Sir Thomas More, Hans Holbein the Younger
Holbein’s portrait of Thomas Cromwell, More’s chief adversary, now hangs across his portrait of More in the Frick Collection in New York. The coincidence not only illustrates the fickleness of power but the fickleness of artists who, as beneficiaries of power, had to shift allegiances to survive.
Holbein is not the only artist to have jumped ship and not looked back. In 1483, Leonardo da Vinci famously secured a job with the Milanese Duke Ludovico Sforza, who was looking for military engineers, by adjusting his resume to read like a weapon designer’s (bent on highly imaginative destruction) rather than an artist’s. When the Duke was captured by invading French armies in 1499, da Vinci lost no time in securing for himself the favour of the French. He even went on to work on a commission for Gian Giacomo Trivulzio, Sforza’s nemesis. Of course, genius cannot help itself from being noticed and craved and, just as artists required material support, rulers required creative advertising and the more creative and awe-inspiring, the better. So the pursuit was mutual.
But it would be unfair to propose that artists have never been loyal or suffered for their causes or fealties. The French realist Gustave Courbet backed the short-lived revolution of the Paris Commune, spending six months in prison as a result and being charged with a fine that he was unable to pay.
In 1977, Pakistani painter Ijaz ul Hassan was incarcerated at the Lahore Fort for opposing the military regime of Ziaul Haq. It is interesting to note that the paintings produced by the two artists during and after their stints in prison (separated by almost a century) are mostly non-figurative works of great poignancy that represent bondage (in the form, for example, of a hooked trout, in Courbet’s case, and the motif of a barred window in Hassan’s) or celebrate nature — a free and resilient force beyond walls and bars.
What is it that artists are loyal to today? The government sponsorship of the arts is no longer in vogue, and to work for the state as an artist is to alienate oneself, perhaps forever, from the contemporary art market that ostensibly advocates autonomy and dissidence and goes out of its way to circumvent references to the very thing that is its cornerstone: money. Galleries and museums, auction houses and art fairs, private collectors and art dealers are the forces that make up the market, and successful artists today, it can be argued, are loyal primarily to the image of themselves that is in tune with the demands of this market.
Published in Dawn, EOS, July 29th, 2018