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Artists on art
Susannah Fiennes on Chardin's The Young Draughtsman (1737)
Interview by Martin Gayford
The Daily Telegraph, London,
16 June 2001,
Journalist Martin Gayford
There are many ways to get to know a painting,
but perhaps the very best way is to attempt to reproduce it - which is
how the painter Susannah Fiennes first got acquainted with the work of
Jean-Baptiste-Simeon Chardin. "In my second year at the Slade,"
she says, When we were instructed to do a copy of a painting I chose a
Chardin. And I learnt so much from doing that copy, about how the inner
logic of the picture worked.
"Since then I've always been passionate about
Chardin, and especially since seeing the exhibition that was in London
and New York last year. In that show, I thought that The Young
Draughtsman (Le Jeune Dessinateur) from 1737, was a perfect example
of his mastery of the language of painting."
Chardin (1699-1779) made the painting as he was
approaching middle age. It is one of a relatively small group of largish
figure works produced by this artist, who otherwise specialised in still
life and small, genre pictures. But if he did not often paint human
subjects in this way, his mastery was complete.
"This is a very concise expression of the
language of painting," Fiennes says, "which depends on understanding the
relations between opposites. One thing I love is the way that Chardin
organises the rectangle of the canvas. The painting is clearly divided
into three. The table that the boy is leaning on occupies the bottom
third of the picture, then his torso occupies the middle third. So it's
beautifully phrased, like a piece of music or three acts of a play."
Denis Diderot - the first art critic in the
modern manner - began his account of the Chardins at the Salo of 1765
thus: "Here you are again, old magician, with your silent arrangements."
Fiennes shares his enthusiasm: "I love the way
the artist constructs the space through that geometry. It's very
deliberately formed. Just as he counteracts the front of the table with
the diagonal of the drawing and the portfolio, so he counteracts that
diagonal with the line of the boy's arm. He's playing all the time with
emphasis. The boy's upper arm is at a right angle to the chalk and his
lower arm.
"You could inscribe a square between the line
of the chalk and forearm, the front of the jacket and the lower part of
the hat, so that the empty background is charged with positive tension
that relates to the boy. The drama of the picture comes from the way
that tilted square works within the rectangle."
Such disciplined geometric division of the
picture was a passion of the late Euan Uglow, who taught drawing at the
Slade when Fiennes studied there. Since then, as a watercolourist, she
has accompanied the Prince of Wales on the occasion of the handing over
of Hong Kong.
"Chardin's work is so considered," she says.
"There are no accidents. I think that's what I love about it - the way
the elements of the picture are impeccably organised. He constructs an
illusion of volume, space and light on a flat surface through a concise
arrangement of coloured shapes. Just as in the music of Bach you get the
feeling that every little note is placed with absolute deliberation and
precision, so is everything in this painting done with a particular
purpose in mind."
Chardin did not paint quickly. The Queen of
Sweden grew impatient waiting for her commissions. "I have made a habit
of not relinquishing my paintings until, to my eyes, they leave nothing
to be desired," he wrote to her.
The economy of The Young Draughtsman is just
mind-blowing," Fiennes says. "Take the tip of the boy's hat, that little
droopy bit, then look at the way Chardin continues that dark shape back
all the way through the hat, the hair, into the ribbon, all the way
down through the ponytail, and the shadow on the back. It's all one
shape. That dark shape carries on all the way down to the
bottom of the picture - even across the bottom horizontal of the table.
So instead of illustrating a hat, or hair, Chardin is seeing the mystery
of how one shape becomes another shape in a very abstract way.
"Another shape to focus on is the fragment of
turquoise under his collar that must be his shirt coming through. It
defines the curve of his front so that you don't read him as a flat
shape, you read him as a volume. That tiny bit of floating light and air
between the boy's neck and his hair is so articulate: it defines the
back of his neck.
"Just as we've had opposites in geometry we
also have opposites in colour, The hot red of the boy's cheek is
counteracted by the cold blue-green of the drawing paper. And the red of
the ribbon echoes the cheek. The most divine thing is the way that the
background colour is a most mysterious, elusive grey that hovers between
the greenness and the redness. It's what you would get if you mixed
those two other colours.
"In this picture, the subject serves as a sort
of homage to drawing. That sums up what we were striving to do at the
Slade. It was almost like a monastic order in the way that we approached
our investigation of the subject."
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