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Art &
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Cathedral
Mosaics
Part IV - The Impossible Dream
More mosaics went up in the Cathedral between 1930
and 1935 than at any time before or since. Yet their style resulted in
the greatest public furore witnessed in the Cathedral's history. For the
origins of the situation we have to go back almost to the beginning of
the century.
When Francis Bourne succeeded Herbert Vaughan as Archbishop of Westminster
in 1903, the only mosaics in place were those designed by W C Symons in
the Holy Souls Chapel and those opposite in the Chapel of St Gregory and
St Augustine, designed by J R Clayton of the firm of Clayton and Bell.
Bourne was happy with neither. In November 1905 he was in Rome and from
there travelled to Sicily specifically to see the 12th century Byzantine
mosaics in Palermo's Palatine Chapel and in the great Cathedral of Monreale
nearby. There at last Bourne found what he wanted, speaking on his return
of his intention to reproduce the mosaics in Westminster Cathedral.
Almost twenty years went by but Cardinal Bourne was satisfied with none
of the Cathedral mosaics. To commemorate his twenty years as Archbishop
of Westminster, Bourne had his portrait painted in 1923. The artist was
Gilbert Pownall, a Catholic who had exhibited regularly at the Royal Academy
from 1908. Bourne believed that at last he had found the right man to
design the Cathedral mosaics. As Pownall had little or no experience in
this medium, Bourne arranged for him to go to Ravenna, Rome, Venice and,
of course, Palermo and Monreale, to study the masterpieces in mosaic there
as Bourne himself had done. On his return, Bourne asked him to design
mosaics first for the alcove above one of the main confessionals and then
for the Lady Chapel. He also announced that a mosaic workshop would be
set up in the tower. The designs were accepted and in 1930 the workshop
was established with Basil Carey-Elwes and T Josey as the first mosaicists.
The confessional mosaics were completed in the same year (1930), using
the direct method, and a start was then made on the Lady Chapel. By now
the team of mosaicists had grown, to three and then to five with the arrival
of two experienced Italians in 1931. The Lady Chapel mosaics took five
years, being completed in June 1935. Meanwhile the blue sanctuary arch
mosaic was put up by the Italians in 1932-33, St Peter's Crypt received
its mosaic in 1934 and work started on the Cathedral apse in the autumn
of 1934. But from December 1933, Edward Hutton, an expert on Italian art,
had started to organise leading figures in the art world in a protest
against Gilbert Pownall's style, which Hutton regarded as 'amateurish,
clumsy and without mastery'. When Bourne died in January 1935 his successor,
Arthur Hinsley, gave in. The partially completed apse mosaic was taken
down and only the war saved the sanctuary arch.
So how much of Bourne's dream of bringing Monreale to Westminster was
achieved? The main theme of the Lady Chapel - the Tree of Life and the
vine - are clearly taken from the 12th century apse of San Clemente in
Rome and many of the animals, including the unusual fish-like creatures
at the termination of tendrils, are the same. The mandorla of Christ on
a rainbow in the Lady Chapel apse appears to be from the Ascension dome
in St Mark's Venice, while the blue entrance arch of the chapel may derive
from the Mausoleum of Galla Placidia in Ravenna. We know from Bourne that
the Cathedral sanctuary arch mosaic of Christ enthroned among evangelists
and apostles was inspired by the 4th century apse of Santa Pudenziana
in Rome, though the treatment is vastly different. Only the engagingly
simple yet effective arch of St Peter in the crypt and perhaps also the
confessional mosaics, have any real affinity with the mosaics of Palermo
and Monreale. But then dreams often are impossible.
Patrick Rogers
First
published in Oremus the magazine of Westminster Cathedral November 2004.
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Read more about Cathedral Mosaics -
Part I - Trial and Error
Part
II - Opus Sectile and the Italian Method
Part
III - The Arts and Crafts Men
Part IV
- The Impossible Dream
Part
V - A Russian Perspective
Part
VI - The Journey proceeds
Part
VII - The Mystery Mosaics

Basil
Carey-Elwes working on the Lady Chapel in 1931.
Gilbert
Pownall and his wife
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