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The Troubetzkoy Archive Project

The Troubetzkoy Archive Project

An authoritative online central database of the complete works of Prince Paul Troubetzkoy

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Encounters with the great playwright George Bernard Shaw

James Drake . 12 January 2021

George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950), the famous playwright and Fabian socialist, was a devoted vegetarian like Troubetzkoy. They became firm friends, with the playwright modelled three times over twenty years.

The story begins with another great Shavian bust by the towering genius Auguste Rodin. The original plaster of Rodin’s bust was created in the sculptor’s Paris studio in 1906.

Shaw maintained that the Rodin bust was the only likeness that revealed his inner self. He explained that only Rodin could penetrate the “mask” of his sitter’s reputation. “Look at my bust, and you will not find it a bit like the brilliant fiction known as GBS. But it is most frightfully like me.”

George Bernard Shaw by Rodin

Shaw said that Rodin worked quite slowly, “as if he were a river god building a wall in a garden for 3 or 4 francs a day”. “When he was in doubt he measured me with an old iron divider, and then measured the bust. If the nose was too long, he sliced a bit off it, and jammed the tip up to close the gap, with no more emotion of affection than a glazier putting in a window pane. If the ear was in the wrong place, he cut it off and slapped it into the right place, excusing the ruthless mutilations to my wife (who half expected to see the already terribly animated clay bleed) by remarking that it was easier than to make a new ear. Yet a succession of miracles took place as he worked. In the first 15 minutes, in merely giving a suggestion of human shape to the lump of clay, he produced so spirited a thumbnail bust of me that I wanted to take it away and relieve him from further labour […] but that phase vanished like a summer cloud as the bust evolved […] (then) it sobered down into a careful representation of my features in their exact dimensions. Then it reverted to the cradle of Christian art, at which point I wanted to shout “For Heaven’s sake, stop: it is a Byzantine masterpiece. Then it began to look as if Bernini had meddled with it. Then, to my horror, it smoothed out into a plausible, rather elegant piece of 18th C. work, almost as if Houdon had touched up a head by Canova. At this point Troubetzkoy would have broken it with a hammer, or given up with a wail of despair. Then another century passed in a single night, and the bust became a Rodin creation, and was the living head […] It was a process for the embryologist to study, not the aesthete […]”

Shaw paid Rodin the highest possible compliment when he predicted his own epitaph as: Shaw, Bernard: sculpted by Rodin, otherwise unknown! His assessment of Troubetzkoy (“the most amazing sculptor of modern times”) was coloured no doubt by flattery: after all, he sat for the Russian on three separate occasions. He also wrote that Troubetzkoy was a “gigantic humanitarian who could do anything with an animal except eat it.”

Shaw observed that “when Troubetzkoy models an animal, be it the smallest spoiled pet, or an exhausted draft horse, in whose body one can see all the pains of the ill-treated animals who died without knowing human pity; or the horse subjugated by the terrible Czar, which stands out irresistibly in the great square of Leningrad, among the spaces left empty by the conventional monuments, swept away by the exasperation of the Soviets, so perfect is the result, so adherent to nature, such the impression that is aroused by its power of representation, to be compelled by us to conclude that his sculpture – like Barye’s – is created to model only, and nothing else, animals.”

Shaw knew of course that animal sculptures were just a small part of the Russian’s oeuvre. He knew that the sculptor would be remembered primarily for his busts and his statues of high society figures in Paris and London, impeccably dressed. So his legacy would be as the Singer Sargent of sculpture – in Shaw’s words “discovering the “quintessence of elegance in the draping of a skirt, in the head and arms of an archduchess”.

At the same time, Shaw recognised that Troubetzkoy’s genius transcended a mere society portraitist in clay. He pointed out that, when his countrymen from Lake Maggiore asked him for a memorial of the great war, Troubetzkoy placed, in the long lake of Pallanza, where he once lived beside the famous Villa Cabianca rock, a simple figure of a mother, who tends her child and asks: “Do you want to see my son?”

The first Troubetzkoy bust, in 1908, was created after the Russian saw the Rodin bust. He declared that there was no life in the eyes, and felt that he could do better. In five hours of frenzied work in the London studio of John Singer Sargent he produced his own bust of Shaw. (This was at the house in Tite Street, Chelsea which is still opposite the house where Oscar Wilde lived). Shaw remembered it as “a delightful and wonderful performance. He worked convulsively, giving birth to the thing in agonies, hurling lumps of clay about with groans, and making strange, dumb movements with his tongue, like a wordless prophet. He covered himself with plaster. He covered me with plaster. And, finally, he covered the block he was working on with plaster to such purpose that, at the end of the second sitting, lo! there stood Sargent’s studio in ruins, buried like Pompeii under the scoriae of a volcano, and in the midst a spirited bust of one of my reputations, a little idealized (quite the gentleman in fact) but recognisable a mile off as the sardonic author of Man and Superman, with a dash of Offenbach, a touch of Mephistopheles, and a certain aristocratic delicacy and distinction that came from Troubetzkoy himself, he being a Russian prince. I should like to have that bust; but the truth is that my wife couldn’t stand Offenbach-Mephistopheles; and I was not allowed to have the bust […]” (This explains why only the Rodin bust greets visitors to Shaw’s Corner in Hertfordshire).

Many years later Shaw went to Troubetzkoy’s studio in Verbania, Italy for full body sculptures. His visits to Lake Maggiore were to have a profound influence on his later plays, but it was not just the magical scenery that stimulated his creative imagination.

In the late Summer of 1921, an American girl, Molly Tompkins, came to London for the express purpose of meeting the great playwright. Shaw bumped into her outside his house in Adelphi Terrace and invited her in for ‘buttered crumpets’. She explained that, with her husband Laurence, she wanted to create a Shavian theatre. Although he found Molly ‘as vain as a goldfish’, her eagerness “softened my stony heart a little”. He realised that Molly brought out qualities he shared with Henry Higgins in Pygmalion. No surprise therefore that he saw something of Eliza Doolittle in her, and sent her for lessons in diction with Professor Daniel Jones at London University.

Molly Tompkins and Son on Lake Maggiore

When Molly and Laurence went to Italy in Spring 1926, she invited George Bernard Shaw to join them. On the 5th of August he and his wife Charlotte arrived at the Regina Hotel at Stresa, overlooking Lake Maggiore. They were enlivened by local residents including the conductor Albert Coates and his wife Dooshka – a ‘Prima Donna from Moscow’. Fellow guests included Cecil Lewis who later shared an Oscar for the screenplay of Shaw’s Pygmalion.

Shaw spent his time ferrying across the lake to sit for Prince Paul Troubetzkoy who had a ‘big studio’ and an “astonishing wife”. Shaw posed for a statuette showing him seated in July 1926. One of the stops on the lake was the tiny island of San Giovanni, which was being rented by Molly Thompkins. ‘I cannot tear myself away from the Isola Molli’ wrote Shaw, who went on excursions with her to Baveno.

The following year Shaw returned to the Regina Palace – once again to pose for Troubetzkoy.

Shaw described how he took up his ‘platform pose as an orator’ when he gave ‘twenty sittings, or rather standings’ for the final portrayal at Troubetzkoy’s studio. Only one bronze cast was made from it. It captures the combative nature of a subject with an opinion on everything, whose moustache bristles as he contemplates a suitable repartee. He was only upset that it was not exhibited at the National Gallery of Ireland during his lifetime. He accepted the (then) rule that only portraits of deceased subjects were displayed.

Shaw claimed to have saved the sculptor from despair over the 1927 death of his wife Elin Sundström by agreeing to return to Verbania for the final sitting. However, it was also a convenient excuse to meet Molly Thompkins at the Isolino San Giovanni. She left an indelible mark on his creative output. Molly and her “love-island” lingered like a sea-fantasy over his last plays and continued to haunt his memory. ‘The restless hands sometimes tire of the pen and remember the road to Baveno’ he wrote her: ‘…angels will always love you, including George Bernard Shaw’!


References

1 Shaw: An Autobiography 1898 – 1950, selected from his writings by Stanley Weintraub

2 Paul Troubetzkoy by George Bernard Shaw

Towards a Digital Catalogue Raisonné of Paul Troubetzkoy’s Complete works

Giulia Suardi . 7 December 2020

The aim of the Troubetzkoy Archive Project (TAP) is to establish a central database as the basis for a documented and reliable online Catalogue Raisonné, which provides complete and easily accessible information to a wide audience of experts or even art lovers. The inherent complexity of constructing a Catalogue Raisonné, combined with the vastness and relative dispersion of Troubetzkoy’s ‘oeuvre’, make the undertaking highly challenging but certainly fascinating. In any case, we see it as an overdue effort to celebrate the work of a sculpture’s genius and revive his fame.


Catalogue Raisonné

The Catalogue Raisonné is a journey that involves the heart and the intellect. It requires all the love for the artist and passion for his work, together with scientific rigor, method in research and accuracy of information. The International Foundation for Art Research (IFAR) defines Catalogues Raisonnés as “scholarly compilations of an artist’s body of work […] critical tools for researching the provenance, attribution, and authenticity of a work of art”1 The New York Public Library describes a “catalogue raisonné [as] a comprehensive, annotated listing of all the known works of an artist either in a particular medium or all media” and provides a comprehensive list of information that should be considered,  including: title and title variations, dimension, date, medium, current location, owner, provenance, exhibition history, condition, bibliography and literature, critical assessments, description of the work, signatures of the artist and a list of works attributed, lost, destroyed, and fakes2. Not all of this information is always readily available, while in specific cases different inputs may be needed, thus requiring a rigorous yet flexible approach. In essence, according to Prof. Brian Allen, one of the founding members of the International Catalogue Raisonné association (ICRA), “Catalogues Raisonnés are the building blocks of art history […] The absence of a reliably established corpus of works by a given artist inevitably leads to misattributed works continuing to be reproduced and discussed in error”3 .

The process of compiling a Catalogue Raisonné usually takes several years, considering the research, organization of information, writing, printing, and publishing. The update process, to incorporate any new discoveries or new information, can be even more complex and problematic. This is the reason why other forms of creation and diffusion are taking over from the traditional, physical Catalogue Raisonné.


Online Catalogue Raisonné

Printed catalogues are normally elaborate, illustrated publications, with a high production cost and an equivalent high consumer price, which relay information crystallized at the time of publication. The creation and printing of any updates require long intervals. Needless to say, many printed Catalogues Raisonnés must have several volumes in order to stay up to date, even if this procedure takes many years.

For this reason, in the last five years, the art world has witnessed a key shift in the study and documentation of artworks. Digital Catalogues Raisonnés have significantly gained ground as a valid alternative to printed catalogues, as they make it easier to update catalogues more rapidly and frequently and at a lower cost. Henry Moore’s online Catalogue Raisonné, for example, has announced that they will update through 2020 a section of the artist’s output.

Some online Catalogue Raisonnés require a fee to be able to access, although others are free: as an example, for Paul Cezanne’s Catalogue Raisonné you only need to register as a new user to enter the website, while the Edward Burne-Jones Catalogue Raisonné, which went live in August 2020, does not even require registered users. In the majority of cases, all you need is your laptop.

Moreover, high resolution images are usually a concern, as they are among the elements that cost the most when publishing a printed Catalogue Raisonné. Uploading a high-resolution image on an online data management system would be a win-win: it does not have an associated cost and the quality of the image on a screen is sharper and could potentially provide the option of close-ups on specific details.

All this makes an online Catalogue Raisonné more accessible for professional users and other viewers.


Sources, guidance, aims

The Troubetzkoy Archive Project benefits from a primary and proprietary source represented by the extensive archive of John Grioni, the Italian scholar who dedicated fifty years of his life to an unpublished study of the works of Paul Troubetzkoy. Furthermore, since its inception in 2019, the project takes advantage of a close collaboration with the Museo del Paesaggio of Verbania (on the Lake Maggiore in Italy, where the artist was born) which holds about 340 of Troubetzkoy’s works, and will also benefit from contact with other museums and collectors who hold or have held the artist’s works.

The Troubetzkoy Archive Project will be managed by an internal team coordinated by James Drake and Giulia Suardi, and guided by an advisory board, chaired by Alexander Kader FSA, Co-Worldwide Head of European Sculpture and Works of Art, Sotheby’s, London. Other board members include Federica Rabai and Stefano Martinella from Verbania, Anne-Lise Desmas from the Getty Museum and other acknowledged experts on Troubetzkoy, who will ensure constant support and scientific rigor to the project.

All in all, the Troubetzkoy Archive Project TAP is committed to delivering an online Catalogue Raisonné, resulting from a research of all available sources, with clear elements supporting the provenance of the complete corpus of Paul Troubetzkoy’s works. This will be offered for consultation to academics, auction houses and art galleries, dealers, collectors and any other beholder interested in the artist’s works. Thanks to the online mode, we are determined to give each user easy access, great image quality, more timely updates, at more acceptable overall costs for the entire chain from production to final use. All this, with the genuine hope of bringing the personality and work of a great artist again to the fore.


[1] ICRA, Why Have a Catalogue Raisonné?, https://icra.art/about/catalogue-raisonne/why-have-a-catalogue-raisonne

[2] IFAR, Users Guide, https://www.ifar.org/users_guide.php.

[3] New York Public Library, What is a Catalogue Raisonné?, https://www.nypl.org/about/divisions/wallach-division/art-architecture-collection/catalogue-raisonne


References:

International Catalogue Raisonné Association, www.icra.art, accessed 30 November 2020.

International Foundation for Art Research (IFAR), www.ifar.org, accessed 30 November 2020.

New York Public Library, www.nypl.org, accessed 30 November 2020.

Paul Troubetzkoy: Sculpture’s genius

Giulia Suardi . 7 December 2020

The Troubetzkoy Archive Project aims to celebrate a great artist and revive his fame. Why Troubetzkoy? What makes his artistic and personal profile so fascinating? What clues did he leave behind and why are we undertaking a vast and rigorous study to create the Catalogue Raisonné of his complete work?

Considered by Bernard Shaw to be “the most astonishing sculptor of modern times”, Prince Paul Troubetzkoy has to be regarded as a pioneer in Sculptural Impressionism. An extraordinary artist of the 20th century, he was described by his brother Luigi as an eccentric personality: courageous and not afraid to speak up. His personal and artistic curiosity led him to travel constantly and settle for several years in the art capitals of his time, where he would meet and portray the elites of the world. Troubetzkoy undoubtedly broke the paradigms of the old academic tradition by affirming his unique style, independent from the politics and artistic currents of the time. He enjoyed moments of great success in his lifetime, alternating between deliberate pauses and several fresh starts in new places and with new challenges until his final years on his native Lake Maggiore, in Northern Italy. The dazzling successes during his lifetime were then contrasted by a later phase, in which his fame silently began to fade. Unlike other artists of his time, in the second half of the 1900s until today, only a few exhibitions, or other art initiatives have been dedicated to Troubetzkoy. A genius, an innovator, a profound artistic (and human) soul, he demands renewed attention and celebration.


Innovator, unique, independent

Troubetzkoy’s contribution to art was that of an innovator, capable of dismantling the principles of the “Académie” and following, coherently, his own path. Troubetzkoy’s style and artistic principles make him a precursor for Impressionist Sculpture. The rejection of classical principles, his conception of space as an integral part of the work, and his meticulous attention to the light and materiality of surfaces are the founding beliefs of Troubetzkoy’s art. Descriptions such as “light” and “unconstrained to proportions” are frequently applied to Troubetzkoy’s oeuvre.

He had natural talent: his fluidity in sculpting impressed anyone who sat for him or watched his quick and “rough” technique. Svetlana Domogatskaya notes how, when Troubetzkoy became professor at the Academy of Sculpture in Moscow, “the phrase ‘to model à la Troubetzkoy’ meaning modeling quickly, exuberantly, lively and cheerfully became a catch-phrase among Moscow sculptors”1 . His sculpting ‘signature’ is unmistakable, not only in statuettes, which are best remembered out of Troubetzkoy’s artistic production, but also in his large works and public monuments.

Certainly, Troubetzkoy was an independent man with a strong personality. A lover of animals and nature, and a firm believer in vegetarianism, he used to keep wolves and bears in his St. Petersburg studio. He was a man who never followed others and stayed true to his values. His vision of life and culture made him exempt from any external influences: he did not attempt to study techniques, read books or listen to the art critics of the time. He was only focused on shaping the material for his works.


Great international fame

Paul Troubetzkoy, son of a Russian Prince and an American lyric singer, born, raised and educated in Italy, was for his entire life a citizen of the world. His aristocratic origins and exposure to great artists, musicians and writers of the time, such as Bernard Shaw, Tolstoy, Toscanini and Caruso, pushed him to travel the world, moving from Italy, to Paris, Russia and Hollywood, portraying the glamorous international elite of the time. After many years of travel, he became, effectively, one of the most highly regarded society portraitists of the 19th and 20th century and a master of “portrait-statuettes”, which became, in a way, his “trademark” and paved the way for a vibrant trend.

In the early years of his education in Italy, he was enthusiastically accepted by the circles of Milanese culture and successfully exhibited his first “statuette” at the Brera Academy, also participating in bids for large public monuments, acclaimed by art critics.

Years later, his entry into the static Moscow art scene sparked a heated debate between traditional academics and the circles of progressive artists that followed him, considering him the initiator of the New Moscow School of Sculpture, a turning point in Russian sculpture. His success was great in portraying the nobility and the Muscovite upper-class, as shown by several portraits of his great friend Leo Tolstoy, or of Prince Galitzin and Princess Gagarina with a Child (today at the Tretyakov Gallery) and others. Likewise, memorable monuments were commissioned from him, such as the Monument to the Tsar Alexander III in St. Petersburg, a choice that outraged the Russian academics, who were excluded.

 The apex of his career, however, was reached on the Parisian and American scene of the 20th century. In Paris, where he had already won in 1900 the Grand Prix at the Universal Exposition, he attended the Société des Nouvelles Peintres et Sculpteurs, chaired by Rodin, and obtained visibility and positive feedback from the critics of the Salon of 1906. The real essence of his success though, was the enthusiastic welcome and admiration from the Parisian and American society, of which Troubetzkoy portrayed important personalities, not least his friend George Bernard Shaw, Anatole France, several members of the Vanderbilt family (who opened many doors to him in the USA), Franklin D Roosevelt and the actress Mary Pickford.


The shine fades

Back to his native lake, the last years of his life were less dazzling, characterized by a few exhibitions in Italy and a progressive transition to oil painting. Perhaps his independence and international flair, which ensured him success and admiration, turned out to be limiting factors in preserving his fame after his glorious years. Troubetzkoy had been through the years overshadowed by his peers, such as Auguste Rodin or Medardo Rosso, considered by critics to be the major players of the post-impressionist style.   His unconventional attitude in comparison to his fellow artists might have made him appear as a kind of “external visitor” in the artistic scene of the time. His being in any nation and none, certainly did not help in giving him a place that could be considered completely ‘his place’ and recognized as such by every beholder. It is not by chance that, even in the successful exhibition at the Paris Salon of 1906, Troubetzkoy was regarded as an exponent of the Russian school by Rodin and by art critics (thus limiting, in good faith, his artistic stature.


A man and an artist to celebrate

Paul Troubetzkoy is a man and artist who must be celebrated, whose greatness must be fully recognized. He was a genius of sculpture, creative, protective of his independence, curious about the world and people around him, an artist with an overflowing personality but completely dedicated to his sculptures, a natural talent, an innovator and recognized as such, but perhaps not as well remembered as he fully deserves. This is the profile of a man and an artist that the Troubetzkoy Archive Project would like to give new life to. Troubetzkoy’s production is vast and not yet entirely identified. For this reason, a Catalogue Raisonné, which aims to bring it all together with passion and academic rigor, is the most suitable tool to give renewed recognition and a legacy to this forgotten genius.


References

Paolo Troubetzkoy la Collezione del Museo del Paesaggio. Museo del Paesaggio, Verbania. Pressgrafica Srl, 2017.

[1] Domogatskaya, Svetlana. Paolo Troubetzkoy and Russia. Tretyakov Gallery Magazine, issue n. 2, 2009.


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