
Frederick, Lord
Leighton Flaming
June 1895 oil on canvas, 46 7/8 x 46 7/8 ins.
Courtesy, Museo de Arte de Ponce,
the Louis A. Ferre Foundation Inc., Puerto Rico.
Reproduction of original tabernacle frame
designed by Frederic, Lord Leighton,
commissioned by Christie's and made
by Arnold Wiggins & Sons limited, 1006. |
Frederic, Lord Leighton was one of a group
of artists, including Alma Tadema and the Pre- Raphaelites, who
from the 1850s onwards Experimented with the design and function
of the picture frame as a reaction against the mass- produced
Victorian frames. By the 1880s, Leighton had developed a distinctive
tabernacle frame that he used on many of his paintings. Its inspiration
was Renaissance altarpieces and especially the framing of works
by Neri de Bicci who worked in Florence in the 15th century. The
frame was strongly architectural with deeply fluted pillasters,
Ionic capitals and a frieze of anthemion drawn from Greek antiquity:
It had become more than a decorative border, it was an architectural
opening — a window that helped to set the scene for his
paintings.
Flaming
June was first exhibited at the Royal Academy in
the frame illustrated in the photograph of Leighton's studio taken
in 1895. Victorian painting went out of fashion and some time
after 1950 the painting and frame were hidden behind panelling
in a house on Clapham Common. Uncovered during building work in
1962, the painting was sold to a local picture framer on Lavender
Hill who priced the painting at £50 and the frame at £60.
The painting finally arrived for sale in London's West End without
its frame. The interest in historically correct framing and the
centenary exhibition of Lord Leighton's work at the Royal Academy
prompted a reproduction of the original frame to be made by Arnold
Wiggins & Sons. Information from the Wiggins Picture Frame
Archive and drawings and casts made from Leighton's original frames
made it possible for an accurate reproduction to be made.
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| Drawings were made
of the section and the ornament of the frame. Both modern
machinery and nineteenth century moulding planes were used
to shape the moulding! which were assembled using hafflapp
and tenon joints. |
The ornament, as
on the original frame, was either carved in wood using different
shaped chisels and gouges or cast in composition, made to
a traditional recipe of resin, linseed oil, Scotch glue and
whitening. Moulds were made from casts of the same ornament
taken from other Leighton frames. |
The frame was primed
and whitened with several coats of gesso after which the mouldings
and ornament were 'smoothed up' and re- defined before the
bole was applied. For a more solid gold appearance the frame
was double water gilded and matted with gilders ormolu mixed
to a contemporary recipe and applied to give a deeper and
richer cotour. |
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