Vol. 160 / No. 1384
Vol. 160 / No. 1384
This is the Royal Academy’s year. The venerable London institution
has celebrated its 250th anniversary by unveiling a redevelopment that has
added seventy per cent more public space, staging a Summer Exhibition that has
garnered five-star reviews, mounting an exhibition, The Great Spectacle, which
traces the history of the annual exhibition since its inception in 1768, and
publishing a monumental multi-author history of itself and its collections.1
The celebrations were crowned in June by a knighthood for its Chief Executive,
Charles Saumarez Smith, who, when he took up the post in 2007, inherited a £100
million redevelopment scheme for which no funds had been raised.
This achievement has been long in the making. It is
seventeen years since the RA acquired the large building to its rear, 6
Burlington Gardens, designed by James Pennethorne in 1866 as the headquarters of
the University of London. As the Museum of Mankind, it housed the British
Museum’s ethnographical collections from 1970 to 1997. When the building was reopened
in 2003 after a refurbishment by the Royal Academy’s then Surveyor of the
Fabric, Peter Schmitt, it was obvious that a link between the two buildings
would transform the way that the RA inhabited what was now a two-acre site. Yet
it took no fewer than three competitions – in 2001, 2003 and 2008 – to come up
with a workable scheme. In 2001 the winning architects, Michael and Patti Hopkins,
proposed a link at first-floor level, an idea that was rejected because it was
felt to compromise the exhibition galleries. Colin St John Wilson, who won the
2003 competition, wanted to connect the two buildings by an external route
along their eastern flank. That scheme foundered owing to not only its expense
but also Wilson’s death in 2007.
A major problem that these architects faced was the presence
of the Royal Academy Schools between the RA and Burlington Gardens: the 2001
and 2003 schemes were designed to take the link between the buildings either
above or around the Schools. A solution was at last found when Maurice
Cockrill, then Keeper of the Schools, agreed to the proposal put forward by the
winner of the third competition, David Chipperfield. This created an axial
route from the front door of the RA to the main entrance of Burlington Gardens,
bisecting the Schools, and opening them up for the first time to a degree of
public access.
The result is a great corridor that takes the visitor coming
from Piccadilly down from the RA’s Palladian entrance hall into a Piranesian brick-vaulted
gallery lined with plaster casts of classical sculptures. Having crossed a
corridor that leads at left and right into the scuffed, workaday environment of
the Schools, the visitor then climbs a steep staircase to a covered concrete
bridge into Burlington Gardens that provides glimpses into the narrow courtyard
between the two buildings, which has been landscaped by the Belgian firm Wirtz.
Burlington Gardens now houses galleries for temporary exhibitions, a lecture theatre,
a room for architectural displays, a permanent gallery for the RA’s collections
and a spacious bar in the first-floor Senate Room, where a 1901 painted
decorative scheme has been restored by Chipperfield’s collaborator, the
conservation architect Julian Harrap. This adds a final touch of sparkle to the
variety of historic and contemporary spaces and finishes that makes a walk
through these buildings so visually rewarding.
A setting that was widely regarded as no more than a vessel
for temporary exhibitions is revealed as the home of a living community that invites
visitors to meet, talk and just hang out – the essential foundation for
creative endeavour. There is also an engagingly contextual element to
Chipperfield’s scheme: his corridor is an arcade of the arts, which playfully
echoes – and is physically parallel to – the commercial glamour of the
Burlington Arcade to its east. The RA now has two faces: one looking towards
Piccadilly, past the learned institutions with which it shares Burlington
House, and the other facing down Cork Street, which is still, despite all the
recent threats to its character, the home of the commercial art world in the
West End – a world with which the RA merges, given the presence of the Pace
Gallery in the west wing of Burlington Gardens.
Part of the fascination of the redevelopment – which has
cost £56 million, £12.7 million of which came from the Heritage Lottery Fund –
is that it prompts so many reflections on the RA’s history. It is presumably only
an accident that the staircase that forms such a prominent feature of
Chipperfield’s scheme recalls the equally precipitous ascent to the RA’s
original exhibition galleries, in Somerset House. The centre of the new gallery
for the RA’s own collections has been deliberately devised as an encapsulation
of the institution’s original purpose. At its heart is Michelangelo’s Taddei
Tondo, flanked by three of James Thornhill’s copies of the Raphael Cartoons and
the copy of Leonardo’s Last Supper painted c.1515–20 by G.A. Boltraffio and
others. This is, in short, the accepted canon of taste that Joshua Reynolds,
first President of the RA, hoped would form the basis for a national school of
art, to be fostered by the new institution.
That hope is echoed by the words on the wall panel with
which The Great Spectacle concludes: ‘The Summer Exhibition has continued to renew
and revitalise itself, for both artists and visitors, while maintaining the
ideals set out by its eighteenth-century founders’. This pious observation is
definitively undermined by this year’s exhibition, chosen by a selection
committee headed by Grayson Perry, which brings to a festive climax the
revitalisation of the event begun by Michael Craig- Martin in 2015 (where will
it go from here?) If anyone does still visit the Summer Exhibition in order to
understand the British national school of art, or the intentions of the RA’s
founders, they will be confronted by displays on its bubble-gum-coloured walls
that are eccentric, diverse and joyfully subversive of any concept of ‘taste’.
It could be argued that there is something a bit complacent about that, but it
would be grudging in the extreme to deny the visitors their fun, or to question
the RA’s achievement in its anniversary redevelopment. After a century or more
of defying claims that it has become irrelevant, and with financial scandals
and political infighting still a relatively recent memory, the RA has at last
become an institution that seems comfortable in its own skin.2
1 The Great Spectacle is at the Royal Academy of Arts, London, until 19th August. The Royal Academy of Arts: History and Collections, edited by Robin Simon, is published by Yale University Press, New Haven and London, for the Paul Mellon Centre, in association with the Royal Academy of Arts. Both exhibition and book will be reviewed in a future issue of this Magazine.
2 On those scandals, see Editorial: ‘The Royal Academy of Arts’, THE
BURLINGTON MAGAZINE, 146 (2004), p. 587.