Heritage: An ode to Prado
En route to Andalusia I had just a day to spare for the Prado in Madrid — a disservice to one of Spain’s most prestigious museums and perhaps the largest gallery of classical paintings in the world. Nonetheless, on that sunny October morning my brief Prado acquaintance, buoyed by that delightful sense of anticipation and discovery peculiar to encountering museum paintings in the flesh, was bracing and memorable.
Lavish reproductions of masterpieces in publications have familiarised the world with their significance but as Robert Hughes, the most incisive critic of our times, pointed out, “there is no tyranny like the tyranny of the unseen masterpiece”. Face-to-face with masterworks, previously seen only in books or online, is a huge learning experience. Not all great paintings appear incredible, some are disappointing, others more astonishing and new details hitherto unnoticed often jump out and alter one’s understanding of the work altogether. Indeed “The seen and fully experienced masterpiece tends to liberate” one’s preconceived notions.
Pressed for time and unable to indulge in the long look spread over several visits, I opted to relish the delights of instant impact. Brushwork, texture, colour subtleties, range and size of paintings were some attributes that revealed themselves anew in the live encounters. Chromatic profusion and aged brilliance of stunning hues like vermillion, indigo, sienna and ochre prompted reflection on the mineral material of the colour pigments. Generous use of gold in the numerous gilded / illuminated Medieval / Renaissance paintings, panels, pedestals, frames and altar pieces was overwhelming. I learned that the three costliest pigments used in Renaissance art were gold, ultramarine (from the semi-precious Asian stone Lapis Lazuli) and red Lac (from India). In fact, these three colours were so costly that typically their use would be stipulated in the painting contract issued for the commission in question.
Salwat Ali writes about her visit to the Prado Museum in Madrid showcasing an enormous collection of classical paintings
Theatrical narrative was the other magical draw. Outstanding works by some of the greatest masters of European and Spanish art, such as Bosch, Raphael, Titian, Rubens, Velázquez, Goya, El Greco and Van Dyke and the astonishingly rich collection of Netherlandish art were essentially Biblical tableaux, sacred history and mythological stories. With accent on the human body, the figurative compositions capitalised on melodramatic expression and gesture. Centred in pictorially rich surroundings, the figure gained further emphasis through the draped / worn garment. Silk, satin, brocade, damask, velvet, gauze or muslin, the fabric found eloquent address in the hands of the masters noticeably, Raphael (‘The cardinal’) Rembrandt (‘Judith …’) and Flemish painters like Van Der Weyden (‘The descent from the cross’), etc.