The exhibition features other sources that influenced the artist in this painting - for instance children's book illustrations and Japanese prints. At the same time it explores various visual prompts for the painting's wrestling theme, from scenes of Breton wrestling to earlier and later artistic interpretations of its biblical subject, Jacob and the Angel. The exhibition will bring together eighty-four stunning works by Gauguin himself, his immediate mentors, artists whom he admired and his younger contemporaries and followers.
Vision
curated by Belinda Thomson
Vision of the Sermon is today one of the best-known and most widely-reproduced
paintings in the world. This bold, stylised work with its provocative religious
theme marks a turning point in the history of art. It depicts the 'vision' of devout
Breton women who literally 'see' the biblical story of 'Jacob wrestling with the
angel' which has formed the subject of a sermon just preached to them by their
priest. The picture is truly 'visionary' and is the first undisputed masterpiece by
the great Post-Impressionist painter Paul Gauguin. It will be the centrepiece of the
National Gallery of Scotland's major summer exhibition which will open at the
recently refurbished Royal Scottish Academy Building this July.
This innovatory exhibition, the first to examine this work in detail, will bring
together eighty-four stunning works by Gauguin himself, his immediate mentors such
as the Impressionists Edgar Degas and Camille Pissarro, artists whom he admired such
as Paul Cézanne and Gustave Moreau, and his younger contemporaries and followers,
including Emile Bernard, Louis Anquetin, Paul Sérusier and Maurice Denis. Drawing on
loans from prestigious public and private collections around the world, the
exhibition will offer the viewer an unrepeatable chance to understand Vision of the
Sermon in a rich and intimate context, exploring the biographical, pictorial and
cultural circumstances that enabled Gauguin to make such a radical statement in
paint in 1888. The exhibition will contain a full range of objects from paintings to
drawings, fans, book illustrations and letters, as well as ceramics and furniture.
For Gauguin, Brittany, the setting of the painting, was a step on the road to more
extreme artistic tourism which culminated in his work in the South Pacific. The
exhibition will investigate the particular attractions of Brittany for artists of
the early modern age, their desire to reconnect with the rugged peninsular and the
seemingly primitive and pious life of the Celtic fringe. This Breton theme is
explored in popular religious prints, books and photographs and in paintings
intended for the broad public who attended the annual Paris Salon exhibitions.
Several fascinating items of period Breton costume will be lent to the exhibition
from the Musée de Pont-Aven in Brittany.
The exhibition features other sources that influenced Gauguin in this painting - for
instance children's book illustrations and Japanese prints. At the same time it
explores various visual prompts for the painting's wrestling theme, from scenes of
Breton wrestling to earlier and later artistic interpretations of its biblical
subject, Jacob and the Angel.
Gauguin originally intended Vision of the Sermon for a church setting, and was
disappointed, although not surprised, when his offer was turned down by the
incumbent priests in Pont-Aven and nearby Nizon. He then sent it to be exhibited and
sold in Paris. Known for years as Vision after the Sermon, the title used in the
exhibition, Vision of the Sermon, is the one Gauguin gave his composition when he
first exhibited it in Brussels in 1889. Admired by the artistic avant-garde but
still unsold in early 1891 when Gauguin's dealer, Theo van Gogh, died, it was
included in an auction to raise money for the artist's long-planned voyage to the
South Seas. A cheer went up in the sale room when an artist named Meilheurat des
Pruraux paid 900 francs for the painting, the biggest price at the auction. In
1911-12 it was sold again, and shown in its current baroque frame at the Stafford
Gallery in London before entering the collection of its next owner, the great
British educationalist, Sir Michael Sadler. From Sadler it was purchased by the
Trustees of the National Gallery of Scotland in 1925, a major coup and an audacious
purchase for any large institution at that time for most British institutions were
still very conservative in their picture-buying. It was a gamble that paid off,
however, and the picture's presence in the National Gallery of Scotland enhances
Scotland's importance for art enthusiasts the world over.
Belinda Thomson, exhibition curator, commented: "Having studied Gauguin for some
thirty years, it has been a great privilege to work on this extraordinary painting
and shape an exhibition around it. It will be thrilling to see the show come
together. At the same time there is a major sense of responsibility involved in
opening up for broader public debate issues that have for so long occupied art
historians for over a century!"
Alex Callander, Joint Senior Partner and Chief Executive of Baillie Gifford, said:
"At Baillie Gifford, a primary aim is to be one of the world's leading investment
management firms. We are also proud of our long-standing sponsorship of the arts in
Scotland. Thus, we are delighted to be sponsoring the "Gauguin's Vision"
exhibition, which focuses on one of the world's great paintings, and brings together
works by some of the world's finest artists in a world class venue."
Image. Paul Gauguin, The Vision after the Sermon (Jacob and the Angel), 1888.
The show will be accompanied by a fully illustrated, accessible catalogue
incorporating a study of the painting's diverse sources, its exhibition history and
critical reception, the history of its ownership and its legacy as a cause célèbre
of art historical debate. Appealing to a general audience as well as scholars of the
period, this re-examination of Vision of the Sermon will throw the spotlight on one
of the most intriguing works in the National Gallery of Scotland: price £19.95. A
smaller, souvenir catalogue will also be available: price £7.95.
Sponsored by Baillie Gifford
Press view: Tuesday 5 July, 11.30am-1pm
The Royal Scottish Academy Building
The Mound, Edinburgh
Admission £6.50 (concessions £4.50); under 12s enter for free
Sponsored by Baillie Gifford