The Peacock Room is one of the most famous rooms in the world, a perfect symphony of decorative elements. It is now in the Freer Gallery in Washington. It has a great story, as the Gallery's
web site explains:
The Peacock Room was once the dining
room in the London home of Frederick R. Leyland, a wealthy shipowner
from Liverpool, England. It was originally designed by a gifted interior
architect named Thomas Jeckyll. To display Leyland's prized collection
of Chinese porcelain to best advantage, Jeckyll constructed a lattice of
intricately carved shelving and hung antique gilded leather on the
walls. A painting by James McNeill Whistler (1834-1903) called La Princesse du pays de la porcelaine — or The Princess from the Land of Porcelain — occupied a place of honor above the fireplace.
Jeckyll had nearly completed his commission when he consulted Whistler —
who was then working on decorations for the entrance hall of Leyland's
house — about the color to paint the dining room shutters and doors.
Concerned that the red roses on the leather hangings clashed with the
colors in The Princess, Whistler volunteered to retouch the walls
with traces of yellow. Leyland permitted Whistler to make that minor
alteration and also to adorn the wainscoting and cornice with a "wave
pattern" derived from the design on the leaded glass of the pantry door.
Assuming the decoration of the room to be virtually complete, Leyland
went back to his business in Liverpool.
In his patron's absence, Whistler was inspired
to make bolder revisions. He covered the ceiling with Dutch metal, or
imitation gold leaf, over which he painted a lush pattern of peacock
feathers. He then gilded Jeckyll's walnut shelving and embellished the
wooden shutters with four magnificently plumed peacocks.
Whistler wrote to Leyland that the dining room was "really alive with
beauty — brilliant and gorgeous while at the same time delicate and
refined to the last degree," boasting that the changes he had made were
past imagining. "I assure you," he said, "you can have no more idea of
the ensemble in its perfection gathered from what you last saw on the
walls than you could have of a complete opera judging from a third
finger exercise!" He urged Leyland not to return to London yet, since he
did not want the room to be seen before every detail was perfect.
Yet Whistler entertained visitors and amused the
press in the lavishly decorated room, never thinking to ask permission
of the owner of the house. His audacious behavior, coupled with a
dispute over payment for the project, provoked a bitter quarrel between
the painter and his patron. Leyland would not consent to pay the two
thousand guineas that Whistler wanted: "I do not think you should have
involved me in such a large expenditure without previously telling me of
it," he wrote to the artist. Eventually Leyland agreed to half that
amount, but he further insulted Whistler by writing his check in pounds,
the currency of trade, when payment to artists and professionals was
customarily made in guineas. A pound is worth twenty shillings and a
guinea twenty-one, so the already offensive sum was also smaller than
expected .
Perhaps in retaliation, Whistler took the liberty
of coating Leyland's valuable leather with Prussian-blue paint and
depicting a pair of peacocks aggressively confronting each other on the
wall opposite The Princess. He used two shades of gold for the
design and highlighted telling details in silver. Scattered at the feet
of the angry bird are the coins (silver shillings) that Leyland refused
to pay; the silver feathers on the peacock's throat allude to the
ruffled shirts that Leyland always wore. The poor and affronted peacock
has a silver crest feather that resembles the lock of white hair that
curled above Whistler's forehead. To make sure that Leyland understood
his point, Whistler called the mural of the fighting peacocks "Art and
Money; or, The Story of the Room." He obtained a blue rug to complete
the scheme and titled the room Harmony in Blue and Gold. After concluding his work in March 1877, the artist never saw the Peacock Room again.
Actually, as funny as I might find it, I have heard of Leyland. This is a very nice room, I can imagine dining inside. :) When I'm out of the cheap hotel Liverpool centre, I'll give it a visit!
ReplyDelete