The exhibition will not only be the first devoted to the monumental Prometheus Triptych, one of Kokoschka’s largest and most ambitious works, but will also offer visitors a rare opportunity in a museum or gallery to contemplate in isolation just one great work of art. The exhibition of this enthralling work will be accompanied by a range of documentary material comprising photographs, letters and catalogues from archives in Vienna and London.
The Prometheus Triptych
The Prometheus Triptych, the most important painting by Oskar Kokoschka in
the United Kingdom, will be exhibited for the first time in a decade at the
Courtauld Institute of Art Gallery, Somerset House, Strand, London, from
Thursday 29 June to Sunday 17 September 2006.
The exhibition will not only
be the first devoted to the monumental Prometheus Triptych, one of
Kokoschka’s largest and most ambitious works, but will also offer visitors a
rare opportunity in a museum or gallery to contemplate in isolation just one
great work of art. This exhibition is supported by the Austrian Cultural
Forum London, Global Betbrokers Ltd and Marlborough Fine Art (London) Ltd,
and will be officially opened by the Austrian Ambassador to the UK, Her
Excellency Dr Gabriele Matzner-Holzer.
The Prometheus Triptych was commissioned in 1950 by Count Antoine Seilern
for the ceiling of his London house at 56 Princes Gate [1].
After his death, the Count bequeathed the
triptych, together with his remarkable collection of Old Master paintings,
to be displayed at the Courtauld Institute of Art. The triptych was rarely
seen in public during Seilern’s lifetime and because of its enormous size -
the three canvases together measure over eight metres wide - it has only
been possible to show the work infrequently since his death. However the
artist’s fears for the future of his painting, which he thought would be
abandoned and misunderstood by “a despicable contemporary world", have not
been realised.
Oskar Kokoschka (1886-1980) and Count Seilern (1901-1978) were both emigre's
in London having left their native Austria during the 1930s as the shadow of
war loomed over Europe. Both were well-known figures in the Viennese art
world and Kokoschka had made his reputation earlier in the century as one of
the foremost avant-garde artists of the Vienna Secession alongside Gustav
Klimt and Egon Schiele. Seilern bought a number of Kokoschka’s works during
the war but the idea of commissioning a ceiling painting only came in 1949.
This represented a major commitment to Kokoschka who was the only
contemporary artist whose work formed a significant part of Seilern’s
collection and Seilern devoted an entire room in Princes Gate to Kokoschka’s
paintings.
The ceiling project was first discussed in the summer of 1949 and by the end
of the year Kokoschka had decided to begin work on a central panel depicting
the Apocalypse, to be followed by two side panels. A contract for the
centre panel was drawn up in January 1950 for 17,500 Swiss francs and by 8
February Kokoschka had completed it. He then began work on the two side
panels, initially with a scene of Amor and Psyche which he abandoned in
favour of Hades and Persephone.
He worked on this simultaneously with the
other panel which depicts the punishment of Prometheus. Kokoschka seems to
have made very few preparatory sketches for the paintings and worked at
speed directly on the canvas. Dennis Farr, former director of the Courtauld
Institute Gallery, was taken to Princes Gate as a student to see Kokoschka
at work and recalled that “dressed in his characteristic blue and white
striped butcher’s apron….his dramatic, passionate performance, his
glittering eyes and greying hair all made an indelible impression".
Kokoschka worked with unceasing passion and commitment on the triptych,
driven by a firm belief in the painting’s importance as his most complete
and powerful artistic achievement. When he finished the monumental work on
15 July 1950, after only little more than six months, he wrote “I put the
last brush-stroke (I feel like saying axe-stroke) to my ceiling painting
yesterday".
Kokoschka intended the work to make a public statement and when
he persuaded Seilern to exhibit it at the 1952 Venice Biennale he stated
that the triptych was a warning of the consequences of “man’s intellectual
arrogance". He explained that the dangers faced by contemporary
civilisation were symbolised by the figure of Prometheus “whose overweening
nature drove him to steal fire so that man could challenge the gods". The
artist’s fear was that culture and society were being dominated by science
and technology which threatened the freedom and individuality of mankind.
Such fears became widespread as the cold war and nuclear arms race developed
during the 1950s and the Prometheus Triptych can be seen as prophetic of the
period.
When viewing the Prometheus Triptych one is immediately struck by an
explosion of form and colour with figures propelled through a void-like
space ranging from the darkest shadows to the brightest lights. In the
centre an apocalyptic vision unfolds of the four horsemen rising up with a
gathering storm from the underworld and charging towards the earth.
The
right-hand panel depicts Prometheus as punished by Zeus, chained to a rock
with an eagle pecking at his liver. However the left-hand panel offers some
sense of hope and regeneration with Persephone springing out of the clutches
of Hades, who had abducted her, aided by her mother Demeter who stands
between them. In a late alteration to the panel, Kokoschka painted the
figure of Hades as a self-portrait, adding a further layer of complexity to
the work.
The exhibition of this enthralling work will be accompanied by a range of
documentary material comprising photographs, letters and catalogues from
archives in Vienna and London. The display will enhance the understanding of
the painting’s contemporary context and allow the visitor to explore the
background of the commission, its execution and subsequent reception. A
selected display of Kokoschka’s works from Seilern’s collection, including
the celebrated early woodcuts The Dreaming Youths, 1906-7, will be installed
in an adjacent room. In addition there will be a gallery guide, a series of
lectures and other educational events.
The Prometheus Triptych will be an imposing spectacle, hung in isolation
high up on the wall of the Courtauld Gallery’s exhibition room, canted
forward in emulation of its original conception as a work to be viewed from
below. Oskar Kokoschka: The Prometheus Triptych will offer a unique
opportunity to reassess the importance of Kokoschka’s monumental achievement
and the space to contemplate its complex meanings and visual power.
Courtauld Institute
Somerset House - Strand - London
Opening hours: Daily 10.00 am to 6.00 pm, last admission 5.15 pm
Admission: Included in admission to permanent collection:
Adult: 5.00, concessions: 4.00
Free admission: Mondays 10.00 am to 2.00 pm
Free at all times for under 18s, full-time UK students and unwaged
Joint ticket with one other collection at Somerset House: £1.00 discount
Joint ticket with two other collections: £2.00 discount