. Built in the 17th, it was Britain's first classical structure, designed by Inigo Jones, one of his first commissions following the usual Continental grand tour. It was designed for Anne of Denmark, James I's wife, but finished for Henrietta, Charles I's wife. Our main interest was the so-called "Tulip Staircase," the first free-standing staircase in Britain; but much else was waiting for us inside. By turns, the Queen's House has been a royal residence, an artist's studio, housing for a royal mistress, for French refugees, residence for Ranger of the Park, home to a smuggling ring, a naval orphanage and school, a war-time billet, and, now, a museum and art gallery attached to the National Maritime Museum. There is a permanent art collection that is now joined by a spectacular temporary exhibition of paintings on loan from Woburn Abbey, ancestral home of the Russell family (of Bloombury development fame), while it is in renovation. Not the first such temporary exhibition we have benefited from that was due to a renovation.

View from the river, through Wren's buildings, to the Queen's
House; an noted in the previous post, Queen Mary insisted the
Queen's House's view to the river be unobstructed

The Queen's House, Vicki entering


In the Great Hall

Looking down the Tulip Staircase

And up, at Vicki; actually, they're said to be fleur-de-lis, to honor
Henrietta, not tulips; still gorgeous and impressive

The first room you pass through contains a Reynolds,
a Claude, and a Van Dyke, all from Woburn Abbey;
we were knocked out; this is Reynold's Francis
Russell, Earl of Tavistock
(Tavistock Place is a block
north from our flat...practically neighbors!)

Claude's A Classical Landscape with Arcadian Shepherds;
according to the (excellent) signage, the Earl of Tavistock paid
220£ for it in 1762 and felt he was over-charged

Van Dyke's Francis Russell, 4th Earl of Bedford

For the first time ever (and we were there) all three of the "Armada
Portraits" of Queen Elizabeth I; all anonymous or unknown, all
contemporaneous with the Armada or its defeat; one from 
Woburn, one from the National Portrait Gallery, one from the
Royal Museums Greenwich; the docent said the painters remained
anonymous because the issue about the Armada was still in doubt...

The National Portrait Gallery version was actually cut down
(conspicuously) in the 19th so as to fit their notion of what a
portrait should be


Gheeraert's Sir Francis Drake, wearing the Drake
Jewel, last seen on my most recent post from 
the V&A

Unidentified star fort; probably part of the maritime museum
collection...

Michael Dahl, Queen Anne, 1714

Lemuel Francis Abbot, Vice Admiral Horatio Nelson,
1797

Gainsborough, Woodcutter and Milkmaid, purchased 1755

William Westfall, Scenes from a Voyage Around Autsralia, 1810;
Westfall was official artist for the voyage around Australia,
establishing it as a continent; tie me kangaroos down, sport...

Obligatory Canaletto, Regatta on the Grand Canal; there's a
similar one in the National Gallery

Greenwich view, pretty sure it's a Canaletto

The Russells also bought this one, Admiral Don
Adriano Pulido Pareja
, thinking it was a Velazquez...
alas, it's now thought to be a copy by his son in law,
Mazo; I think we saw the real one at the National Gallery...

And finally, Poussin's David and Bathsheba, 1630































































































































































































In yet another room was a set of paintings by various artists 
depicting naval scenes from WWII: here, Convoy to Russia,
by Charles Pears


Norman Wilkinson, A Catalina Flying Boat Sighting the Bismarck,
26 May, 1941









































Also by Wilkinson, The Tanker 'Ohio' in a Malta Convoy, August,
1942
  


















Richard Eurich, Bombardment of the Coast near Trapani; Turner
would have felt complimented