The exhibition also presents new acquisitions, including the Design for an Ewer (1629) by Stefano della Bella and Design for a Quatrefoil (about 1475-90) by an artist in the circle of the Housebook Master, one of the greatest graphic artists of northern Europe in the later Middle Ages.
Although it is commonly assumed that artists made drawings principally to plan paintings and frescoes, many, if not most of them, made drawings for the decorative arts as well. For example, the German master Albrecht Dürer and his pupil Sebald Beham designed stained glass and jewelry. Italian painters such as Taddeo Zuccaro made studies for majolica. Others produced designs for expensive tapestries and elaborate glass table ornaments. This exhibition showcases artists' ingenuity and demonstrates the key role drawing played in the creation of objects. It also highlights the collaborative relationship between artists and craftsmen. Made for Manufacture: Drawings for Sculpture and the Decorative Arts includes designs to be executed in media such as metal, wood, glass, ceramics, and stone. Spanning the 1400s through the 1700s, the exhibition includes drawings from the Italian, German, French, Spanish, Netherlandish, and Flemish schools, all from the collection of the Getty Museum and a private collector.
Not all the designs in the exhibition found their way into production. For instance, although elaborate glass table ornaments were common at the Medici court in Florence, it is unlikely the ingenious ewer designed by Stefano della Bella ever graced a table. A note by the artist hints at the design's complexity: "The two tubes to fill the glass are marked A and B. They show that white wine should be poured into one tube and red wine into the other, so that the red will fill the eagles and snakes, and the other will fill the rest with white wine."Â In the drawing, delicate blue wash evokes the presence of liquid inside a transparent shell.
Several of the drawings, however, do closely correspond to objects that have survived, including a drawing of a 1775 wall light attributed to Jean-Louis Prieur that the Getty Museum has in its collection. The actual wall light is mounted next to the drawing for it, showing that its original design changed very little in its execution. Other surviving objects are pictured next to their designs.
Made for Manufacture: Drawings for Sculpture and the Decorative Arts runs through May 20, 2007, in the East Pavilion of the J. Paul Getty Museum at the Getty Center. The exhibition curator is Stephanie Schrader, assistant curator of drawings at the Getty Museum. -- www.getty.edu
Posted February 19th, 2007 by ruzik_tuzik