The
Integrated Art Collection Rosemary Harris De NatWest Group, een van de grootste Britse banken, bezit een collectie die bestaat uit meer dan 1500 werken. Het meerendeel van de collectie bestaat uit moderne Britse kunst. De bank opende in februari van dit jaar de Lothbury Gallery; een permanente expositieruimte in de bankhal van het hoofdkantoor in Londen. Rosemary Harris is sinds 1995 conservator van de kunstcollectie van de NatWest Group. Daarvoor werkte ze vanaf 1986 als conservator voor de Tate Gallery in Londen. NatWest and the Main Features of the Art Collection The National Westminster Bank is among the world's foremost banking and financial services organisations. We employ over 70,000 people. Our turnover is six billion pounds sterling. We are part of a world-wide industry which has evolved beyond recognition in the last 30 years. Traditionally banks sought to project an image of financial strength and permanence. This was reflected in the architecture of the buildings. These were lofty and daunting marble and mahagony banking halls.But, of course, the nature of financial services and banking has dramatically changed. The emphasis is on innovation and advanced technology. Contemporary concepts of office design and architecture have brought long white walls, glass and uniformity. A central feature of the new architecture was the abundance of wall space. These spaces were ideal for hanging paintings. These created a demand for works of art in keeping with the new architecture in order to 'decorate' offices. During the 1960s and the 1970s there was also a growing awareness of the positive role that art could play in the work place to promote a stimulating environment for both staff and visitors. Art could enhance the working environment and make a visual statement about the company's nature. The formation of NatWest's collection of contemporary art is thus directly linked to the development of architecture. When I was employed two years ago as the first trained curator, having been at the Tate Gallery for nine years, I found a collection of over 1,500 items. We had paintings, drawings, photographs and prints; and silver, porcelain, clocks, furniture and tapestries. The main art collection has historic paintings from the seventeenth-century to nineteenth-century, collected almost at random; and works by twentieth-century British artists, collected to decorate modern offices. The historic works form only a small part of the Collection. They include topographical scenes such as Joseph Nicholls view of London, `A view of Charing Cross and Northumberland House', 1746. For me, however, the main fascination of the Collection, and the unique quality that it has, is the large number of pictures by post-war British artists. We were very lucky in the 1960s a new regional head office in Manchester was designed by the Casson Conder Partnership. The regional Chairman liked modern paintings and set about buying a collection of work by contemporary British artists. An art budget was established and 70 paintings and works on paper were purchased with specialist advice from Manchester's Whitworth Art Gallery. Figurative and abstract works were acquired including in 1970 L.S. Lowry's 'The Mill, Early Morning', 1963. This work is characteristic of his images of industrial scenes and was an especially appropriate work because Lowry was born and studied in Manchester. But an association with Manchester was not an acquisition criterion. Frank Auerbach's painting of 'Primrose Hill', 1971, was painted near the artist's studio in Camden Town, London and acquired in the same year. Auerbach's principle subjects were figures and townscapes. 'Primrose Hill' is one of a series on the London Park and is typical of his rich and thickly painted works. On the same theme of art following the architecture, in 1980 NatWest completed a major building designed by Seifert and Partners, the tallest Tower in the City of London. Again there was an allocated budget for works of art and specialist advice was obtained from the Contemporary Art Society. They assembled a Collection of 100 works by contemporary British artists, some represented by more than one work. Two painting by Ivon Hitchens were purchased, including 'Orange Flowers in a White Bowl,' 1960-1965. Hitchens concentrated on painting landscapes, flowers and occasionally nudes. He was particularly influenced by Cézanne and Matisse. In this painting Hitchens sought to represent the same lyrical qualities which he found in nature. Three Howard Hodgkin prints were purchased, one of which 'Bleeding', 1982 is a hand-coloured lithograph. Hodgkin's semi-abstract work relates to specific experiences. For him the process of making the work is an act of recollection in which he seeks equivalents in colour and form for his memories and impressions of a particular scene. In this instance, his memory is of a quarrel which took place in a Manhattan apartment. The richly decorated panels in this print were inspired by the Indian wall hangings in the apartment. Elisabeth Vellacott is represented by 4 drawings and by a painting 'Christ Driving the Photographers from King's College Chapel', 1981. This depicts King's College Chapel in Cambridge University near to where she lives. It is a contemporary interpretation of Christ driving the Pharisees from the temple in Jerusalem. The 'temple' here is King's College, a much visited venue for tourists and photographers. The
Collecting policy of the Art Collection Working with one senior executive, we have developed a combined acquisitions and disposals policy to rationalise and refine the Collection. Previously works had been sold because the style or subject of the work was unsuitable or the work was difficult to place or was surplus. We now have a strategic disposal policy to sell a number of high value items which fall outside the main focus of the Collection in order to create a fund to finance future acquisitions. This policy is being implemented: we recently sold at Sotheby's two pictures by Antonio Joli which raised world record prices and produced over 1.5 million pounds sterling to support the Collection. Linked to the disposals is a clear acquisitions programme. The main thrust is to build on existing areas of strength, namely post war British art and works by younger emerging artists which we consider of interest. We will extend the Collection through acquisitions of both traditional modes of expression and more contemporary developments. Since 1996 we have strengthened our representation of British abstraction by a number of significant acquisitions of younger British artists working in an abstract style. These include Mark Francis, Jason Martin, Callum Innes and Antoni Malinowski. Innes, who was shortlisted for the 1995 Tate Gallery Turner Prize, is represented by 'Exposed Painting, Cadmium Orange', 1996. Innes starts with a monochrome ground which he paints onto the canvas and then uses a brush soaked in terpentine to remove the colour he previously applied. His working practice has been described as 'deliberately accidental'. Antoni Malinowski who was born in Warsaw and has lived and worked in London since 1980 is represented by 'Towards Darkness in White', 1993. This is typical of his work in the 'all-over' composition of small, precise, flickering marks. He is interested in Eastern philosophy and meditation and as such his images evolve slowly and are concerned with the idea of stasis. In addition to painting we are also looking to acquire more photographic works and to building a collection of sculpture and sculptors' drawings. Activities
of the Collection which involve public relations and advertising. We
insist on very high standards. The space and the display surpasses that
of many public galleries. The central aim is to show changing displays
from the Group's permanent Collection. The first Collection display titled,
'The Subjects of Art' focused on the four subjects of art, namely still-life,
the figure, landscape and abstraction. Our next permanent collection display,
'Portraits of Places' will open in February 1998 and will explore the
ways in which artists have depicted the landscape. In order to maintain
the level of interest in the Gallery from the local community and beyond
we have planned a programme of loan exhibitions. In November 1997 we will
be mounting 'London: The New Millennium' an exhibition of some thirty
of the major architectural projects for London over the Millennium period.
The exhibition has been selected to reflect the diversity and range of
the planned developments from the large scale leisure projects at Battersea
Power I will finish with a picture which we acquired for the opening of the new gallery, Albert Irvin's 'San Giorgio', 1995. It is one of a major series of three works Irvin made in 1995. Of the other two, one was purchased by the Tate Gallery, London and the other by the Museum of Modern Art, Dublin. Irvin's paintings are characterised by an expansive scale, vigorous and gesturally applied paint and exuberant colour. The central subject of Irvin's work is 'the experience of being in the world'. Irvin regards the space of his paintings and the steps taken in their execution as metaphors for real space and to events in life. I have chosen to end with this painting because the spirit of celebration which is central to Irvin's work seems to me to be appropriate to the close links which NatWest has forged with art and to the bank's aspirations for the future. Maake een keuze uit de volgende sprekers: Erik
Hermida, Onderneming & Kunst
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