Inquiry into the
Real and Imaginary
Obstructions to
the Acquisition of the
Arts in
by Morris Eaves
The disturbance and surprise
always just under the serenely consolidated skin of
twentieth-century Blake studies originate in our awareness of
the very extraordinary
maneuvers required to get Blake into the literary Canon: there
are skeletons in the closet and loose ends untied. Since the single most
profound maneuver in the history of Blake's reputation was ID turn him into a
poet, chiefly through editing his illuminated books by wary standards
of legibility, most of the omissions, suppressions, and distortions involve the
Blake who lived and died an artist in a circle of artists. The editing project adjusted his practice to
the needs of a literary Mon, but it left his theories untouched and
unexplained. Blake's literary Placement encouraged literary critics to look for
the literary theorist in htm. Most, like W. K. Wimsatt and
But, curiously, the process of
stabilizing the institutional definition of as one of
the six major English romantic poets seems to have liberated the academic
energies necessary to retrieve Blake and artist, including Blake the art
theorist. Hence the most recent efforts to under-stand Blake's theories have
indeed been inspired by the thought that they are primarily about visual art
not poetry, and that they derive from an eighteenth-century discourse in the
visual arts not poetry. (Of course I am omitting important qualifications.) But
because the historians of English art have shown little inclination to come to
a broad and sophisticated understanding of that discourse, a lot of groundwork
still needs to be done.
In The Political Theory of Painting from Reynolds to
Hazlitt, one of the very few able studies of this group of writings, John Barrell has shown how the so-called discourse of civic
humanism, or "republican" theory, as de-rived from the work of
historian J. G. A. Pocock, organizes the politics of
eighteenth-century art theory at one level. While I revere Barren's analysis of
the political stratum of these writings, I would also want to remind us of the
plain fact that these eighteenth-century writers about art do not present their
theories as theories of republican government. That is, Barrell
successfully extracts civic-humanist discourse from Jonathan Richardson, Joshua
Reynolds, James Barry, and Henry Fuseli—less successfully from Blake2—as
if he were mining gold. But as geologists, we want to understand not just the
gold but the formations it comes from. To put it another way, any
"one" discourse is always and necessarily many discourses
intersecting in a complex hierarchical arrangement. Barrell
helps us see a major intersection, but the narrow angle of civic human-ism does
not permit the panoramic view we need of the traffic pattern.
I name the traffic pattern English-school discourse,
after the lingering crisis that occasioned one of these theoretical forays
after another. Con-fronting the conspicuous failure to
establish an English school of painting that. could
compete successfully with the Continental schools, writers groped for
explanations and solutions. They created narratives about the past to explain
both the present crisis in
But there is another way of
achieving a panoramic view. Because syntax and narrative are achieved
simultaneously, there is a literary element in all discourse. Perhaps this is merely analogous
to what we hear about other cultural categories: as every discourse has a
politics or an economics, so every discourse has a literature. Without jumping
to the claim that literary discourse is metadiscourse,
I would want to suggest that it is an interdiscursive
discourse, one that readily structures other discourses by providing a dynamic
narrative pattern capable not only of accommodating many smaller patterns but
also of limiting the forms those intersecting patterns can take and the levels
of importance they can assume. Accepting help freely from mythminded
literary theorists and historians likeNorthrop
Frye and Hayden White, I want to profile the literary discourse that I suppose
organizes the body of writings on the English school of painting in the
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. I apologize in advance for having
severely curtailed the documentation for fear that frequent quoting from
primary sources in so short a piece might only overshadow the bare outlines I
want to trace.
An
The typical argument for the
English school is broadly economic in motivation, historical in form, and
prospective or open in vantage. The object of the argument is to construct a
diagnostic and prognostic narrative that grants English art an honorable place
in European art history. The most influential versions of that narrative have
four leading features, the first pair of which give
meaning to the second. In the first pair, an argument by analogy is driven by
a principle of improvement that is transfer-able across historical periods and
across cultures. In the second, a list of obstructions is supplemented by a
list of counter-measures. The two pairs dovetail in a single prospective
history: when the obstructions are re-moved and the counter-measures
implemented, the principle of improvement will be able to operate freely, and
the heretofore partial analogies will emerge in increasingly comprehensive
forms.
Although, as the decades pass,
stakes deepen, issues complicate, and implications multiply, the favorite
arguments continue to be analogical. As X, so
These were, however, only the
uplifting forms of unrealized hope and possibility, while the debate was
conducted in the ominous rhetoric of national disaster: "The present
moment is considered by artists as teeming with the crisis . . . of the destiny
of their Art in England."' A string of highly visible practical
failures in the present made it easy to spot the ironies, not to say
mockeries, in the theoretical optimism about the future. Knowledge of patterns
of development, after all, can be either cheering or depressing depending on
one's position. At a conference on the prospects of economic development in
the Third World, insiders, those who feel that the pattern already applies to
them, may emphasize preconditions that outsiders cannot meet; outsiders may
emphasize the transfer-ability of the pattern itself. In arguments about the
development of art history, eighteenth-century Continental writers tend to
behave as insiders. Consolidating and defending, they assure themselves that
they are correct by rediscovering the pattern of artistic improvement in
classical art and in their own. Negatively, they discover that wherever great
art is missing, as in
But
still, the pattern of improvement itself makes the underlying bias toward
nurture over nature compelling enough to encourage English writers, behaving as
outsiders at the periphery of an inner circle, to transfer it to their own
situation. In this respect, Montesquieu's
vast devotion to the efficacy of "education. . . . We find it among
civilized peoples"a becomes the solution to the problem posed by his own
raisons naturelles. English writers do not deny that
In Valentine Green's happy interpretation of artistic cydes, English . painting becomes "the last offspring of a parent that
had filled the world with the renown of all her other progeny.' Green's
apparently incidental resort to the social metaphors of parent and progeny is
in fact a clue to the mythical form of English-school discourse, which is primarily
comic throughout the period.'' This comedy is seldom pure or exclusive. Whenever
a promising savior comes along to focus the action, the comedy opens itself
for a time to elements of romance. When failure mocks ,even
the best efforts of the best actors, darker ironic elements emerge. But the
mood of comic optimism prevails, and the forwardlooking
action al-ways returns to it for the motivation to nourish new strategies
conceived in hope.
The action of comedy focuses on
two areas of relationship, the relation —of the hero and heroine to one another
and the relation of the hero! heroine pair to some
more extensive social organization. Each relation-ship indexes
the other: the relation of hero to heroine tells us something about the larger
society, and the nature of the society predicts the relationship between hero
and heroine. Green's metaphor is characteristic of the plot in which it is
embedded insofar as the comedy of the English school is typically a comedy of
inheritance that moves (prospectively) from a state of social alienation to one
of integration. English art awaits the day when the
truth about its family connections will be discovered and it will be restored
to its rightful place among the acknowledged true heirs of European art. When
the social dimension is at its most explicit, English art may seek openly to
prove that it belongs in the ruling class. With this class-based orientation,
the action seeks to install the polite arts in the polite classes. Before their
liberation, the arts may be figured as la-dies and gentlemen forced to consort
with their rough-and-tumble inferiors while enduring the rigors of the
marketplace: "It is a mistake unworthy of an enlightened
government," says Martin Archer Shee, "to conceive
that the arts, left to the influence of ordinary events, . . . to fight and
scramble in the rude and revolting contest of coarser occupations, can ever arrive
at the perfection which contributes so materially to the permanent glory of a
state."13 Whatever form it takes, the moment of discovery
characteristic of comedy will occur when
Foreign writers who gave reasons
for believing that a successful English school of painting would be an
unnatural development, especially the "pious priests"
Montesquieu, Dubos, and Winckelmann, often focus the adversarial side of the
plot. They become the stock villains who have spread "the monstrous doctrines
of 'British incapacity for arts',"14 the nasty rumor that
On the other side of the plot,
among the blocking figures, the obstacle that the slanderous Continental
critics create is quite the ordinary one of an erroneous family connection for
the hero.
Comedy, thus construed, provided
the structure within which reformulations, answerable to the shifting fortunes
of English painters over several decades, occurred. Let us see how a few
significant variations fit into the more extensive comic pattern. Before the
1790s
This development comes as no
surprise, the role of disguise and hypocrisy in comedy being well known. For
Blake after a point, for Barry at times, and for many other writers on the
subject now and then, this counterplot of hypocrisy—the enemy within—became
especially important. In terms of the comic structure we may regard it as the
form that the blocking forces assume as they approach maximum coherence. To put
it another way, the more coherent the activity of the blocking characters is thought to be, the more
prominent the conspiratorial element in the plot becomes. And it is
considerably more pervasive, in any case, than is generally allowed by those
who regard it as a special paranoia reserved for the likes of Barry and Blake,
who are in fact only two of many who see something more than
coincidence in the misfortunes of English art.
Though
the conspiracy plot is a longlived element of the
discourse, its form changes. The earliest-variation with
which I am acquainted appears as a development of the foreign-artist theme.
Hogarth is not the first but certainly the most influential exponent of the
view that foreign art and artists were a key to the
English artist's dilemma. If they are regarded as simple competitors for the
attentions of the public, then they are relatively weak blocking characters
who can be eliminated by educating the English audience out of its ignorance
and fickleness. They are more formidable, however, when they appear, as they
usually do, in joint conspiratorial ventures with English agents. After 1800
the importance of foreign artists to the conspiracy theme decreases sharply,
but the theme itself remains strong, as we can hear in the frequent references
of later writers to cliques, cabals, cunning men, and secret machinations.
The later writers are at least
as likely as the earlier to locate the roots of neglect—"various talents
inadequately exerted, and genius stooping its powers to custom"—in
corruption and "persecution.i16 Conspiracy becomes a standard
part of the explanation for England's slow development. In 1828 J. T. Smith
blames the "unprecedented depression" of art sales on
"the most glaring misconduct of several speculators" who
undermine the "respectable publishers.„I7
In 1830 Allan Cunningham writes that, while naturally "fame is still the
free gift of the people;—it
was so in Hogarth's time, and it will continue to be so," "false
instructors" and "mock patrons"'s
concoct an artificial economy of supply and demand, respectively, that keeps
self-taught native genius out of the market and out of the historical record.
.Looking back and down from the relatively serene heights of English assurance
in 1841, W. B. Sarsfield Taylor sees a turbulent
history "not merely of unkindness and neglect, but of oppression and
wrong" and hazards a conjecture: "It would almost seem as if some
systematic plan for that purpose had been laid down, and acted upon by
successive governments in England, to discourage the rising talents of the
nation in works of art...." He draws the foreign-artist problem into this
plot: "Continental charlatans and sycophants were continually imported,
to insult the native artists, and deprive them of both character and
subsistence. This is the true cause why the arts have been so backward in
Variation in the discourse is
perhaps most intense in the area of action where enabling mediation takes
place. My emphasis on mediation, rather than onesided
heroic action of the romantic sort, acknowledges the tendency of comedy toward
inclusiveness and integration, even compromise. It is true that the mediators,
Frye's eirons, come from the hero and
heroine's side of the plot. If the eirons are
defeated, so are the hero and heroine. While Frye compares the comic victory of
youth over age to the mythical victory of summer over winter, it is important
to note that victory in comedy can be as different from victory in romance as winning over is from
winning out. In
definitive cases, both the form and spirit of comic victories are
distinguishable from romantic. The generally tolerant spirit of comedy may
derive partly from the recognition that heroes and villains are, to use Blake's
language, states, not identities, and that, as surely as summer will grow into
winter and sons into fathers, today's hero is
to-morrow's villain.
In the comedy of the English
school, mediation comes through a range of characters. Although we are unlikely
to exhaust the possibilities, we can sample them through the figure of the
patron, the father-figure who has the power to block or open the way to the
anticipated union between the painters and the significant public. Patrons are
imaged either as leading representatives of that public or as go-betweens. Of
the former, conventional or great-man patronage is the obvious instance. As
far as the comic structure goes, painters looking for such patrons are in the
position of heroes trying to get help from what would seem to be the wrong side
of the plot. In this case the patron begins life as a blocking figure (Frye's alazon), but if the real obstruction is not the patron but
the patron's ignorance of art, the blocking figure can function as a mediator
when the ignorance is eliminated. Presumably the rest of the public will then
fall like dominoes. Under great-man patronage, the greatest man is of course '
the king, and he is regularly called upon to provide the missing
encour-4agement to the painters: to acknowledge them as real sons, as it were, end
thus to establish their legitimacy through his. Though painters never cease appealing
to this symbolic representative of the legitimate public, the English monarch
is pretty consistently disappointing, if more representative of the public in
that respect than painters sometimes wanted to think. The disappointment, in
any event, produces innovation, as when the painters as a social group make
organized appeals to potential institutional patrons such as the church,
instead of the more respectable and traditional appeal, at least as
eighteenth-century painters preferred to think, in the other direction.
The failure of traditional
patronage moves English hopes to a second kind of patron who promises to open
what Josiah Wedgwood (another variation on the type) called the merchant's "lines, channels &
connectionsi20 between artists and public. In romantic transactions the
matchmaker, in commercial transactions the middleman, the type of the
go-between is well exemplified by "Alderman" John Boydell,
the speculator—engraver, printseller, publisher—who
launched the vastly ambitious Shakespeare Gallery project in the mid-1780s. In
literary structure the Boydell era is an inverted
comedy that begins with a feast and ends with a lottery. The feast is a Royal
Academy dinner in 1789 where the Prince, reading a toast authored by Edmund
Burke and approved by Joshua Reynolds, labels Boydell
"the commercial Maecenas," a particularly English
sort of patron, Burke said, "who patronizes the art better than the Grand Monarque of France.i21 Boydell
offered patronage from a new source, commerce. His clever way around the
potent anti-Commercial themes in the old discourse was to translate his private
project into the old public terms, by which the Shakespeare Gallery be-comes
not a commercial speculation but an institutional supplement to the
After Boydell
died and the stock and the premises were sold off in 1805 lottery,a parody of commerce, commentators reverted to an
earlier antii-commercial language—by which painting
and engraving produced for the market were identified, to their detriment, with
manufactured commodities—and renewed the appeal for state intervention, often
by analogy with Italian or French patronage, Leo X or Louis XIV. The analogy
had become more compelling because
The strongest negative form of
the patron is envisioned by Barry when he tries to communicate the insight that
patronage had actually shaped the history of art: "this business of
patronage is so big with delusion, and delusion of the most mischievous and
treacherous kind, that I do most ardently wish that some man . . . would, for
the public benefit, handle this subject in its full extent . . . He would meet
with matter of the most invidious, malignant kind, and yet so artfully
concealed, confounded, and so politically enveloped, with the very reverse and
most amiable appearances, as would require the utmost effort of his
discriminating skill and penetration, before he could strip and drag it into
the light in all its native deformity."25 Barry personifies
patronage in its conspiratorial form as a comic hypocrite to be unmasked and
expelled.
Finally, at the opposite
extreme from all attempts to find effective go-betweens are the attempts to
eliminate the structures of patronage altogether by making artists their own eirons. The arguments against patron-age are of course
already available in the arguments against excessive -dependence upon bad
patrons, which in form are much like the equally
available arguments against commerce. In painting and printmaking, where the
traditions and the patterns of self-employment are strong,
independence—self-publication and self-promotion—was always an available
remedy, represented in the discourse by the voices of Hogarth, Barry, and
Blake, at least.
The major difference between
most stage comedy and the "comedy" of English-school
discourse is in the purpose, as revealed in the proportion of, say,
entertainment to edification. We often hear about the social nature of comedy,
and the tradition of taking advantage of the opportunities that comedy offers
for social criticism must go back at least to Aristophanes. Social criticism
may even have special affinities with comedy, or, if that seems too broad, then
with the kind of comedy that presents alternative views of society for
adjudication—Frye describes the resemblance between the rhetoric of
jurisprudence and the rhetoric of comedy26—while favoring change and
ridiculing the status quo. English-school discourse
is not literary comedy, however, and, though it may be highly edifying, it is
entertaining only in rare moments of high scurrility.
From the literary point of view
it is, rather, comedy turned inside out: pragmatic social criticism that is
historical in subject and comic in architecture. While in stage comedy the
nature of the reformed society may be only
vaguely hinted at in a final scene, the historico-comic
bias of the English-school discourse allows it to be considerably more explicit
than most stage comedies about the nature of the reformed society that the comic action
makes possible. Thus a discourse as extensive and as public in its
purposes as the one we have been studying is more likely to approach what Frye
calls "the total mythos of comedy, only a small part of which is
ordinarily presented."27 The
Postscript:
Blake
Blake's ideas about art, and many of his ideas about literature as well, are profoundly
indebted to this discourse. The ideas are not, as they have often been supposed to be,
private. They have an internal coherence, but they also share the coherence of
the discourse on the English school of painting as it had evolved over the
course of the eighteenth century. To put it simply, Blake can annotate Reynolds's
Discourses because both the discourses and his annotations belong to the larger
English-school discourse.
While these generalizations account for the norm, they
leave out of ac-count the question of Blake's difference from the norm. I would
propose that much of the difference can be attributed to Blake's introduction
of a secondary discourse, Christian, into the primary one. The resulting change
is registered clearly in such key components of the discourse as the history of
art that it reports. For more than a century the challenge had been to narrate
a history of art in general capable of accommodating the history of English art in
particular—at least as a coherent episode, perhaps even as the climactic
phase, of the history of art. Blake's retelling of the more extensive history
incorporates Christian elements, drawn, for example, from biblical narrative,
in such a way as to reformulate the conditions under which English art had
failed to thrive (and almost all writers agreed that it had indeed failed) and
the conditions under which it could expect future success. Blake's Christian
history of art offers new critiques of the old topoi
in the English-school discourse including, among others, the training of
artists, the role of patrons, the history of
1.
W. K. Wimsatt, Jr., and
2.
In my review (forthcoming in Studies in Romanticism) of Barrell's The Political Theory of
Painting from Reynolds to Hazlitt: "The Body of the Public" (New Haven, 1986) I criticize the
attempt to construct a civic-humanist Blake.
3.
Sir Joshua Reynolds, Discourses on Art, ed. Robert R. Wark
(San Marino, CA, 1959), 25.
4.
Joseph Alsop, The Rare Art Traditions: The History of Art
Collecting and Its Linked Phenomena Wherever These Have Appeared (
5.
As a sample of the uses to which the Carracci model was put, see Opie and
Fuseli in
Ralph N. Womum, Lectures on
Painting, by the Royal Academicians: Barry, Opie, and Fuseli (London, 1848), 259 and 381. See also "Formulas
of Augmentation" in Eaves, William Blake's Theory of Art (
6.
Discourses on Art, 20.
7.
Prince Hoare, An Inquiry into the Requisite Cultivation and
8.
Charles de Secondat, baron de Montesquieu, The Spirit of Laws by Montesquieu:
A Compendium of the First English Edition, ed. David Wallace Carrithers (
9.
Montesquieu, Spirit
of Laws, 435.
10.
James Barry, An Inquiry into the Real and Imaginary Obstructions to the
Acquisition of
the Arts in
11.
Valentine Green, A Review of the Polite Arts in
12.
My analysis of the comic structure of English-school discourse relies
heavily On mythic or pregeneric
accounts of comedy such as Northrop Frye's in "The Mythos
of Spring: Comedy," Anatomy of Criticism: Four Essays (Princeton,
1957), 163–186, and,
to a lesser extent, C. L. Barber's, in Shakespeare's Festive Comedy: A
Study of Dramatic Form and Its Relation to Social Custom (Princeton, 1959).
13.
Martin Archer Shee, Rhymes on Art; or, The
Remonstrance of a Painter:... including Strictures on the State of the Arts, Criticism,
Patronage and Public Taste (3rd ed.
14.
W. B. Sarsfield Taylor, The Origin, Progress, and Present
Condition of the Fine Arts in
15.
Robert Strange, An Inquiry into the Rise and
Establishment of the
16.
Hoare, Arts
of Design in
17.
John Thomas Smith, Nollekens and His Times: Comprehending a
Life of that Celebrated Sculptor; and Memoirs of Several
Contemporary Artists, from the Time of Roubili1te, Hogarth, and
Reynolds, to that of Fuseli, Flaxman, and Blake (2 vols.,
18. Allan Cunningham, The Lives of the Most Eminent British Painters, Sculptors, and Architects (2nd ed., 6 vols. in 3, London,
1830–1846 [Vols. 1-3, 1830; vol. 4, 1831; Vol. 5,
1833; vol. 6, 1846]), 1:92 and 1:193.
19. Taylor, Origin, Progress, and
Present Condition, 1:xiv–xv.
20. Quoted in Neil McKendrick,
"Josiah Wedgwood: An Eighteenth-Century Entrepreneur in Salesmanship and Marketing Techniques," Economic History Review 12 (1960): 410.
21.
"Maecenas"
is Gaius Maecenus, Roman statesman, patron of Horace
and Virgil. Details of the occasion differ considerably—on whether the dinner
was the Lord Mayor's or the
22. Quoted in Sven H. A. Bruntjen,
John Boyden, 1719—1804: A Study of Art
Patron-age and Publishing in Georgian
23. Quoted in Hoare, Arts of Design in
24.
25. James Barry, A
Letter to the Dilettanti Society, Respecting the Obtention
of Certain Matters Essentially Necessary for
the Improvement of Public
Taste, and for Accomplishing the
Original Views of the Royal Academy of Great Britain (London, 1798), 41-42.
26. Anatomy of Criticism, 166.
27. Anatomy of Criticism, 171.