BLAKE, William - b. 1757 London, d. 1827 London - WGA

BLAKE, William

(b. 1757 London, d. 1827 London)

English artist, draughtsman, engraver, philosopher, and poet, one of the most remarkable figures of the Romantic period. From childhood he possessed visionary powers, and the engraving of Joseph of Arimathea, done at the age of 16, shows him already using a personal symbolism to express his mystical philosophy. His apprenticeship (1772-79) to the engraver James Basire (1730-1802), for whom he made drawings of the monuments in Westminster Abbey and other London churches, led him to a dose study of Gothic art and intensified his love of linear design and formal pattern. In 1779 he entered the Royal Academy Schools, but his relations with Reynolds were painful; later he was to find more sympathetic spirits in Stothard, Flaxman, Fuseli, and Barry.

During the 1780s Blake worked as a commercial engraver, but from about 1787 he became engrossed in a new method of printing his own illustrated poems in colour, which he claimed to have been revealed to him in a vision by his brother Robert, then recently deceased. The first of these major works of ‘illuminated printing’, in which handwritten text and illustration were engraved together to form a decorative unit, was Songs of Innocence (1789). In 1793 with his wife, Catherine Boutcher, he settled in Lambeth. where he engraved his principal prose work, The Marriage of Heaven and Hell. He had little material success and in 1800, at the suggestion of William Hayley, poet and man of letters, he left London to settle for three years at Felpham on the Sussex coast. Here he continued a series of watercolours illustrating biblical subjects for his first and most generous patron, Thomas Butts, and also began to engrave Jerusalem, the last and longest of his surviving mystical writings.

On his return to London, Blake made a series of drawings for Robert Blair’s poem The Grave, and in 1809 held a small one-man exhibition for which he issued A Descriptive Catalogue, eloquently summarizing his aims and convictions about art. In 1818 he met John Linnell, whose sympathetic patronage ensured him a livelihood for the remainder of his life. For Linnell he carried out his engravings for The Book of Job and his magnificent designs for The Divine Comedy, on which he was working up to the time of his death. Linnell introduced to him a group of younger artists, including Varley, Calvert, and Samuel Palmer, who were inspired and stimulated by Blake’s imaginative power. He thus passed his last years surrounded by a group of admiring disciples, who formed themselves into a kind of brotherhood called the Ancients.

In art as in life Blake was an individualist who made a principle of nonconformity. He had a prejudice against painting in oils on canvas and experimented with a variety of techniques in colour printing, illustration, and tempera. His work as an artist is almost impossible to divorce from the complex philosophy expressed also through his poetry. He believed that the visible world of the senses is an unreal envelope behind which the spiritual reality is concealed and set himself the impossible task of creating a visual symbolism for the expression of his spiritual visions. He refused the easy path of vagueness and misty suggestion, remaining content with nothing less than the maximum of clarity and precision.

To most of his contemporaries Blake seemed merely an eccentric, and his genius was not generally recognized until the second half of the 19th century. (Rossetti - another painter-poet with mystical leanings - was an early champion.) His output was enormous; there are important collections in the British Museum, the Tate Gallery, the Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, and several American museums.

Adam and Eve Sleeping
Adam and Eve Sleeping by

Adam and Eve Sleeping

This is an illustration to Milton’s Paradise Lost.

Albion, Symbolic Figure
Albion, Symbolic Figure by

Albion, Symbolic Figure

Christ as the Redeemer of Man
Christ as the Redeemer of Man by

Christ as the Redeemer of Man

Blake’s visionary drawing style is demonstrated in this illustration to Milton’s Paradise Lost, III. Christ floats in the air before God the Father, the position of his body referring to his death on the cross. The expressive, outsized hands of his father touch him lightly. Four angels accompany Christ on his way to EEarth. The unremitting movement contains tension. Even in terms of colour the divine realm is divided from the void, in which Satan, armed with a spear, attempts to prevent God’s plan of redemption for the world. The scene is characterized by symmetry and repetition, and is not only illuminated by the artist’s technique, but is also enlightened spiritually.

Elisha in the Chamber on the Wall
Elisha in the Chamber on the Wall by

Elisha in the Chamber on the Wall

Among Blake’s metaphors for creative vision was the Old Testament prophet Elisha, foretelling her future son to the Shunammite woman who had given him a room for his meditations. There can be little doubt that Blake’s bearded seer in his chamber was a more revealing record of himself and his art than a literal portrayal of his features could ever be.

Elohim Creating Adam
Elohim Creating Adam by

Elohim Creating Adam

Hecate or the Three Fates
Hecate or the Three Fates by

Hecate or the Three Fates

Recently the painting is called The Night of Enitharmon’s Joy. The many titles show the many levels of meaning, or the impenetrable mystery of Blake’s work.

Isaac Newton
Isaac Newton by

Isaac Newton

Blake sought to exemplify the deeper significance of his philosophical thought in the tension between the immediate realism of his image and fantastic symbolism.

Newton, man naked and created out of chaos, appears to be breaking through the chaos. He is discovering the law that is inherent in his own physical nature. Man has tasted of the fruit of the tree of knowledge, and now his intellect reveals to his astonished gaze the abstract reality of creation.

Job Confessing his Presumption to God who Answers from the Whirlwind
Job Confessing his Presumption to God who Answers from the Whirlwind by

Job Confessing his Presumption to God who Answers from the Whirlwind

Blake stands alone in the history of British art; his paintings, prints and poetry evoke a private world of religious, mythic and philosophical themes of searing originality. He pursued some conventional training as an apprentice engraver, and briefly as a student at the Royal Academy Schools, but persisted throughout his life with his unorthodox vision. One of the few contemporaries who admired his work was the military clerk Thomas Butts, to whose son Blake gave engraving lessons, and for whom he created over eighty works between 1800 and c. 1809. They treated themes such as the Passion, Apocalyptic beasts and the Old Testament Book of Job, and this watercolour is one of the most splendid.

Blake re-visited the subject of Job on a number of occasions, possibly because he identified with Job’s trials. Job steadfastly refused to abandon his faith in spite of the numerous misfortunes he had to endure, which included the death of his children and the destruction of his home. Here, at the climax of his torment, surrounded by his prostrated wife and friends, he experiences a mystic vision of God, who, with outstretched arms, is seen amid a vortex of angels. Light appears on the horizon, and Job will be granted redemption.

Job and his Daughters
Job and his Daughters by

Job and his Daughters

This is Plate 20 of the Book of Job.

Lear Grasping a Sword
Lear Grasping a Sword by

Lear Grasping a Sword

This is an illustration to Shakespeare’s King Lear.

Los
Los by

Los

This is Plate 100 of the illustrated poem Jerusalem.

Trained as an engraver, Blake evolved into a shamanic figure - mystic, philosopher, priest - compelled to set his visions before the world. They took the form of epic, quasi-biblical dramas of spiritual redemption. He increasingly eschewed conventional media and published them in ‘Prophetic Books’ written and illuminated himself by processes of colour printing. In his Prophetic Books, the character of Los exemplifies the artist’s roles as seer, mystic and interpreter. The author of all art and literature, architect of a City of Art, Los is responsible for everything mankind sees and senses. In Jerusalem he takes various forms, from a London nightwatchman to a blacksmith at his forge, but he is also Blake himself. When the narrative reaches its last page, Los rests from his smithy, but a temple of false religion is already extending to cover the land behind him as night follows day.

Los Entering the Grave
Los Entering the Grave by

Los Entering the Grave

This is the frontispiece of the illustrated poem Jerusalem.

In the coloured version of the frontispiece to his Jerusalem, Blake placed the thorns of the Passion beneath his own personification, Los, as he steps bravely through a door into a dark, grave-like void. This is not an end but the beginning: Los has embarked on an adventure, one hand raised in greeting and the other holding a blazing sun to illuminate the truths to be revealed in the following pages.

Nebuchadnezzar
Nebuchadnezzar by

Nebuchadnezzar

Blake produced in the mid-1790s a series of large colour prints on themes of oppression, one of which is Nebuchadnezzar. This plate depicts the animal state to which man had been reduced after the Fall, so vividly personified in the crouching form and sullen stare of his Nebuchadnezzar.

Oberon, Titania and Puck with Dancing Fairies
Oberon, Titania and Puck with Dancing Fairies by

Oberon, Titania and Puck with Dancing Fairies

Pity
Pity by

Pity

This image is taken from Macbeth: “pity, like a naked newborn babe / Striding the blast, or heaven’s cherubim horsed / Upon the sightless couriers of the air”. Blake draws on popularly-held associations between a fair complexion and moral purity. These connections are also made by Lavater, who writes that “the grey is the tenderest of horses, and, we may here add, that people with light hair, if not effeminate, are yet, it is well known, of tender formation and constitution”.

There are three full-size versions of this design, one in Tate Gallery, London, one in the Metropolitan Museum, New York, and one at the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven. None of the prints are dated, nor do they bear dated watermarks, but all seem to date from the initial phase of Blake’s work on his large colour prints, c.1795. The sequence of the three pulls seems to have been Tate Gallery, Metropolitan Museum and Yale Center.

Pity
Pity by

Pity

Blake was inspired by lines from Macbeth (act 1, scene 7), in which the title character imagines the aftermath of his intended murder of Duncan, the king: “And pity, like a naked new-born babe / Striding the blast, or heaven’s cherubin, horsed / Upon the sightless couriers of the air, / Shall blow the horrid deed in every eye”.

Shakespeare’s similes are embodied here to form a dynamic interplay: a tiny baby springs from his mother towards an angel astride a blind steed. The artist inventively mixed relief etching with colours printed from millboard to produce the image, and then used ink and watercolour to define details. Blake called prints like this one “frescoes” and considered them part of a narrative sequence.

There are three full-size versions of this design, one in Tate Gallery, London, one in the Metropolitan Museum, New York, and one at the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven. None of the prints are dated, nor do they bear dated watermarks, but all seem to date from the initial phase of Blake’s work on his large colour prints, c.1795. The sequence of the three pulls seems to have been Tate Gallery, Metropolitan Museum and Yale Center.

Satan Watching the Caresses of Adam and Eve
Satan Watching the Caresses of Adam and Eve by

Satan Watching the Caresses of Adam and Eve

This is an illustration to Milton’s Paradise Lost.

Songs of Innocence (Title page)
Songs of Innocence (Title page) by

Songs of Innocence (Title page)

William Blake is the only artist of his rank who is even better known as a poet, and some of his most pleasing works are those he called “illuminated printing,” which fuse picture and word to form a completely integrated and completely personal result. Songs of Innocence, published in 1789, comprises 31 illuminated poems; the book was republished in 1794 with Songs of Experience, with 54 plates in all. Blake’s books are similar to 15th-century blockbooks, so called because for each page the letters were, like the images, carved from the block rather than printed from movable type. Blake printed his plates in one colour only, here a bright red-brown. The pages were then painted, perhaps by Blake himself, in watercolours and gold, so every copy of the book is unique. The colours and gold are especially brilliant in this copy. Blake kept the plates and produced these books over a long period of time, probably according to demand. The watermark on 12 leaves of the Metropolitan’s copy includes the date 1825, indicating that it was made in or after that year.

The Ancient of Days
The Ancient of Days by

The Ancient of Days

The subtitle of the picture is “Urizen measuring out the material world.”

The Book of Job: When the Morning Stars Sang Together
The Book of Job: When the Morning Stars Sang Together by

The Book of Job: When the Morning Stars Sang Together

Blake’s images oscillate between dream and reason. Even direct references to the Bible, as here to the Book of Job, do not necessarily mean that this is an illustration of the Bible. The scenes are too much a part of the artist’s private religious vision. Here we see Job, who has been through torment and suffering, taken up by God. With His arms outstretched, God appears as the Lord of Light and Darkness, but the depiction could also be intended to show God as the Lord of the Earth. There is a striking similarity in the faces of God and Job.

The sheet is a drawing for one of the sequences of engravings that appeared from 1825.

The Descent of Christ
The Descent of Christ by

The Descent of Christ

This is Plate 35 of the illustrated poem Jerusalem.

In this early page of Jerusalem, the sleeping Albion is visited by Christ, who awakens his dormant desire for salvation. Though Albion is not yet conscious of Christ’s sacrifice, its promise is foreshadowed by the new body that begins to emerge from his breast.

The Lovers' Whirlwind, Francesca da Rimini and Paolo Malatesta
The Lovers' Whirlwind, Francesca da Rimini and Paolo Malatesta by

The Lovers' Whirlwind, Francesca da Rimini and Paolo Malatesta

The scene is from Dante’s Divine Comedy, Hell).

The Resurrection
The Resurrection by

The Resurrection

The subtitle of the picture is “Angels rolling away the stone from the sepulchre.”

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