THOMAS COOPER // A Monstrous Imagining of Matter and Spirit: Robert Brough鈥檚 Fantaisie en Folie (1897)

Fantaisie en Folie听was Robert Brough鈥檚 (1872-1905) most successful painting and won听international acclaim. However, since its acquisition by the Tate it has largely gone by ignored in art historical accounts of late nineteenth-century painting. 鈥楢 Monstrous Imagining of Matter and Spirit: Robert Brough鈥檚听Fantaisie en Folie听(1897)鈥 examines Brough鈥檚 painting with a fresh perspective. It questions the painting鈥檚 current interpretation as an 鈥榓esthetic moment鈥, investigating notions of inner vision, the fantastic and monstrous, and the insubstantiality of form, matter and spirit. This article compares Brough and his work with Paul Gauguin, James McNeill Whistler and George Frederic Watts. It moves to consider how the painting might be understood in terms of the relationship between the self and the world, drawing on the writings of Edward Carpenter and William James, and the contexts of Theosophy and Buddhist thought. The article proposes that what is represented is something feared rather than desired.

鈥楴othing in the material world endures absolutely unchanged in itself or its conditions, even for the smallest conceivable portion of time. All that听is, is forever in process of听becoming听something else鈥he constant, eternal change of atoms from one state into another.鈥

鈥 William Judge,听Echoes From The Orient, 1890.

Fig. 1: Robert Brough, Fantaisie en Folie, 1897, oil on canvas, 102.2 x 125.7 cm, Tate, London.
Fig. 1: Robert Brough, Fantaisie en Folie, 1897, oil on canvas, 102.2 x 125.7 cm, Tate, London. 漏 Tate, London, 2018.

The scene is a sparse interior. A muddied but otherwise blank, grey-green wall fills the background. In the shallow foreground there is a cloth-covered table. A female figure is sitting next to it in a chair. Her posture is upright. She is dressed elegantly in a brown velvet dress. On the table stands a Budai figurine. With her right arm, the seated figure takes the end of her sautoir necklace and wraps it around the figurine鈥檚 neck. There she holds the pendant of her necklace, gripping it between her thumb and index finger. The necklace 鈥 a chain of fine silver, green, blue and maroon beads 鈥 is looped around the figure鈥檚 neck. It links together the figure and figurine.

This striking tableau is the subject of听Fantaisie en Folie听(Fig. 1), painted in 1897 by Robert Brough.听Fantaisie en Folie听was Brough鈥檚 most successful painting, exhibited first in London and then in Edinburgh, Glasgow, Paris, Munich, Vienna and St. Louis. On the artist鈥檚 bequest, it was given to Tate Britain in 1905, where it now hangs on display, yet goes largely unnoticed.[1]听Invariably in scholarship, Brough is mentioned in passing and without exploration. A posthumous听Exhibition of paintings & sketches by Robert Brough, A.R.S.A听at the Fine Art Society in 1907 and the exhibition听Robert Brough, ARSA: 1872-1905, held at the Aberdeen Art Gallery in 1995, are the only retrospective and extensive explorations of his work to date. Both exhibitions showed听Fantaisie en Folie, yet neither afforded it critical discussion. Thus far only Kenneth McConkey has devoted听Fantaisie en Folie听any serious attention and interprets the work as representing an 鈥榓esthetic moment鈥.[2]

This article offers a sustained and critical account of this painting, making suggestions as to what it may represent. It unpacks what sort of aesthetic moment we bear witness to and the type of human experience, inflected with complex and contradictory contexts of the late nineteenth century, that is articulated in visual and material terms. I find Brough鈥檚 handling of paint and description of form compelling and this article explores the materiality of paint and the representation of physical matter. Part of the framework used engages Victorian materialist aesthetics, drawing on the recent work of Benjamin Morgan to set this up. This article compares听Fantaisie en Folie听with a selection of works by Brough. In addition, it introduces artworks by artists from different networks and nationalities, such as John Singer Sargent, Paul Gauguin and George Frederic Watts to be appraised alongside Brough鈥檚 work. This broader comparative analysis is productive in understanding听Fantaisie en Folie. Questions that I feel this painting asks, are raised throughout the article. These questions are used to propel and deepen the analysis. Often they are placed at the end of a section, but their answers are addressed in the subsequent sections.

Fig. 2: John Singer Sargent, Madame Gautreau Drinking a Toast, 1882-1883, oil on panel, 32 x 41 cm, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, MA, USA. 漏 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, MA, USA.
Fig. 2: John Singer Sargent, Madame Gautreau Drinking a Toast, 1882-1883, oil on panel, 32 x 41 cm, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, MA, USA. 漏 Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, MA, USA.

The argument of this article attends to the representation of the self and contends that this plays out in perverse ways in听Fantaisie en Folie. The article draws on the writings of Edward Carpenter and William James in addition to the new mind and materialist sciences of the period. At the same time, the line of thought is developed with reference to spirituality, Theosophy and Buddhist theology. This article argues that these contexts co-exist with a discussion of materialist thought. They are mobilised through the Budai figurine and in relation to Watts鈥 interest in Theosophy and Buddhism. Carpenter鈥檚 autobiography makes clear his interest in Eastern theological thought, and his views are considered in my discussion of Theosophical and Buddhist doctrine. The doctrine of transmigration, which suggests an absence of the soul, is especially important for the interpretation laid out here.

Fig. 3: Alfred Stevens, The Present, ca. 1866-71, oil on canvas, 37 x 46 cm, Sir Hugh Lane Bequest, 1917, The National Gallery, London.
Fig. 3: Alfred Stevens, The Present, ca. 1866-71, oil on canvas, 37 x 46 cm, Sir Hugh Lane Bequest, 1917, The National Gallery, London. 漏 The National Gallery, London.

Sitting and Seeing

The subject of a female figure sitting in a chair beside a table or bureau on which an object of taste is placed is not specific to听Fantaisie en Folie. It occurs multiple times throughout Brough鈥檚 work and it is something to which we need to pay attention. Painted in the same year as听Fantaisie en Folie,听Mrs Nicol of Roscobie听(1897) shows a profile of a female figure sitting next to a bureau. Holding a newspaper in her left hand and a pair of spectacles in her right hand, Mrs Nicol looks up to face the viewer with a direct stare. The viewer is also addressed in the portrait听Dolly Crombie听(ca. 1897), which closely parallels the costume in听Fantaisie en Folie听through the full-length dress, billowing sleeves and high collar. In this work, the figure is also sitting in a near-identical, low-back wooden chair. Moreover, in听Sweet Violets听(1897) 鈥 considered by critics the sister work of听Fantaisie en Folie听鈥 a woman sits, holds out, and looks towards, a vase filled with violets.[3]听Sargent鈥檚听Madame Gautreau Drinking a Toast听(Fig. 2, 1882-1883) is strikingly akin in composition to both听Fantaisie en Folie听and听Sweet Violets. The brown and purple tones used in听Madame Gautreau听prefigure the purple and maroon palette used by Brough in the sister works.听Mrs Nicol of Roscobie听also achieves a similar balance of 鈥榮emi-tones of purplish hangings鈥.[4]听This preference for purple may perhaps be identified as of trend for Brough. It has been noted that the composition of听Dolly Crombie听echoes Vel谩zquez鈥檚 portrait of Pope Innocent X (1650). For the composition of听Fantaisie en Folie, Brough draws from more recent precedents, as Kenneth McConkey establishes, in Alfred Stevens鈥櫶The Present听(Fig. 3, ca. 1866-1871) and Jules Bastien-Lepage鈥檚听Sarah Bernhardt听(1879).[5]听It is through these comparisons that McConkey characterises the subject of听Fantaisie en Folie听as an 鈥榓esthetic moment鈥. He describes what we see as a moment of reverie in which a fashionably dressed female figure 鈥榦f striking profile鈥 interacts with a decorative object, engaging in 鈥榮uperior鈥 thought and the 鈥榖eauty of contemplation鈥.[6]听The figure herself becomes an object of beauty for the beholder, who subsequently gains a more conscious awareness of the act of looking as well as his or her own selfhood.[7]听The object operates beyond materiality as a talisman, transposing art into life. McConkey draws on Bernard Berenson for some foundation to this unavoidably slippery concept, for whom the 鈥榓esthetic moment鈥 abolishes time and space, wherein the beholder is enwrapped in 鈥榦ne awareness鈥 as the self and the object 鈥榖ecome one entity鈥: 鈥業n short, the aesthetic moment is a moment of mystic vision.鈥[8]听However, what exactly is going on here?

McConkey is correct in seeing the figure in a state of reverie. Unmoving and with closed eyes, she is in an attitude of fixed repose. We imagine that she is thinking on the figurine before her as she reaches to it. Yet, her closed eyes put her in opposition to the modes of contemplation presented in听The Present听and听Sarah Bernhardt. In both paintings, the figures look at the objects before them with open eyes. In听Fantaisie en Folie听this process of engagement through ocular vision is absent; the figure is, in fact, blind. If it is not, to adopt Kate Flint鈥檚 terms, through an 鈥榦uter鈥 vision that the figure in听Fantaisie en Folie听contemplates the object before her, might this process be mediated through an 鈥榠nner鈥 vision?[9]听Thus the figurine represented is what she is seeing in the imagination of her reverie? In this way, the figurine may be a glimpse or moment of the fantasy alluded to in the painting鈥檚 equivocal title. A literal translation of听Fantaisie en Folie听would be 鈥楩antasy in Madness鈥. However, Caroline Corbeau-Parsons suggests it might be better translated as 鈥楿nbridled fantasy鈥.[10]听She also suggests the possibility that the title may allude to musical associations 鈥 whereby听Fantaisie听is a fantasia. 鈥En Folie鈥听would then serve to describe a type of uncontrolled or unbridled sensory experience that evokes more of a mood than a narrative. The associations with musical terms and evocation of mood prompt an apposite comparison with the work of James McNeill Whistler, who titled many of his works with musical terms. Brough and Whistler are compared below, but first I want to advance a line of thought around fantasy as the imaginative and creative vision in which the inanimate figurine comes alive in this aesthetic encounter.

Fig. 4: Paul Gauguin, Vision After the Sermon (Jacob Wrestling with the Angel), 1888, oil on canvas, 72.2. x 91 cm, Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh.
Fig. 4: Paul Gauguin, Vision After the Sermon (Jacob Wrestling with the Angel), 1888, oil on canvas, 72.2. x 91 cm, Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh. 漏 The National Galleries of Scotland.

Critical reviews of听Fantaisie en Folie听attest to this animation. The figurine was described as a 鈥榣ittle fantastic but brilliant idol鈥; noting its fantastic and monstrous qualities, it was reported to be a 鈥楥hinese monster鈥 and an 鈥榓ggressive鈥ittle monster鈥; and even referred to as 鈥榟eathenish-looking鈥.[11]听Frequently, these reviews remarked on the figurine鈥檚 jewel-like quality: 鈥榬adiating like a jewel鈥; 鈥榓 splendid jewelled鈥 figure, bearing 鈥榓 jewel-like brilliancy鈥.[12]听It is clear why such readings held. Brough creates the illusion of the figurine being alive and in motion through paint and colour. The figurine is painted with thin and fluid brushwork. Paint is laid on the ground in circular motions describing the plump face, round cheeks, and curved belly and sack. The paint is thick and stands proud of the support, suggesting something more than two-dimensionality. The figurine is the most brightly coloured element of the entire composition. It sparkles and glistens with painted white highlight. Light seems to bounce off the reflective glaze of its moving surface.

To continue with this notion of the figurine as a projection of the figure鈥檚 imagination, we might see the painting as constitutive of two dimensions of vision: the figure in reverie and what is seen in that reverie. Multiple dimensions of vision are represented in Paul Gauguin鈥檚听Vision After the Sermon (Jacob Wrestling with the Angel)听(Fig. 4, 1888). This was painted in the town of Pont-Aven in Brittany, home to an artist colony established by the Synthesists and other avant-garde artists. 听In works typical for the Synthesists forms are rendered in flat planes, bold lines and saturated colours, and the aesthetic response also terms the representation of a subject. Gauguin depicts in bold outlines and block colours a group of Breton women praying after a theological sermon. Against a background of bright red, these women occupy the left side of the canvas. This section is marked out spatially by a branch that cuts across the work in a right to left and upward diagonal. In the right side of the canvas, we see the vignette of Jacob wrestling with the angel. Thus the branch divides the composition in two, separating the praying women who perceive in reverie from the 鈥榤ental image鈥 of their inner vision.[13]听Of听Vision After the Sermon,听Gauguin wrote to Vincent van Gogh: 鈥楩or me the landscape and the wrestling in this picture only exist in the imagination of the people praying after the sermon.鈥[14]听In this way, of visualising what 鈥榚xist[s] in the imagination鈥, we find similarity between Gauguin and Brough. Brough visited Brittany in 1894 and Gauguin had been there intermittently between 1888 and 1895. While Brough may not have met Gauguin, he was certainly aware of him and his work, as well as that of the Synthesists, of whom he became a follower.[15]听(In Brough鈥檚听Breton Girl Herding Cattle听(ca. 1896), the influence of the Synthesists is clear as colour and rhythmic line operate in unison to produce light and form. A branch divides the compositional space, echoing the branch employed in听Vision After the Sermon.) In comparing听Fantaisie en Folie听with Gauguin鈥檚听Vision After the Sermon, we find a shared engagement with visualisations of inner vision. This supports the argument that the Budai figurine is a visualisation of the imagination.

Both听Vision After the Sermon听and听Fantaisie en Folie听feature a flat undecorated ground of subtly varied tones from a single key of colour. In both cases this functions as the background. The bright red in听Vision After the Sermon听suggests an intensity of some sort, perhaps the tension of the wrestle or acute religious meditation. By contrast, the background in听Fantaisie en Folie听is a dulled mix of green and grey tones. Its smoky appearance suggests that there is something neither fully visible nor accessible. Placed before this background, the figure and figurine block our access to it. Gauguin uses a branch to divide the praying women and their vision. Brough, however, links figure and figurine together by the necklace. Thus the interaction between subject and object concerns how they operate as 鈥榦ne entity鈥 in a shared space and environment. This will be unpacked below as the type of interaction seen here is considered in terms of materialist aesthetics.

 

Fantastic, Alive and Monstrous

The question of what the figure is seeing in her imagination requires further discussion. Here I break away from McConkey and argue that this inner vision is not a contemplation of the object鈥檚 beauty, but rather how this fantastic object operates unexpectedly. In contrast to the closed eyes of the female figure, the face of the figurine has bright, open eyes. Over the blind figure, it has agency of ocular vision as if by some peculiar shift of sensorial ability. The figure鈥檚 haptic engagement directed towards the figurine is transformed and transferred back through its visual engagement: the figurine looks at the figure. If we have any 鈥榦uter鈥 contemplation at all, the dynamic of this process operates atypically from object to subject. We might find a visualisation of this shift at the point where the figure鈥檚 right hand meets the figurine: the Yin-Yang pendant of the sautoir necklace. Here, two swirls of colour, the one above a pale viridian, the other below a mixture of white and brown, rotate in an anti-clockwise motion. The stroke of viridian moves away from the figure towards the figurine, while the stroke of white and brown moves away from the figurine towards the figure. Thus, we have a process of transfer enacted through colour and paint, paralleling the transfer of sensorial ability. In this way, the figurine is not only in opposition to the figure but edges further away from the 鈥榬eal鈥. Furthermore, it does not display characteristics we expect of ceramics: cold, hard, fixed, glazed and inanimate. Unexpectedly, the figurine operates with ocular vision, and moves closer still to the fantastic: existing in the imagination, 鈥榠t is a fantasy鈥, an object coming alive.[16]

Benjamin Morgan explores how the latter half of the nineteenth century was a 鈥榩articularly active moment for seeing the aesthetic domain as a place where matter was invested with mind and observation鈥, and where matter became 鈥榮piritualized, animated, and enminded鈥 in aesthetic objects.[17]听This was an outcome of materialist aesthetics, which recast aesthetic experience as a dynamic interaction between a person鈥檚 corporeality and the perceived object. Physiological psychologists and the new mind sciences of the second half of the nineteenth century proposed mind and soul to be material matter embodied in a system of nerves, reflex action and sensory phenomena. The self was thrown into dynamic 鈥榥etworks of matter, sensations, objects鈥 and the mind was no longer limited to the body鈥檚 interiority; it became an analogue 鈥榦f processual interactions between an organism and environment.鈥[18]听As a result, inanimate objects could become animated and acquire agency. The animation and fantastic characteristics of the figurine in听Fantaisie en Folie听become more apparent when framed by these terms of materialist aesthetics. Morgan points out that this context offered a new relationship for aesthetic experience, where mind and the object perceived are not two independent entities. Consciousness is not set against the object but 鈥榮uffused by and inseparable from it 鈥 such that physical things can become objects of sympathy and love鈥, but this melding of mind and object did not end there, as this kind of relationship also endowed objects with sentience, agency, and consciousness; 鈥榦r, at least, the line between the conscious self and its nonliving [sic] surroundings could seem philosophically difficult to draw.鈥[19]听I find an endowment of sentience enacted through the figurine in听Fantaisie en Folie. However, qualities of sympathy and love are replaced by qualities of the monstrous and fantastic, which disconcert rather than provoke affection. Indeed,听Fantaisie en Folie听perverts the aesthetic object as a thing of beauty; while it glistens like a jewel, the coy smile of this monstrous little figure is menacing. As explored above, contemporary critics saw in the figurine a monster. Nevertheless, the very representation of substance in听Fantaisie en Folie听problematises an interaction understood by materialist aesthetics. Moreover, a reading of听Fantaisie en Folie听in this context does not eclipse an account of spiritualism and immaterial existence, which are explored below.

The depiction of fabric in听Fantaisie en Folie听is another unexpected element. In interior settings, fabric鈥檚 movements are dependent on three external factors: those who place, arrange, wear and use them; atmospheric conditions; and gravity. In Brough鈥檚 painting, however, the cloth covering the table seems to be pulled in towards the cushion placed in the centre of the painting between the figure and the chair. In other words, the expected movement is unturned. The gathered folds, visible below the figure鈥檚 extended arm, narrow as they near the cushion. The cloth appears as if about to be dragged off the table and take the figurine with it. This table surface itself tilts forward and to the right, again in the direction of the cushion. The pleats and folds of the front of the velvet dress seem to be tugged in the same direction, described in long 鈥榙ragged鈥 strokes of paint leaving distinct gaps through which the canvas emerge.[20]听We find a second instance in which form and the handling of the brush produce a sense of movement and animation and wherein fabric, like ceramic, shifts closer to the fantastic. For ceramic and fabric to move there needs to be substance and solidity in their matter. This requirement is in tension with Brough鈥檚 particular means of representing substance and highlights the unusual relationship between materiality and form at play here. I find that materiality is central to how we come to understand and interpret representation in听Fantaisie en Folie.

Fig. 5: John Singer Sargent, Ellen Terry as Lady Macbeth, 1889, oil on canvas, 221 x 114.3cm, Tate, London. 漏 Tate, London, 2018.
Fig. 5: John Singer Sargent, Ellen Terry as Lady Macbeth, 1889, oil on canvas, 221 x 114.3cm, Tate, London. 漏 Tate, London, 2018.

In long, sweeping brushstrokes, Brough paints with aqueous and thinned out paint, comparable to Whistler鈥檚 鈥榮auce鈥, that is 鈥榓 paint mixture lacking in solidity鈥.[21]听Although there are no surviving records attesting to Brough鈥檚 painting technique, he most likely used a similar, aqueous medium to Whistler, that probably first stained the canvas which was then brushed over with a thin layer of paint. There are, nonetheless, several spots where the paint seems to barely be there, as patches of the canvas emerge from underneath the depicted form. The figurine seems to hover as the pedestal on which it stands dissolves; points of the thread of the sautoir necklace vanish; and sections of the figure鈥檚 dress, at the thighs and left sleeve in particular, fade into immateriality. As form loses its material substance, it begins to approach insubstantiality. A comparison between the ways in which Brough and Whistler treat the subjects of their work reveals a shared evocation of an undefined and veiled mood, typical of Whistler鈥檚 Nocturnes, for example. Jonathan Shirland discusses insubstantiality manifested in Whistler鈥檚 black portraits, in which figures emerge from an indeterminate darkness.[22]听However, in听Fantaisie en Folie听the process is reversed: form dissolves and fades away, and the blank grey/green ground underneath is revealed. Absences are foregrounded as definition is withdrawn. We might be led to think that the figure and figurine will disappear entirely into the misty background. If this were the case, the extent of the unbridled fantasy might be lost on us, leaving us only with a blank and muted canvas. Seen another way, the apex of this fantasy might be the viewer imagining the figure and figurine dissolving away to the point of loss. What would happen then?

Insubstantial Material

In the Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museums archive, there is a photograph from 1900. It shows the council and members of the Aberdeen Artists Society, assembled in two rows. One row is seated, the other is standing; both are before a gallery wall filled with paintings. Hung in the centre of the wall is Sargent鈥檚听Ellen Terry as Lady Macbeth听(Fig. 5, 1889). In the photograph, the figure of Lady Macbeth rises above the rows of artists. Her pose is frozen and her eyes are transfixed upon the crown she holds high. In the photograph, Brough stands beneath and in front of Lady Macbeth, as if about to be crowned. We recognise his 鈥榞raceful, slim figure, with a well-shaped head and neck set well and high upon his shoulders鈥 and 鈥榝aun-like alertness鈥 from Francis Derwent Wood鈥檚 portrait bust and James Cadenhead鈥檚 drawing of Brough.[23]听As frequently noted, Brough became Sargent鈥檚 prot茅g茅 and a highly regarded friend of the artist. Sargent painted his portrait and wrote the introduction to the catalogue of Brough鈥檚 posthumous exhibition at the Fine Art Society in 1907.[24]听He described Brough鈥檚 style as having 鈥榯hat very rare quality of style that seems to make the actual paint a precious substance鈥.[25]听Critics noted quotations of Sargent鈥檚 鈥榦wn bravura manner鈥 in Brough鈥檚 handling of paint.[26]听 However, as previously discussed,听Fantaisie en Folie听reveals Brough鈥檚 own idiosyncrasies in treatment of material and subject that are more than 鈥榩recious鈥.

Fig. 6: George Frederic Watts, 鈥楽he Shall be Called Woman鈥, ca. 1875-92, oil on canvas, 257.8 x 116.8cm, Tate, London.
Fig. 6: George Frederic Watts, 鈥楽he Shall be Called Woman鈥, ca. 1875-92, oil on canvas, 257.8 x 116.8cm, Tate, London.

Thinking of the 1900 photograph, we might find similarity between the contemplative pose of Lady Macbeth with that of the figure in听Fantaisie en Folie. The female figure from听Fantaisie en Folie听has a similar contemplative pose to Lady Macbeth in the mentioned 1900 photograph. Furthermore, because of the figure鈥檚 open eyes fixed upon the object before her, Sargent鈥檚 figure reminds us of Brough鈥檚 other figures from听Sweet Violets听and听Mrs Nicol of Roscobie,听as well as Stevens鈥檚 figure from听The Present. Fitting into this group is another painting of Ellen Terry, this time painted by her husband George Frederic Watts:听Ellen Terry (鈥楥hoosing鈥)听(1864). This portrait shows Terry with her head in profile as she turns to look at a Camellia flower, which she attempts to smell. We see her striking blue eyes, a youthful blush to her face, and her flowing golden hair. Our eye follows the hair down her shoulder and left arm to the violets held in her left hand. These flowers bring to mind Brough鈥檚听Sweet Violets, as does his听The Blind Girl听(1901). In the latter, a blind female figure engages with flowers through scent. Watts explores this type of sensory experience in the painting听Eve Tempted听(exhibited 1884), second in sequence in听The Eve Trilogy.[27]听Here Eve is lured by the blossom of the Tree of Knowledge. Her eyes and nose are hidden as she leans into the shrubbery and by whose shadow she almost becomes subsumed.

Beginning this trilogy is听鈥楽he Shall be Called Woman鈥听(Fig. 6, ca. 1875-1892).[28]听Above a ground that her foot barely touches, the figure of Eve rises and emerges from a swirl of cloud, dust, light, flapping songbirds and flowering lilies. She erupts from the profusion of energy around her and from insubstantial matter into form, while rays of golden light shower down on her torso and scarcely-materialised face. Her golden hair floats about her, half of it in the cloud. The digits of her left hand are becoming realised as a corporeal form. In contrast with the rest of听The Eve Trilogy, Watts is doing something different here. He is visualising life emerging and being created out of the indeterminate, showing the force of life itself bringing substance to form. By way of form听emerging, we might draw a connection between 鈥She Shall be Called Woman鈥听and Whistler鈥檚 black portraits. This does not put听鈥楽he Shall be Called Woman鈥听in opposition with听Fantaisie en Folie, where form dissolves as materiality moves towards insubstantiality. In each, the ontological process of the figure differs clearly in dynamics: one emerges, the other disappears. However, both mobilise a relationship between the material and the spiritual.

Of听鈥楽he Shall Be Called Woman鈥, Andrew Wilton and Robert Upstone write: 鈥楾he biblical origins of the Eve subjects were left far behind, as the artists developed the idea of a life force, igniting a new set of meanings for the 1890s.鈥[29]听I want to explore what sort of meanings are ignited when paint gives force to life and form emerges in representation. In 1896, Watts鈥 second wife Mary records in her diaries her husband鈥檚 belief that 鈥榓s long as paint & canvas can last鈥, then the soul, conceived of as 鈥榯he flame鈥 of the candle of human life, 鈥榳ill live鈥 on after death.[30]听The flame consumes the candle of human life. The material burns up and disappears into the air, leaving 鈥榦nly a handful of ashes鈥 which leads Watts to realise 鈥榟ow little of us really is material鈥.[31]听Material of the human body is transient and fades as the soul passes on. Paint and canvas, surviving our ephemeral lives, gives substance to a material that lives on. A discussion of material and spirit may seem at odds alongside the context of materialist aesthetics, which is couched in corporeal terms. However, the inescapable appearance of dissolving material operating in听Fantaisie en Folie听suggest there is credence to thinking about how ideas of the material and spiritual might play out here.

Veronica Franklin Gould suggests Watts鈥 musings on the dissolving of material and death were stimulated by Edward Carpenter鈥檚听Civilisation: Its Cause and Cure听(1889).[32]听For Carpenter, objects (the material) exist due to 鈥榓 matter of [our] consciousness鈥 of them.[33]听They 鈥榓re only the reflexion of鈥 our 鈥榙ifferent senses 鈥 each individual object being only a case, externalised as it were, and made a matter of consciousness, of the general relation to each other of his own sensations and feelings鈥, Carpenter forms this argument in an attempt to pursue the 鈥楾ruth鈥 of science, in other words, understanding what constitutes the self.[34]听Seeking the true relation of the self to the world meant moving towards what Carpenter considered a 鈥楧emocracy鈥. When truly knowing one鈥檚 soul and consciously sustaining its condition, as an analogue to the spiritual part of the self, is when we achieve higher wisdom: 鈥業t is the knowledge which is Space. It is the identification of Space with Consciousness. It is the medium听within听which Thought may indeed move, but which far surpasses all Thought and imagination in the width and swiftness of its embrace.鈥[35]听While Carpenter鈥檚 approach is a metaphysical take on contemporary psychology, the writing of William James offers a more anatomised enquiry into the constituents of the self.

 

A Precarious Self?

James lays out the three constituents of the empirical self (what modern, western society terms as 鈥榤e鈥): the material self, the social self and the spiritual self. The material self is manifested in our relation to objects and external environments, which become our own and extensions of the empirical self. He cites an example in clothing, which is compounded in self-identity.[36]听The social self is realised by our recognition and relation to those we interact with. To go ignored without human interaction is to be regarded as if 鈥榳e were non-existing things鈥 while defined through relationships with others, the social self is a flux of infinitely differing descriptions: 鈥楶roperly speaking, a man has as many social selves as there are individuals who recognise him and carry an image of him in their mind.鈥[37]听While the material and social selves concern the relation to the outward world, the spiritual self concerns the 鈥榠nner鈥eing鈥 and one鈥檚 鈥榩sychic faculties鈥 themselves and when drawing attention to the inner process of thought itself, James describes the form of the spiritual self as a 鈥榮tream of consciousness鈥.[38]听Like the instability met in defining the aesthetic moment, the spiritual self seems unable to be grasped in concrete terms. It might be more productive to think of it as an analogue or a vessel that extends to 鈥榤eet鈥 feeling and ideation, links 鈥榯hat within us to which pleasure and pain, the pleasant and the painful speak鈥 and mediates 鈥榯he process by which ideas or incoming sensations are reflected or pass over into outward acts鈥 and where this spiritual analogue is a 鈥榗entral nucleus of the Self鈥 and can be conceived of as synonymous with the soul.[39]

Overlaps are evident in the ideas expressed by Carpenter and explored by James, especially in the latter鈥檚 vessel of the spiritual self, which is equivalent to Carpenter鈥檚 鈥楽pace鈥 of the soul that听contains everything in itself鈥.[40]听Both, furthermore, conceptualize the world known to the self as contingent on how the 鈥榬eflexion鈥 of that world exists through the sensorium. This echoes Watts鈥 conclusion about the relative relationship between the material and the spiritual, where higher value was given to the latter constituent. Watts wanted to believe it lives on after the candle has burnt out.

Watts was engaged with Theosophy and the question of immortality, elements of which can be found in听Fantaisie en Folie.[41]听Theosophy was a school of esoteric Eastern thought that drew heavily from Buddhism and Brahmanism. In 1875 the Theosophical Society was founded by a Russian, Madame Helena Pretrovna Blavatsky, who had received teachings directly from Indian Mah芒tmas 鈥 learned sages and custodians of preserved knowledge 鈥榦f all natural laws for ages鈥.[42]听The society served to promote the 鈥楢ryan and Eastern Literatures, religions, philosophies, and sciences鈥 that Theosophy encompassed and with the transfer of the headquarters to India in 1879 their publicity boomed, and by 1888 there were 179 international branches of the society, not just in India but within the United Kingdom, Europe, Australia and New Zealand, Japan, and the United States of America.[43]听The society and the school it promoted had an international standing by the last decades of the nineteenth century. However, Theosophy was not a formal religion following an absolute God. In the words of Henry Steel Olcott, the first president of the society, it was:

A theory of human brotherhood that inculcates the noblest altruism, that makes every individual realise his kinship with his fellows, his interests in their moral, intellectual, and spiritual welfare; an ideal of human perfectibility most ennobling and stimulating to the highest thinking and living.[44]

As in Buddhism, reincarnation and karma were essential pillars of Theosophical doctrine. In Theosophy human life was an earthly manifestation, or one material moment, of an eternal, ever-changing life-force whose true existence is spiritual in nature. This life-force exists in an infinite, universal, eternal and cyclical chain, where there is no such thing as dead matter. William Judge wrote that:

Nothing in the material world endures absolutely unchanged in itself or its conditions, even for the smallest conceivable portion of time. All that听is, is forever in process of听becoming听something else 鈥 鈥渢he constant, eternal change of atoms from one state into another鈥.[45]

This amorphous nature of matter finds visual form in the dissolving materiality in听Fantaisie en Folie, as ceramic is enlivened and the fabric is tugged by unknown forces (although we do not know the 鈥榮omething else鈥 these objects are 鈥榠n process of听becoming鈥). Judge鈥檚 description of a transient life-force is in concert with Watts鈥 description of our spiritual post-mortem existence. Carpenter was also engaged with Theosophical thought, for a time, although he would later reject it.[46]听Nonetheless, his conceptualisation of consciousness as a 鈥榮pace鈥 resembles Blavatsky鈥檚 analogue of the spirit, whose 鈥榗entre is everywhere, because its space is illimitable, the centre of it must be wherever the cognizing consciousness is.鈥[47]

Both Carpenter and Watts were also deeply interested in Buddhism.[48]听In 1879 Edwin Arnold published听The Light of Asia, a blank-verse poem collected in eight books describing the life of the Buddha, Guatama Siddhartha.[49]听Arnold鈥檚 enormously popular work was a great contribution to the interest in Buddhism for the late-Victorian imagination. Several elements of the Eastern thought caught the attention and admiration of the Victorian mind: qualities of the Buddha鈥檚 heroic sacrifice and selflessness; Buddhism鈥檚 intellectual and philosophical erudition; romanticised notions of locale and religious practice; and, most of all, the religion鈥檚 standpoint on morality.[50]听Notwithstanding this interest some foundational aspects of Buddhist doctrine were largely 鈥榰nassimilable by the Victorians鈥 and they responded, for example, to the notions of rebirth, or transmigration with fierce criticism because it considered to be 鈥榤onstrous鈥 and 鈥榬epugnant鈥, provoking 听fear of being reborn in an animal form and of living in suffering.[51]听The terms critics used in the 1890s to describe the Budai figurine in听Fantaisie en Folie听are striking when considered against this reception. The heathenish monster they saw in the figurine may project fears and concerns over the issue of Buddhist doctrine. Several other concepts were problematic. For instance, the 鈥榙isgusting and awful鈥 idea that every part of nature may have once been human, as well as the concept of transmigration which reduced the dignity of the species and of man鈥檚 exalted position in the order of the universe, subordinate only to God.[52]听Philip Arnold draws out further struggles in Victorian reactions to the doctrine, claiming that Buddhism鈥檚 鈥榠nsistence on the denial of any permanent entity at the base of an individual鈥, was critical and continues: 鈥楾he Victorians were quick to perceive the problem: in the absence of soul or self which survives death and enters a new body, what could be reborn?鈥[53]听In short, this was a denial of the soul.

For Watts, life after death could be realised through art, because form and life could emerge through paint and canvas. This vision is represented in听鈥楽he Shall be Called Woman鈥. The biblical origins of the creation of man and woman were left far behind because a new form emerges here. The comparative study of Brough, Whistler, Sargent and Watts throughout this article also suggest that听鈥楽he Shall be Called Woman鈥櫶shows the emergence of the New Woman. To elaborate, Sargent and Whistler painted many portraits of this intelligent, educated and independent gender type. The direct stare of Brough鈥檚听Mrs Nicol of Roscobie听that confronts the viewer speaks a little way to the type. Sargent captured the audacious socialite Virginie Am茅lie Avegno Gautreau in the famous听Portrait of Madame X听(1884). She is shown in a more intimate portrait in听Madame Gautreau Drinking a Toast, which closely resembles听Fantaisie en Folie. Madame Gautreau鈥檚 gaze at the drinking glass implies assessment or judgement, perhaps even an aesthetic moment, which brings it even closer to听Fantaisie en Folie. Despite the already mentioned similarities in composition and colour, as well as subject/object interaction,听Fantaisie en Folie听does not present the same type of female subject. Brough鈥檚 figure is not identified to a person or group, and a social self is limited to the implied working between artist and anonymous model. The title听Fantaisie en Folie听and its evocation of mood lead us away from the identity of a specific character or type and towards a more generalised notion of the inner states of being, feeling and thinking. The conclusion drawn here is that a social self, to think of James鈥檚 three constituents, is perhaps suspended; the viewer sees, as discussed earlier, a representation of a 鈥榖lind鈥 woman engaged in an interiorised moment of reverie. The puzzle 鈥 of subject, materiality and possible meaning 鈥 that is presented in听Fantaisie en Folie听causes the viewers not to know who they are really looking at. A relationship between the self and the material objects appears present, but the very conditions of those material objects are fantastic and insubstantial. A material self, if there is one at all, is slipping away. Any account of a spiritual self will always be less direct in its visualisation. How the spiritual self is expressed, however, could be understood when taking into account the requisite role played by the sensorium within the analogue, as laid out by James. The haptic engagement directed from the figure to the figurine is not being relayed back along her arm through to the central nervous system. Rather this sensation of touch seems transformed via the pendant and relayed instead through the ocular vision of the figurine; it looks up towards the figure鈥檚 head.

Brough鈥檚 representation of this head is extraordinary. The head is brilliantly lit and the dramatic profile shows a poised jaw and chin, pursed red lips, a straight nose, and closed eyes. Above, the figure鈥檚 thick brunette hair is tied up with a dark pink ribbon. The warm blush on her cheek gives a healthy look to her otherwise pale ivory skin. In contrast to the areas of insubstantial form, the skin of her face is perhaps the most fully realised section of the painting in terms of materiality, yet the head is not attached convincingly to the body. Gaps are distinguished as the canvas emerges between the flesh of her jaw and the high-neck collar of her dress. Moreover, the corner of the mandible below her ear is听missing, cut off with an upward stroke of the brush. This unusual representation is made more distinct when compared against similar paintings of female subjects in profile. This is evident in the works by Stevens and Sargent previously discussed. (Among Brough鈥檚 Scottish contemporaries, George Henry and Edward Arthur Walton provide similar, additional comparisons. In some of their work, attention is drawn to the neck by way of a hem of a veil, a ribbon or the ruff of a high collar.) To add to this, the ear in听Fantaisie en Folie听displays no orifice leading to the ear canal and the viewer cannot distinguish the anti-helix or concha. What is shown instead is a flat, almost foetal extremity that does not resemble a functioning human ear. The figure鈥檚 ability to hear is impossible, therefore she is not just blind but also deaf. In fact, the five constituents of the sensorium as expressed in听Fantaisie en Folie听are atypical: touch is warped; sight is shut down; smell and taste are inactive; and hearing is impossible. If the sensorium is unable to properly mediate sensation, then the analogue of the spiritual self becomes problematised and its functioning inoperative. In this way, the painting shows a spiritual self decidedly threatened by its inability to establish itself through sensation and function.

In conclusion,听Fantaisie en Folie听certainly does represent an aesthetic encounter, but one based on imagining rather than looking. It is not beauty that is imagined but something monstrous and heathenish, which distorts material substance, sensorial operation and possible continuation of the soul. Through a discussion around Carpenter, Watts and James, this article finds the representation of self in听Fantaisie en Folie听suspended, in the least, and threatened to fail, at the most. The self is not lost or absent, for any form aesthetic engagement would demand its presence. Nonetheless, there is a suggestion of the dislocation of self from the body or the self breaking down in the warped body and environment. Considering the painting as a whole, we could say that complete definition or realisation of form and subject is not quite achieved. This painting arouses ideas of dissolving, fracturing, loss, vanishing 鈥 the extent of which we do not know. There is something ominous about the background 鈥 an emptiness of space and form. With its sombre and baleful mood,听Fantaisie en Folie听does not present an opportunity for the soul to continue in paint and canvas.听Fantaisie en Folie听suggests a vacuous future where the material and spiritual are in precarious states. It is a fantasy we may not wish to happen.

Citations

[1]听See entry dated 12 January 1990 for the Tate鈥檚 Catalogue File on听Fantaisie en Folie.

[2]听Kenneth McConkey,听Edwardian Portraits: Images of Opulence听(Woodbridge, Suffolk: Antique Collectors Club, 1987).

[3]听Edward Pinnington claims 鈥榯he pictures are of similar arrangement鈥, in Edward Pinnington, 鈥楻obert Brough, Painter鈥,听The Art Journal听(May 1898), 148. Despite their mirroring compositions, however, B. Kendell claims that 鈥楾he girl is more real 鈥 less visionary than her companion in the Fantaisie.鈥 in B. Kendell, 鈥楻obert Brough鈥, in听Artist: An Illustrated Monthly Record of Arts, Crafts and Industries听(31 May 1901), 67.

[4]听Pinnington, 148.

[5]Robert Brough, ARSA: 1872-1905听(City of Aberdeen: Aberdeen City Council, Arts & Recreation Division, 1995), 30; McConkey (1987), 110.

[6]听McConkey (1987), 110; Kenneth McConkey,听Memory and Desire: Painting in Britain and Ireland at the Turn of the Twentieth Century听(Aldershot: Ashgate, 2002), 54.

[7]听McConkey (2002), 54.

[8]听Quoted in McConkey (2002), 55.

[9]听Kate Flint,听The Victorians and the Visual Imagination听(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 2.

[10]听Caroline Corbeau-Parsons, 鈥楩orgotten Faces鈥,听Tate听(Published n.d., Accessed: 29/03/17,听https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-britain/display/bp-spotlight-forgotten-faces/essay).

[11]听鈥楻oyal Scottish Academy Exhibition鈥,听The Dundee Courier & Argus听(18 February 1898), 4.

[12]听Kendell, 65; 鈥楢rt鈥,听The Academy听(15 May 1897), 527; Pinnington, 148.

[13]听Dario Gamboni,听The Listening Eye: Taking Notes after Gauguin听(Ostfildern: Hatje Cantz, 2011), 16.

[14]听Gamboni, 87.

[15]Robert Brough: ARSA, 16.

[16]听Pinnington, 148.

[17]听Benjamin Morgan,听The Outward Mind: Materialist Aesthetics in Victorian Science and Literature听(Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press, 2017), 9-19.

[18]听Morgan, 9, 11.

[19]听Morgan, 134, 136.

[20]听鈥楾he Royal Academy鈥,听London Daily News听(22 July 1897), 6.

[21]听Jonathan Shirland, 鈥楨mbryonic Phantoms: materiality, marginality and modernity in Whistler鈥檚 Black Portraits鈥,听Art History: Journal of the Association of Art Historians, 1, 34 (2011), 80-101, 82; Pinnington, 148.

[22]听Shirland, 82.

[23]听George Percy Jacomb-Hood,听With Brush and Pencil听(London: John Murray, 1925), 61-62.

[24]听See Evan Charteris,听John Sargent听(London: William Heinemann, 1927); Richard Ormond and Elaine Kilmurray (eds.),听John Singer Sargent: The Late Portraits听(New Haven and London: Published for the Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art by Yale University Press, 2003); and Devon Cox,听The Street of Wonderful Possibilities: Whistler, Wilde and Sargent in Tite Street听(London: Frances Lincoln, 2015).

[25]听Charteris, 200.

[26]听Ormond and Kilmurray, 10.

[27]听There are several versions of the Eve trilogy, the last of which (ca. 1865-1897) are now in the Tate and are the examples I am referring to here.

[28]听Andrew Wilton and Robert Upstone (eds.),听The Age of Rossetti, Burne-Jones and Watts: Symbolism in Britain, 1860-1910听(London: Tate Gallery Publishing, 1997), 265. These dates account for Watts鈥 reworking of the painting, which may have been altered even after 1892; as noted in Wilton and Upstone (267), the painting 鈥榳as largely a product of the 1890s鈥.

[29]听Wilton and Upstone, 267.

[30]听Mary Watts,听The Diary of Mary Watts, 1887-1904: Victorian Progressive and Artistic Visionary, ed. by Desna Greenhow (London: Lund Humphries in association with Watts Gallery, 2016), 162.

[31]听Watts,听162.

[32]听Veronica Gould,听G. F. Watts: The Last Great Victorian听(New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2004), 69.

[33]听Edward Carpenter,听Civilisation: Its Cause and Cure听(London: George Allen & Unwin, 1889), 129.

[34]听Carpenter (1889), 129-130.

[35]听Edward Carpenter (ed.),听Light from the East: being letters on G帽anam, the divine knowledge鈥听(London: G. Allen & Unwin, 1927), 21.

[36]听William James,听The Principles of Psychology听(New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1890), 292.

[37]听James, 293-294.

[38]听James, 296.

[39]听James, 297-298.

[40]听Carpenter (1927), 21-23.

[41]听For more on Watts and Theosophy, see David Stewart, 鈥楾heosophy and Abstraction in the Victorian Era: The Paintings of G. F. Watts.鈥,听Apollo, 3, 138 (1993), 298-302.

[42]听William Q. Judge,听Echoes from The Orient: A Broad Outline of Theosophical Doctrines听(New York: The Aryan Press, 1890), 1.

[43]听Henry Steel Olcott, 鈥楾he Genesis of Theosophy鈥,听The National Review听(October 1889), 208-210.

[44]听Olcott, 210.

[45]听Judge, 10-11.

[46]听Edward Carpenter,听My Days and Dreams, Being Autobiographical Notes听(London: George Allen & Unwin, 1927), 240.

[47]听Quoted in Judge, 15.

[48]听Gould, 258.

[49]听Edwin Arnold,听The Light of Asia听(London: Tr眉bner & Co., 1879).

[50]听Philip C. Arnold,听The British discovery of Buddhism听(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988), 3.

[51]听Arnold (1988), 84.

[52]听Arnold (1988), 85.

[53]听Arnold (1988), 88.

Citations