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The exhibition (2003-2004) was instigated by Dr
Ann Galbally in 1998 whose recent biography, Charles Conder:
The Last Bohemian, (Melbourne: The Miegunyah Press, 2002) is
a comprehensive account of Charles Conders career, which began
when he was a precocious adolescent in New South Wales. The Sydney
Gallery, in fact, gave Conder his first official recognition by
purchasing 'Departure of the Orient - Circular Quay' in 1888.
Dr Galbally together with Barry Pearce, Head Curator
of Australian Art at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, curated
the exhibition. Their catalogue is scholarly and well produced.
Appropriately, there is included an amusing essay: Confessions
of a collector, by Barry Humphries, a 'Conder fan' from his
student days and a serious collector of his work and that of other
artists of the 1890s.
As a 19 year old boy just out of school and already
an enthusiastic reader of Arthur Symons, Ernest Dowson, and
their 'decadent' contemporaries, I was intrigued by Conders
Melbourne-Montmartre connection. Here was an artist who, in
his youth, had painted in and around my hometown and then, within
a couple of years, had journeyed to England and France and befriended
- and been admired by - the likes of Oscar Wilde and Toulouse-Lautrec.
It was the kind of transition which in wildest fantasy I dreamed
of achieving.
(Charles Conder, 1868-1909, Art Gallery of New South
Wales, Sydney, 2003, p.33)
The brief career of Charles Conder provides a salutary
indicator of the effect of fin-de-siécle living upon
the talented output of a single outstanding painter. It is rendered
all the more poignant by the superb and carefree romantic impressionism
that Conder in his early twenties displayed in Australia. Less than
20 years later he was dead. Thirty years on, he was all but forgotten
save in the provincial galleries of Australia. Yet in that country
his talent knew no limits. A gradual decadence consumed him between
Dieppe, Paris and London. Even a secure and happy marriage was only
to remove his creative urge and to precipitate his premature yet
world-weary collapse. Conder might seem to all but epitomise fin-de-siécle
1890s man; in his life, work and early death.
In May 1898 DS MacColl wrote for The Studio
an article entitled The Paintings on Silk of Charles Conder.
It was the first tribute of this kind that Conder had received,
and one of the best. MacColl had known Conder and his work for six
years, and the eulogy (a prose poem) was the culmination of his
esteem for the artist.1 Sadly, Charles Conder died some ten years
later in 1909, aged only 37. In 1938 in The Life and Death of
Conder, John Rothenstein observed:
For a decade before his death and a few years
afterwards he rated high among the English painters of the age.
DS MacColl praised him with untiring eloquence. Charles Ricketts,
on a solemn occasion, called him 'one of the most exquisite
personalities in modern art'; Laurence Housman, 'a man of almost
incalculable genius'. Toulouse-Lautrec delighted in him. Anquetin
looked at him to give a new impetus to the art of Europe. The
French Government honoured him by the purchase of one of his
pictures, others were acquired by collectors of such diverse
but discriminating tastes as Sir Hugh Lane, André Gide,
Jacques-Emile Blanche, the younger Coquelin and Wilson Steer.
The style of feminine beauty he created set a fashion. After
less than 30 years, he is almost forgotten.2
Charles Conders life was clouded by emotional
instability; he lacked self-discipline and showed disdain for a
useful life, and he abused his health to the severest extent with
alcohol and in the pursuit of endless women. He worked erratically
and was very poor at business. Oscar Wilde recalled, 'Dear Conder!
Always trying to persuade one to buy a fan for 10 guineas for which
one would be very happy to pay 20!'3 Conder got on very badly with
art dealers, and consequently the lack of success of his work meant
that for most of his life he was plagued by poverty. Yet Conders
works display a total contrast to a depressing life lived under
the shadow of premature death. An arcadia 'peopled by dreamy, capricious
figures who lead lives of luxurious idleness'. Conders world
is exquisite and delicate, like the materials - watercolour and
silk - that he used and in it life is tranquil. There is no violence,
no harshness for his privileged beings. The dichotomy between the
often depressing and sordid life led by Conder and the exquisite
beauty he sought to portray makes him a romantic and fascinating
example of 1890s man. The fact, too, that his work declined greatly
towards the end of his short life arouses curiosity and begs questions.
Although in his early years as an artist Conder worked
extensively from nature, his real feeling was for poetry and for
the imagination. During his time in Paris he was influenced by Symbolism
and by a sense of the theatrical. Rosicrucianism had a marked effect
on Conder. 'The cult of pure idealism in art against all imitation
of nature.'4 It gave him the confidence to follow his instinct towards
creating an ideal world. Conder was from an early age interested
in the notion of transience. At times his work appeared very close
in spirit to Watteau, and he used images of the 18th century fête
galant to create a lost world. Present realities played no part
in Conder's art. In 1895 Max Beerbohm met Conder, and he remembered
him as 'a sick man, immersed in dreams, unable to look realities
in the face'.5 It is quite probable that the knowledge of an early
death (from the syphilis that plagued him from the age of 19) attracted
Conder to fleeting moments of beauty; his own sense of personal
vulnerability and frailty acknowledged the ephemeral aspects of
nature, of falling petals, delicate blossoms, birds and the colour
blue. Conder often quoted Omar Khayyám's line: 'The bird
of Time has but a little way to fly - and lo, the Bird is on the
Wing.'
Charles Conder's early years as an artist were spent
in Australia - a lost paradise, in retrospect of his career. His
mother had died in India when Conder was five years old, and he
was sent back to England to boarding school. Then at the age of
15 he was sent to an uncle (his father's brother) in Sydney, who
was Chief Trigonometrical Surveyor in New South Wales. Conder worked
in the Sydney office of the Lands Department of New South Wales
and then for almost two years at survey camps in the country. According
to fellow workers there, Conder had no intention of becoming a surveyor
and the notebook he always carried was solely for sketching. His
father, however, had forbidden Conder to become an artist. At the
end of 1886 Conder applied to work at a firm of lithographic printers
in Sydney and soon after began a lithographic apprenticeship. As
it turned out, he didn't stay but took a studio in the city in Sydney.
He attended classes at the Art Society School conducted by Julian
Ashton, a leading painter in Sydney and in 1886 he won a prize for
the 'best painting from nature'.7
Conder's natural talent was recognised and duly blossomed
under the influence of two painters; Girolamo Nerli from Sienna,
who had been in contact with the Macchaioli and painted in the open
air, and Tom Roberts, 'the father of Australian Impressionism'.8
Conder and Roberts formed an immediate friendship
when they met in Sydney in 1888. Roberts was ten years older than
Conder and he had an academic training in Melbourne, followed by
travels in Spain, England and France (1881-85), during which time
he acquired considerable knowledge of Whistler and the theories
of plein-air. Roberts was an accomplished portraitist in
Melbourne and painted in camps outside Melbourne with Frederick
McCubbin and Arthur Streeton. While Roberts was in Sydney in 1888
he and Conder painted together on numerous occasions. Conder was
a quick student; with paintings such as 'Departure of the Orient
- Circular Quay' (1888) it is hard to believe that Conder was only
20 years of age and had been drawing and painting for a mere two
to three years. Using a high viewpoint it is an ambitious and finely
executed work, both melancholy and amusing. He creates delightful
patterns of umbrellas and animated figures against the strong division
of the picture plane with the quay, buildings and ships. Exhibited
in 1888 at the Art Society in Sydney, it was acquired by the Art
Gallery of New South Wales.
Among the landscapes produced by Conder in 1888 was
'Herrick's Blossoms', epitomising much in Conder's mind that he
carried into later works while in Paris and London. 'Nothing could
convey better the lyricism and enchanting light-heartedness of Conder's
Australian years than these springtime scenes.'9 Conder's move to
Melbourne towards the end of 1888 was inspired largely by the fact
Tom Roberts had returned there and on arrival he briefly shared
a studio with Roberts. He soon met other artists and visited the
camps outside Melbourne: Boxhill, Mentone and then Eaglemont. Years
later he looked back on 1889 as the happiest time in his life. The
'9 x 5' exhibition, so well known to Australians as the radical
exhibition of 'Impressionist' works by Tom Roberts, Arthur Streeton
and Charles Conder, took place in August 1889 in Melbourne. It included
46 works by Conder. Its motto was 'an effect is only momentary:
so an Impressionist tries to find his place'. The works were painted
on cigar box lids measuring 9" by 5". Conders 'Old Time is
still A-Flying' is typical of the 9 x 5 work he did. The title is
taken from a poem by Herrick:
Gather ye rosebuds while ye may
Old time is still a-flying
And this same flower that smiles today
Tomorrow will be dying
Conder's painting captures the frailty and transience
of youth and beauty.10 'How We Lost Poor Flossie' of the same year
relates to Japanese prints and to Whistler. It is elegant and misty
and shows Conder's great design sense.
In Australia Conder developed fine powers of observation.
'It was surely these scenes at Heidelberg that gave him the first
hint of the Arcadia he was destined to create.'11 Arthur Streeton
described him thus: 'Though the same age he seemed 30 years my senior
in knowledge of humanity and worldly affairs: he knew all about
Browning, Carlyle, Herrick and The Rubáiyát.'12 Although
Conder played a leading part in the development of an Australian
Impressionist school, he was - as Barry Humphries wrote in Confessions
of a Conder Fan - neither Australian by birth nor by stylistic
affinity. Nor was he an Impressionist at heart; objectivity did
not feature, but his natural inclination for poetry and fantasy
prompted his return to Europe. In 1890, aged 22, Conder left Melbourne
for Paris, where an uncle had offered to support him for two years.
Conder lived in Paris from 1890 to 1895. He led a
passionate and exhausting existence, and most of his painting it
seems was done on trips away from Paris to Vétheuil, Dennemont
and the coast at Yport.13 In the review of the exhibition at the
Société Nationale in 1893, DS MacColl thought that
of the landscape painters, 'Conder alone held that equilibrium between
observation, feeling, composition of form and colour which made
"the beautiful picture".' In the mind of MacColl, 'Conder reduced
nature to the music of colours and evoked perfumed and poetic moods.
[He] was to be the main spokesman for art for art's sake and the
aestheticism of the "Yellow Nineties".'14
Conder developed his imaginative work, at times illustrating
stories or poems. 'The Fairy Prince', for example, a Wagnerian figure,
was produced in The Yellow Book15 in 1897. Anquetin inspired
Conder with a love of Watteau. Many of Conder's large paintings
on silk and his delicate fans portray, 'the dream of an elegant
pastoral life, of an artificial existence, far from the commonplaces
of the everyday and removed to timeless part'.16 Conder also made
designs for dresses, silk panels and wall decorations.17 They were
praised highly by Conder's contemporaries. His use of colour was
outstanding, the slightly blurred images on silk were original and
delicate, and he soon established a reputation for his talent.
From 1895 to 1898 Conder spent a lot of time in Dieppe,
where he was mostly very happy with only spells of the debauched
life. At times he worked intensely. According to Blanche, there
was 'something feverish in his creative urge; later on it was to
come near to madness'.18 In 1896 Aubrey Beardsley was in Dieppe
as well, very close to dying. They were drawn together by what Rothenstein
described as 'their common nostalgia for the romantic past, and
their allies in the face of a derisive, even malevolent English
philistinism'.19 Charles Ricketts wrote in the Burlington Magazine
shortly after Conder's death that 'Conders influence changed
the course of Beardsleys designs into an interpretation of
"modernity"'.20 Conder's contribution to Beardsley's art was essentially
intangible, associated with mood and nuance. Conder worked and lived
by instinct, whereas Beardsley's approach was more precise and intellectual.
The circle to which Conder belonged in Dieppe included not only
Beardsley but also Oscar Wilde, who went there upon his release
from jail. Many artists and writers visited from London and Paris:
Max Beerbohm, Walter Sickert, Leonard Smithers, Arthur Symons and
Jacques-Emile Blanche.
In May 1899 Conder had his first one man exhibition
at the Carfax in London. There were 24 works, mostly watercolours
on silk, including 14 fans. Although Conder was known in London,
his work was not. In reproduction his work had appeared in The
Studio, The Yellow Book, The Saturday Review and
The Savoy and Pageant. They had not, however, done justice
to his mastery of colour, and so the Carfax exhibition had quite
an impact.
In the same year William Rothenstein reintroduced
Conder to lithography. Among his first works in the new medium were
illustrations for Balzac's La Fille aux yeux dor, entitled
'The Balzac Set'. Conder had concentrated very little on line as
his natural talent was with colour, but the Balzac lithographs were
in fact a great achievement. They 'show a dynamic force apparent
in no other work of Conder's. The profiles are powerful, the shadows
menacing.'21 Many other lithographs, including those in the exhibition,
were produced by Conder soon after the Balzac Set but none has the
strength and resolve of the Balzac works. A scholarly treatment
of the work done by Conder in the period 1890-1909 is marred by
the fact that the materials Conder chose to work with were delicate
and have not survived very well. We have to rely on the evidence
of the strong and sensitive Australian works done in watercolour
on paper and oil on canvas or hardboard and the praise of contemporaries
to realise Conder's outstanding talent. In his late work the colours
have faded and the silk - sometimes of poor quality - has rotted.
Rothenstein's account of Conder's time in Paris is
interesting and detailed, assembled from many letters and contemporaries
accounts. According to him, the first two years in Paris were beneficial
to Conder, not so much for what he achieved than for what he experienced.22
He looked at pictures in museums and studios, he talked, he read
widely and met many artists; the most influential on his life and
work were Toulouse-Lautrec and Anquetin. In the spring of 1890 he
went to the country where his health was restored and where he painted
landscapes and gardens. He liked the human scale of the landscape
in France, modelled by humans, compared with the wildness of the
Australian bush. In March 1891, Conder held a joint exhibition with
William Rothenstein in Paris. Conder showed paintings of blossoms
and drawings inspired by Omar Khayyám; the work still retained
the freshness and spirit of the Australian paintings. Figaro
reviewed it favourably, and L'Art français reproduced
a number of exhibits; it was praised by Degas and Pissaro. At the
end of 1892 Conder was establishing himself in France as a serious
imaginative painter. However, his personal life began to undermine
his creative powers.
Rothenstein describes Conder's decline:
The longer he stayed in Paris the more often was
his development, so rich with promise, hindered by dissipation.
Brandy-and-soda, which at first he had rarely drunk before the
evening, became an hourly need, and he acquired the dangerous
taste for absinthe in addition
Nearly any woman, glorified by his imagination,
became desirable. One amorous adventure followed another. There
was a gargantuan flavour about them. With a woman or two he
would disappear for a time. For days, sometimes even weeks,
they would remain closeted together
Suddenly with money
and passion spent he would go back with fanatic zeal to work.
At the end of 1891, after 18 months in Paris, came the first
of the series of illnesses that ultimately led to his collapse
and death.23
Conder suffered poor health and spells of acute illness
throughout the 1890s - rheumatism, severe gout, insomnia - causing
him depression and despair. It was naturally difficult for him to
work consistently, and he tended to work in intense bouts. In June
1900, to the amazement of his friends, Conder met Stella Maris a
young widow with whom he fell in love and married in December the
same year. Although their union was destined to end in tragedy,
it was a very happy marriage. They became totally emotionally dependent
on one another, and she devoted to his every need. Not only that,
she had a large private income enabling them to live luxuriously
and to entertain lavishly. In 1904 they lived at 91 Cheyne Walk
in a beautiful 18th century house overlooking the river. For the
first time in Condor's adult life he kept regular house, ate nourishing
food and became relatively temperate. He did not have to stay in
cafes, streets or boarding houses, and during the first years of
marriage his health improved.24 With it came, not a steady output
of the fine work, but something of a decline. In these years it
is not really possible to blame Conders health for his inability
to paint well or do justice to the talent his early work displayed.
Indeed, as Rothenstein suggested, the decline in his work seems
more related to a loss of incentive:
So great a change in circumstances and habit as,
after his marriage, Conder underwent could not escape reflection
in his art. Until then his life was mostly unhappy, a man in
love with romance had been familiar with abject poverty, who
worshipped dignity, had been compelled to play the sponger and
the furtive debtor, who delighted in luxury, to flit from one
mean lodging to another. Much of his life had certainly been
passed in the gayest resorts, in the company of brilliant men,
admiring friends, pretty women - and that is not little. But
those who have written about Conder have
insisted on
the 'high sports'
to the neglect of the black weeks or
remorse, constantly recurrent, during which, with hope extinguished,
he moped inert, incapable of facing the real world.25
No longer did Conder need a dream world, to aspire
to - a languid and luxurious existence - when he and Stella could
give costume balls in their own house, when he was the host to members
of society in London or France. Luxury became accessible, then familiar.26
The spirit that delighted such stern judges and contemptuous men
as Anquetin and Lautrec grew listless; and the unerring sense of
colour and rhythm the best of his earlier works reveal was seldom
at his command.27
June 1906 was an unfortunate turning point in Conder's
life. He was lying on a sofa, smoking a cigarette in the company
of Stella and a friend, when he was unable to respond to a question
they asked. He was paralysed, and various doctors confirmed that
Conder's condition was incurable. He recovered to an extent with
long spells in sanatoria, and wrote the most touching and beautiful
letters to Stella and several friends. His loneliness and his longing
for Stella during these periods were intense and desperate. Remarkably,
Charles Conder survived until 9 April 1909 due to Stella Mariss
unfailing love and devotion; indeed, her entire fortune was spent
on keeping him comfortable and alive for as long as possible. After
his death she had nothing to live for and survived him by only three
years.
To import the manner of poetry into life is inconceivable
in the admirable part for which the Englishman casts himself,
and the very women, those superb Amazons, can be thought of
as wielding a whip, but hardly a fan. This race, that produces
the finest of poetry, treats it as something alien, cuts out
endearment from its tongue, and blushes at any graceful embroidery
upon the acts of life. The profession of poet it regards askance.28
References
1. Rothenstein J. The Life and Death of Conder. London: Dent,
1938. p146.
2. Ibid, p.xiii.
3. Ibid, p.148.
4. Ibid, p.111.
5. Ibid, p.119.
6. Hoff U. Charles Conder. Melbourne: Landsdowne Press, 1972.
p69.
7. Ibid, p.15.
8. Ibid, p.16.
9. Ibid, p.24
10. Ibid, p.38
11. Rothenstein, op.cit., p19.
12. Ibid, p.25.
13. Hoff, op.cit., p.58.
14. Ibid, p.58.
15. The Yellow Book. Vol XIII.
16. Hoff, op.cit., p.64.
17. Ibid, p.64.
18. Rothenstein, op.cit., p.119.
19. Ibid, p.135.
20. Burlington Magazine. Vol XV, pp8-14.
21. Rothenstein, op.cit., p.168.
22. Ibid, p.70.
23. Ibid, pp.73-75.
24. Ibid, p.207.
25. Ibid, p.206.
26. Ibid, p.206.
27. Ibid, p.207
28. MacColl DS. The Paintings on Silk of Charles Conder.
The Studio Vol XIII. No. 62, May 1898, p.237.
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