Great Expectations in Celebration of Mr. Charles Dickens
IN CELEBRATION OF THE 200TH BIRTHDAY
OF CHARLES DICKENS there are two exhibits currently taking place in England. I would like to share the details here with you.
The Bodleian Summer
exhibition celebrates the bicentenary of Charles Dickens. It explores the relationship
between the fictional worlds Dickens created in his novels and the historical
reality in which he
lived. Drawing on the Bodleian’s unparalleled collection of printed ephemera, the Dickens
and his World exhibition depicts in a unique way the life and times in which the novels and
stories of this great writer were set. On display will be playbills, advertisements, murder
sheets, maps, panoramas, sheet music, playing cards and prints which will aim to recreate
Dickens’s world and take the visitors on a journey back to his time. These
items will be accompanied by
quotations from Dickens’s novels, thus revealing how the historical reality of
the Victorian times is mirrored in his writings. There will be sections on
Victorian London and its amusements; the coming of the railways; domestic entertainment;
and school life for children. The exhibition will also look at the many stage
adaptations that were often performed before the novels had completed their
serialization and the plays Dickens produced and acted in, sometimes privately.
Curator: Clive Hurst,
Head of Rare Books and
Printed
Ephemera, Bodleian
Library
Main Exhibition
Exhibition Highlights
• the earliest
surviving letter
of Dickens, written to
a
schoolfellow when he
was
thirteen or fourteen
(on
loan from Charles
Dickens
Museum)
• Dickens’s poem ‘The
Ivy
Green’ in The Pickwick
Papers
set to music by Henry
Russell
• print of an interior
scene
from Madame Tussaud’s
first
permanent exhibition
based
at Baker Street
(Dickens
reinvented Madame
Tussaud
as Mrs Jarley in The
Old
Curiosity Shop)
• panoramas and maps of
London showing how
rapidly London
developed
during Victorian times
• a miniature theatre
with
sheets for Oliver Twist
from
1875 (Oliver Twist was
the only one of
Dickens’s
novels that was adapted
for
miniature theatre)
• advertisement for
‘farewell
readings’ by Dickens,
1870.
This was his final tour
before he died in June
1870
Portrait from the Illustrated
London News, 1870
Dickens and His World is at the University of Oxford, Bodleian Libraries
The Beautiful Watts Gallery in Surrey
The next exhibit is Dickens and the Artists at Watts Gallery, Guildord, Surrey, England
Tue, 19th June 2012 - Sun, 28th October 2012
Dickens and His World is at the University of Oxford, Bodleian Libraries
The Beautiful Watts Gallery in Surrey
The next exhibit is Dickens and the Artists at Watts Gallery, Guildord, Surrey, England
Tue, 19th June 2012 - Sun, 28th October 2012
Dickens and the Artists will explore the significant connection
between Charles Dickens and visual art. A remarkably visual writer, Dickens
grew out of a tradition where illustration formed a significant part of both
serial and book. He admired artists, probably more than his fellow writers, and
had long and close friendships with several, including Clarkson Stanfield,
Daniel Maclise, Frank Stone and William Powell Frith. Dickens was interested in
both contemporary artists and the art of the old masters which he viewed and
commented on in his tours of Europe. The influence of Dickens was widespread
and many artists chose to depict scenes from his novels as well as being
influenced by the subjects and characterization in his novels. The exhibition
will be accompanied by a publication and a conference.
‘There
is no writer, in my opinion, who is so much a painter and a black-and-white
artist as Dickens,’ Vincent
van Gogh, March 1883
Charles Dickens liked art and
artists. He bought and commissioned art for his walls and counted amongst his
close friends a high proportion of artists. In fact Dickens thought a lot about
art and his novels are full of vivid descriptions that his artist daughter observed
could only have been written by ‘a writer with an innate feeling for artistic
effect.’
His characters and novels inspired
artists to create paintings of them, and Little Nell in particular proved a
favourite to a great number of artists. Dickens also gave a new freedom to
artists who painted genre scenes to move from depicting costumed paintings set
in the past to up-to-date scenes of the world around them. The social themes,
so strong and trenchant in Dickens, also motivated artists to paint the poor
and the dispossessed.
The exhibition explores both what
Dickens thought about art and artists and what artists thought about Dickens.
The first section, Dickens as Art Critic explores his tastes and artistic
friendships; his strong like and dislikes. The second, The Influence of Dickens
on the Artists, looks the profound impact that Dickens made upon a generation
of artists, not only who those drew upon his novels as a source for painting
but those who created a painterly equivalent to his novels, rich visual
narratives of the Dickensian world.
Including major works by leading
nineteenth century artists including Frith, Fildes, and Hicks as well works
from Dickens’ own art collection, the exhibition displays the Dickensian vision
in Victorian painting.
For museum and exhibit information, Watts Gallery
Just a quick post to share two important exhibits going on to celebrate one of Victorian England's most important authors. Both museum links are provided for further information and more wonderful images.
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