Can you see anything wrong with this picture?

1/2
5 April 2012

What is in effect the National Gallery of Puerto Rico is closed for renovation. This startling information must be of little interest in London, but for the advantage taken of it by Tate Britain which, for some months, is to offer refuge to two of the gallery's most important British pictures, Lord Leighton's Flaming June and The Sleep of Arthur at Avalon by Edward Burne-Jones. Flaming June has some claim to be the picture that reversed public distaste for High Victorian art in the mid and later Sixties, and Arthur at Avalon has been described by the director of Tate Britain as its painter's "last and greatest work". Last it unarguably was, for Burne-Jones worked on it the day before his death on 17 June 1898, and the canvas still shows signs of unfinish, though his assistant, the loyal and attentive Thomas Rooke (never credited) must have tinkered it into saleable condition. The old boy's greatest work, it certainly was not: less of a composition than a stiff, stilted and staged tableau, it has nothing of the invention, energy and bravura of The Perseus Cycle with which it overlapped; nevertheless, it is worth more than a passing glance. More than six metres wide and nearly three high, initiated in 1881 as a commission for the library of Haworth Castle, the home of the painter's friend, George Howard, this vast canvas was to be for Burne-Jones what Parsifal — which took twice as long to complete and was also a last work — was to Wagner: a too personal, spiritual and emotional exploration of himself and a romantic mythological past with which he identified himself to the extent of self-portraiture as Arthur. It is sentimental, anguished and morbid; it reeks with the odour of sanctity; and just as a recent critic described Parsifal as "a bit of a pill staggeringly pretentious", so the sane man might say of this picture. It underwent more significant re-composing than even Picasso's Guernica, and became the ageing painter's obsession so much so that Howard released him from the commission so that Burne-Jones could paint it for himself without constraint.

"I'm not in good spirits about Avalon," said the old boy to Rooke in 1897, exactly a year before his death, "it might turn out no more than a piece of decoration with no meaning in it at all, and what's the good of that? I shall have to go at it with more fury." But then, within weeks of the first brushstroke in 1881, he had asked himself: "Why did I begin it?" Two months before his fatal heart attack he complained that he must finish it without any expectation of a sale; and one month later he demanded larger brushes, "thumpers and whack-ers", so that he could paint faster. And still he did not finish it.

In the winter after his death, Arthur at Avalon was first seen by the public in a memorial exhibition. It was subsequently sold to Charles Goldman, a collector who in 1929 offered to sell it to the Tate; when the offer was refused, he lent it instead. There it was last exhibited in 1933, the centenary of the painter's birth. It remained on loan until April 1962, but at some point, probably in August 1939 when the Tate evacuated its paintings in preparation for the Second World War, it was removed from its stretcher, rolled, and put into a stout box some half-metre square and three metres long. In that it stayed undisturbed until 1963, when Goldman's heirs consigned it to Christie's, where I was then working, for inclusion in a sale by auction on Friday 26 April.

The box containing the canvas was not delivered until the previous Friday, 19 April. From a small black and white photograph I had to concoct a cata logue entry for a picture that no one had seen for 30 years and that played no part in the then available literature; it was thus with particular interest that I watched its arrival in the lofty anteroom, the unscrewing of the lid and the myriad spiders that scuttled from the box. The vast canvas was then gently unrolled on the floor, obstinate in its curvature, and the mass of webs and other arachnid detritus removed from it. How could we display so large a canvas without a stretcher? As a tapestry on a tapestry bar, I decided, but not one in the house was six metres long and another had to be procured. With the canvas tacked to it by the raw edge that had formerly folded over the original stretcher, it was hauled up the wall with a dozen of us supporting it to ensure that the inevitable inverted curvature was kept as open as possible. It worked. The canvas, however, was much weightier than any tapestry.

Christie's chairman, Peter Chance, then came in to see the masterpiece. Demure, a pink and silver man, short, stout and erect, he strode to its very centre and within a pace of it; at that moment the weight of the canvas began to tear it from the bar. Poor Peter reached to press it against the wall, but the avalanche could not be stopped, the canvas ripped away, curled forward and enclosed him in its vastness. Instead of standing still, he panicked, fought his way out of the belly of this whale, dishevelled, and the canvas lay face down, a crumpled heap.

The one thing that must never be done with a painted canvas is to roll it face in, but that is more or less what happened in its fall. When we reversed it and flattened it we saw the consequences — flaked paint lay thickly on the floor, the whole width of the canvas where flowers fill the foreground, the area of heaviest initial impact, was extensively damaged, and the widespread random damages elsewhere reflected the chair-man's efforts to escape.

I called Joan Seddon, old friend and Courtauld Institute contemporary, a distinguished conservator of paintings then working on the restoration of Mantegna's Triumphs at Hampton Court. We had until 9am on Monday morning, when the picture was officially on view — some 30 working hours, we thought — in which to camouflage the damages. Lying on cushions on the canvas Joan began work at the top, and I, on my knees, began at the bottom on the easier business of repairing the crudely painted flowers. Thirty hours were not enough and we worked through the night on Sunday.

During the week of the sale not a word was said by anyone. Did no one notice how much of Arthur at Avalon had been damaged? And if they did, did they assume that the damages were old? When the painting was bought by the museum in Puerto Rico, it was relined, cleaned and stretched before being framed and installed in a specially constructed room —- did none of the experts responsible for these procedures not notice how much of the paint was new? Or were all the damages stripped and re-restored without a word to the new owner? Looking at the painting now, 45 years later almost to the day, under the uneven glister of a patchy varnish, I could identify very few of Joan's interventions, but was appalled by the crude quality of the irises, blue-bells and forget-me-nots —- is any one of them by Burne-Jones himself, or are they all by one of the 20 assistants he once had, by Thomas Rooke, by me and subsequent restorers?

Tate Britain (020 7887 8008; www.tate.org.uk) is open daily, 10am-5.50pm, and until 10pm on the first Friday of each month. Admission free.

Create a FREE account to continue reading

eros

Registration is a free and easy way to support our journalism.

Join our community where you can: comment on stories; sign up to newsletters; enter competitions and access content on our app.

Your email address

Must be at least 6 characters, include an upper and lower case character and a number

You must be at least 18 years old to create an account

* Required fields

Already have an account? SIGN IN

By clicking Create Account you confirm that your data has been entered correctly and you have read and agree to our Terms of use , Cookie policy and Privacy policy .

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged in

MORE ABOUT