Vol. 164 / No. 1429
Vol. 164 / No. 1429
The reopening last month of the Burrell Collection, Glasgow,
brought to a conclusion an ambitious museum renovation with sustainability at
its heart. This £68.25 million project, funded by Glasgow City Council, the
National Lottery Heritage Fund and the governments of Scotland and the United
Kingdom, has involved a complete overhaul by the architects John McAslan +
Partners of the building designed by Barry Gasson, John Meunier and Brit
Andresen for the collection formed by the Glasgow shipping magnate William
Burrell (1861–1958), which opened to the public in 1983. Although it was
disappointing that the building required a fundamental restoration less than four
decades after its completion – necessitating its closure to the public in the
autumn of 2016 – John McAslan + Partners deserve praise for the respect and
rigour they have brought to the task of refreshing the home of a world-class
collection that is still too little known outside Scotland.
To coincide with the reopening, Martin Bellamy and Isobel MacDonald
have published a new biography of Burrell.[1] His
achievement is more remarkable when his background is taken into account: he
left formal education at fourteen and was entirely self-taught in his artistic
endeavours. Nonetheless he managed to create a major collection of Gothic and
Renaissance textiles, stained glass, sculpture and painting. He also formed
important groups of Chinese and Middle Eastern ceramics and decorative arts and
nineteenth-century European paintings, prints and drawings. Much of the
collection was installed at Hutton Castle, near Berwick-upon-Tweed, which
Burrell and his wife, Constance, purchased in 1916. He also collected
monumental architectural elements, such as a sixteenth-century heraldic
sandstone gateway from Hornby Castle, Yorkshire, demolished in 1930, and a sixteenth-century
carved oak ceiling from a house in Bridgwater, Somerset. The latter, together
with historic windows and doors, was acquired from the collection of William Randolph
Hearst as part of Burrell’s plan for a museum in which his works of art would
be placed in settings evoking domestic interiors, rather than neutral
galleries.
Burrell gifted his collection to the City of Glasgow in 1944,
after over two decades of thoughtful, planned lending to museums in Scotland
and England.[2]
He continued to add works up to his death. He set two principal conditions on
the gift: the collection was to be housed in a building in a country setting at
least sixteen miles from the centre of Glasgow, to avoid the effects of air
pollution, and loans could be made only within the United Kingdom. Largely
because of the search for a suitable site, four decades passed before the
collection was in Pollok Country Park on Glasgow’s south side.[3] In
2014 the Burrell’s trustees obtained an Act of Parliament to enable them to
make international loans, a freedom exploited in touring exhibitions of
highlights of the collection made while the building was closed. Burrell’s gift
included an endowment, which continues to support the museum’s work – by the acquisition,
for example, in 2021 of a bronze, L’Implorante, by Camille Claudel
(1864–1943), the first sculpture by a woman in the collection and a complement
to the fourteen pieces by Rodin acquired by Burrell.
Visitors to the Burrell Collection encounter a restful building of
sandstone, wood, glass and steel, set in parkland that forms a natural and sympathetic
setting for the objects in the collection. The generously sized rooms and
passages evoke the Scottish baronial atmosphere of the Burrells’ home and the
soaring interior spaces in which the tapestries and carpets are installed
deftly play with light and shade, dissolving the boundaries between exterior
and interior in a way that is both rhythmic and calm (Fig.1). Stained glass, a
well-known strength of the Burrell Collection, numbering around six hundred
pieces, is strikingly displayed in the floor-to-ceiling windows of the entrance
galleries. With particular strengths in German and Low Countries glass, the
collection also includes a panel depicting Princess Cecily of York (1469–1507),
a daughter of Edward IV (Fig.2), made for Canterbury Cathedral.
Any substantial intervention into a building of such unique personal
character is likely to lead to gains as well as losses. The losses include two
of the room sets that recreated interiors in Hutton Castle. The gains lie first
and foremost in the fundamental viability of the building, which has been made
air and watertight; all its glass has been renewed. The entrance has been moved,
creating more generous circulation space, and there is a commitment, over time,
to improve energy management. Importantly, the proportion of the collection on
display has increased by one third, partly by the conversion of former offices
into galleries. A gallery for temporary exhibitions has been created and an open
storage area has been introduced on the lower floor, next to a stepped atrium
for events in which visitors can also sit at ease and learn more about the
collection on digital screens. The architects have also landscaped the immediate
surroundings, creating improved access routes, as part of a wider effort to
encourage more and longer visits to Pollok Country Park. John McAslan has
spoken of producing a ‘bigger, greener, more welcoming space’ and in this the project
is a resounding success.
In the years since the opening of the Burrell, research into the collection
has continued apace. A book by Vivien Hamilton, the Research Manager for Art at
Glasgow Museums, on the French paintings, pastels and works on paper, which include
works by Corot, Manet, Degas and Cézanne, is in progress, and the collection’s
Chinese art is the subject of a digital resource, ‘Chinese Art – Research into Provenance’.[4] Led
by Nicholas Pearce of the University of Glasgow, this mines the copious and
informative records of Burrell’s collecting in this field in a case study that
boosts knowledge about the reception of Chinese art in the United Kingdom during
the twentieth century. It includes essays about the prominent dealers who sold
to Burrell, including Bluett & Sons, John Sparks Ltd and Frank Partridge.
Burrell collected sculpture, jades and bronzes, but ceramics form the largest
part of his Chinese holdings. Exceptionally wide-ranging in both chronology and
technical accomplishment, they encompass Yangshao culture coiled pots with
geometric painted decoration, made c.3000 BC in north China, and impressive sancai
‘three colour’ glazed Tang dynasty funerary wares. There are also exquisite
Song dynasty monochromes glazed in jade green, and iron-rich black Jian ware tea
bowls. Architectural ceramics, Kraak porcelain for the export market and Kangxi
wares are also on show together with an extremely rare Hongwu period meiping
(plum blossom) vase (Fig.4). In the display of the Chinese pieces, the
designers have introduced a few carefully placed digital screens presenting high-quality
images of a Kangxi meiping with an Islamic inscription and a Shang
dynasty jue (bronze tripod libation cup) with a dragonhead handle. These
are intended to enhance close examination of the original objects, especially
during group visits or busy times, to avoid crowding round wall-mounted cases.
A highlight of the museum is the collection of tapestries,
numbering over two hundred items, which forms the subject of a substantial book,
Tapestries from the Burrell Collection by Elizabeth Cleland and Lorraine
Karafel, published in 2017. Tapestries from France, Germany, the Low Countries
and England were collected with discernment and persistence, after the young
Burrell had travelled in Europe to look at examples and learn about them. He regarded
the tapestries as the most valuable part of his collection, as is evident from
his careful records of the sums he spent on them. The remarkable tapestry Fight
between a falcon and a heron (Fig.3) was bought in 1936 for £2,200
according to Burrell’s purchase books. It is distinguished by subtle colour
effects that accentuate the recession from the front register, with its animals
and people, back towards distant houses and mountains. It has been suggested by
William Wells that this celebration of the pleasure of hunting formed part of a
lost series of French royal tapestries known as the Hunts of François I, who
might therefore be the rider of the white horse.[5]
The Burrell gift to the City of Glasgow has been widely acclaimed –
‘no municipality has ever received from one of its native sons a gift of such
munificence’, wrote John Julius Norwich in 1983.[6] Now
that the building has been comprehensively upgraded, and with improvements to
its tranquil country-park setting, the collection can finally settle into a harmonious
relationship with its host city. One hopes that visitors will make their way to
Pollok Country Park in large numbers, not only during the first flush of
enthusiasm for the beautifully upgraded building and galleries but also in
decades to come. Glasgow Life, the charity that delivers cultural, sporting and
learning activities on behalf of Glasgow City Council, has emphasised the
city’s desire to build pride in its history and cultural offerings. Both the
Burrell and another under-appreciated museum in Pollok Country Park, the
Stirling-Maxwell collection of old-master paintings at Pollok House, have the
potential to play a leading role in that plan.
1 M. Bellamy and I. Macdonald: William Burrell: A Collector’s
Life, Edinburgh 2022.
2 Ibid., pp.105 and 136–37.
3 For an account of the collection when it opened to the public,
see ‘Editorial: The Burrell Collection’, THE BURLINGTON MAGAZINE 125 (1983),
pp.724–27.
4 https://carp.arts.gla.ac.uk, accessed 10th March 2022.
5 On this suggestion, see E. Cleland and L. Karafel: Tapestries
from The Burrell Collection, Glasgow 2017, p.353.
6 J.J. Norwich: The Burrell Collection, London and Glasgow 1983, p.7.