“Accidents are the
makings of a picture”
Arthur Melville
Arthur Melville
For the nineteenth century painter Arthur Melville the
courting of danger was a sought after ingredient in both his work and his life.
About whom Britain’s Art
Fund has said “Arthur Melville's fascination with brilliant
light and bold compositions made him one of the most radical and innovative
Scottish artists of the 19th-century.”
An opinion underscored by Tate
Britain who has said “Melville evolved a new watercolor method. He saturated the paper with
Chinese white paint and used sponges to create a velvet-like texture. Before
applying the paint, he tried out ideas on pieces of glass held over the
painting. Color, such as the blue used here, (see below) drew attention not
just to the subject of the work, but to the medium itself.”
Born in 1855 and whilst a grocers apprentice in his
late teens Melville attended evening classes at the Royal Scottish Academy and
after having one of his pictures exhibited at London’s Royal Academy when he
was 23 Melville decamped to France. During his two years there he first painted
in Paris and later at an artist’s colony in Grez-sur-Loing.
After France Melville traveled to the Middle East. First
to Egypt then later to Bagdad and then overland through Syria and Turkey to
Europe and England. During this journey Melville was attacked by robbers and
left for dead, detained by the Turks as a suspected spy and completed some 60 watercolor
sketches in a style that was destined to become the dominant influence for the
rest of his life.
As the Independent
Newspaper’s Iain Gale wrote about a 2011 Edinburgh exhibition of Melville’s work “At first sight it is
easy to mistake Melville's loose style for a derivative of Impressionism - he
is often dubbed a "Scottish impressionist". In truth, although his
inspiration was in part French, it was drawn not from Monet, Sisley and their
fellow rebels but from rather more prosaic French and Dutch Realist painters,
such as Bastien-Lepage, Mauve, Israels and other Hague artists… In the latter work Melville shows himself a
paragon of artistic brevity. In his finest watercolors he is able to convey the
mood of an Eastern street market, a Highland autumn or a Spanish bull-ring with
no more than a few strokes of subtle tonal wash. With Melville, less is
definitely more… Melville was a man ahead of his time - an unsuspected
precursor of modernism, anticipating the achievement of Kandinsky and the
German Expressionists.
Although he never returned to the Middle East, Melville
found a substitute in Spain which visited regularly. And it was his last visit
there at the age of 49 that saw him catch Typhoid fever that was to bring his
life to its close.
The Exhibition Arthur Melville: Adventures in Color is
currently on show at the Scottish
National Gallery until the 17th of January 2016.
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