Conjunto para el salón de baile del príncipe Alexis Mdivani [Ensemble for Prince Alexis Mdivani's ballroom]

Conjunto para el salón de baile del príncipe Alexis Mdivani [Ensemble for Prince Alexis Mdivani's ballroom]  Serie

  • 1935
  • Set of 10 oil paintings on canvas. Varying dimensions
  • Cat. P_S_1
  • Acquired in 1955
  • Observations: Set of works from the ballroom of Prince Alexis Mdivani. Photo of the original layout of the ballroom in Prince Alexis Mdivani's palace, Venice, 1935.
By:
José María Viñuela

The Barcelona branch of the Banco de España is the current site of seven paintings by Josep Maria Sert, originally designed as a single set with consistent shared motifs. Until recently, few people have been aware of the provenance of these works. Lately, however, there has been renewed interest in the work of this renowned cosmopolitan Catalan painter from the first half of the twentieth century. This therefore seems like a fitting opportunity to examine these works in greater depth, given how little-known they are and in view of the fact that that are now hosted in a Banco de España office.

Josep Maria Sert was born into a well-to-do family of textile manufacturers, elevated to the nobility by King Alfonso XII. In 1899, following the death of his parents, Sert moved to Paris. There, he embarked on a successful career, moving easily among the clergy, the aristocracy and the great international financiers of the day. He was aided by his exceptional gift for great decorative composition and his ability to provide quick and convincing answers to clients who wanted imposing and eclectic artwork. He was also a well-connected artist, who cultivated the sophisticated social life of his time. In this he had valuable assistance from his first wife, Maria Godebska, whom he met soon after settling in Paris. Misia –as she was known in French artistic circles– was a friend of Renoir, Dégas, Bonnard and Vouillard, who made many portraits of her. She also moved among the upper echelons of Paris, allowing Sert to cultivate a select core of friends who furnished him with important commissions.

Sert had already received a solid artistic grounding, starting in Barcelona at the San Jorge School of Fine Arts, where he was schooled by some great masters, including Pere Borrell del Caso. (Borrell painted Escaping Criticism, now one of the most popular paintings in the Banco de España Collection, a trompe l'oeil depicting a small boy apparently climbing out the frame of a painting.) During his first year in Paris, Sert was influenced by the modernists. It was at this point that he opted for large-format decorative painting, the genre to which he was to devote the rest of his career. He was entrusted with painting the murals for the dining room of the Art Nouveau Pavilion at the Exposition Universelle of 1889. It was the first of a long series of commissions throughout Europe and America to paint interiors ranging from French, Spanish and Italian palaces to churches, English mansions and the interiors of New York skyscrapers. His work earned him distinctions and honours of all kinds, not to mention a sizable fortune.

In 1928 he met Roussadana Mdivani, a member of a Georgian family, whom he married after divorcing Misia. He abandoned his former bohemian life and gained access to another social sphere, just as worldly, if somewhat more superficial, than the previous one. At the heart of this new group were Roussadana and her three siblings, Georgian aristocrats who had lost everything on fleeing the Bolsheviks, but had married into large European and American fortunes. The Mdivanis were famed in the international press of the 1930s for their liaisons with Hollywood stars and oil magnates, their scandalous divorces and in some cases, their tragic deaths. The youngest, Prince Alexis, whose English schooling Sert had financed, bought a palazzo in Venice while honeymooning in the city with his bride Barbara Hutton. The house was of the former site of the Audiencia de San Gregorio, close to the church of Santa Maria della Salute on the Grand Canal. Alexis commissioned his brother-in-law, already a renowned painter, to decorate his Venetian mansion. Sert –who had frequently declared his love of Venice and had drawn much of his inspiration from its historical artwork– painted and installed the ensemble in person. In 1935, as Sert was installing the last part of the ensemble, Alexis Mdivani was killed in a car crash while in the company of Maud von Thyssen-Bornemisza. Some years later, the paintings were acquired by the Banco de España on the advice of architect Juan de Zavala, who had designed the bank's new branch on Plaza de Catalunya in Barcelona in the 1940s (the offices opened in 1954). It was also Zavala who donated one of the gems of the Banco de España collection, a Ceres by Juan van der Hamen, which now hangs in the dining room of the main gallery in the Madrid building.

Sert's decorative paintings were removed from their original location in the ballroom of the palazzo in Venice and shipped to Barcelona. There they were adapted —with differing degrees of skill— to their new home in several rooms of the bank's new building on Plaça de Catalunya. For this purpose, a description was made of the set while still in place as a single unit in the Mdivani palace. It would be unwise to try to analyse too deeply the symbolism of the artwork, a task which might only lend itself to fantastic conjectures and a great variety of interpretations. For example, some writers have speculated about possible allusions to the international pedigree of the Mdivani family, who hailed originally from Georgia. Happily, it is now planned to bring the paintings together in a single location, thus restoring the unitary nature of the ensemble.

The paintings were originally located in a rectangular room, measuring approximately 18 x 8 metres. One headwall contained a fireplace between two doors, thus creating a face for which Sert designed a composition with architectural features in the background, including minarets and domes on the far side of a fantastical pinnacled bridge. In the foreground of the painting, just above the fireplace, is a group of people of different races in a triangular composition. At the vertex, is a red-robed magician, over whom fly two groups of children.

The canvases were shipped to the Barcelona branch of the Banco de España at the end of the 1940s, where they were adapted, recomposed and separated to decorate the trading floor, staircase and meeting hall. Despite the journey from Venice and the alterations made, the ensemble is in a reasonable state of preservation. The pigments in Sert's original paintings and the subsequent additions have aged differently, making them easy to distinguish from one another. The adaptation work was undertaken to a design by the architect Zavala and carried out by the restorers Ángel Macarrón —who was responsible for supplementing the works— and Félix Alonso, a skilled perspectivist well known in Madrid architects' studios of the period.

The two larger compositions were installed on the trading floor, in keeping with contemporary tastes for decorating representative buildings. They were placed in recessed coffers within limestone frames. One of these paintings came from the headwall facing the fireplace in the Mdivani palace and in order to make up a complete rectangle, the two gaps left by the doors in the original wall had to be filled in. Although the artists who undertook the task tried to employ features that were consistent with Sert's style and simply extend the existing paintings, the alterations suffer from a certain lack of imagination. Moreover, the poor technical quality of the paint is now clearly visible in the different rate of aging.

The other large rectangular work, also positioned in the trading hall, came from the long headwall between two doors described above. In this case, the original was already a complete rectangle and fewer additions were required. However, it was cut along the lines of the two jambs closest to the doors in the ballroom in Venice, and two narrow strips therefore had to be added to the sides.

These two fragments of the decoration have been moved to areas that are visible from the public area of the trading floor, following a process of cleaning and partial restoration, respecting absolutely both the original painting and the additions from the 1950s. In order to cover the full width of the walls and thus restore the decorative mural nature of the work, frame-like perimeter strips have been added, consisting of painted surfaces following the plane of the canvas, although separated from it by an intermediary groove. This delicate work, which involved painting 30 square metres, was skilfully undertaken by the painter Isabel Quintanilla. After consultations with the architects Rafael Moneo, Luis Nadal and Óscar Tusquets, she devised the decorative features for the frames which she painted in her studio. Although the primary intention is to enhance Sert's original paintings, the project has close ties to Quintanilla's own artistic career. The results she has achieved combine current sensitivities with a respect for a work from the past.

Despite its eventful history, this set of panels by Josep María Sert is not widely known. Indeed, its provenance has largely been forgotten and it still comes as a surprise to many people, even some from Barcelona with an interest in the artist’s work. Sert's ensemble art is currently being re-assessed, now that both the passionate defence of his admirers and clients and the equally passionate attacks by devotees of the most dogmatic avant-garde have quietened down. This therefore seems like a good time to consider, with the benefit of hindsight, the work of this painter, one of whose greatest achievements was to negotiate at the League of Nations in Geneva for the return, in good condition, of the art works that had been evacuated from the Prado and other state heritage sites during the bombing of Madrid between 1936 and 1939.

José María Viñuela

 
By:
Pilar Sáez Lacave
Josep María Sert i Badía
Barcelona 1874 - Barcelona 1945

It is not easy to sum up the figure of Josep Maria Sert or indeed his artwork. Sert was a vibrant, larger-than-life, man of the world and one of those exceptional artists that neither history nor his critics have ever succeeded in pinning down. He was one of the most internationally renowned Catalan artists of his time, with enormous creative talent and extraordinary social skills. He was also a great master of decorative painting, precisely at a time when interest in the discipline was beginning to wane. His forceful personality, the aplomb with which he steered his career, his grandiloquent style, far removed from the avant-garde trends of his day, his many non-artistic projects (including his involvement in the evacuation of artworks from the Prado during the Spanish Civil War), coupled with his friendships with magnates and politicians... all of these facets, together with the intensity with which he lived a life of many contradictions, still arouse very divergent and often passionate feelings to this day. His two wives, Misia Godebska (1872-1950) and Roussy Mdivani (1906-1938), were every bit as exceptional as Sert himself. And he was on close terms with some of the great figures of the period, including Pablo Picasso, Mlle Chanel and Igor Stravinsky. He rubbed shoulders with some of the wealthiest individuals of the time, whose homes he decorated to their aesthetic taste. He is, in short, one of the most fascinating characters of the first half of the twentieth century and, without a doubt, the greatest decorative painter of the period.

Sert's career began late. We have no record of any works from his youth in his native Barcelona, although we do know that he trained as an artist, probably intending to join his family's thriving fabric business. This grounding may have given him the confidence with which he unselfconsciously married art and business. Like many artists of his generation, he studied under Pere Borrell and Alexandre de Riquer. He regularly frequented such diverse artistic gatherings as the Saint Lluc circle and the Els Quatre Gats bar. In 1899, following the death of his parents, he moved to Paris to make a living as an artist. With his background and his contacts amongst Barcelona's haute bourgeoise, he soon became part of the musical symbolism scene in Paris, meeting such iconic figures as Paul-Albert Besnard, Auguste Rodin and Edgar Degas and other emerging young artists such as Maurice Denis and Claude Debussy. It is hardly surprising, then, that when he came to choose his artistic niche, Sert should opt for decorative and monumental art, for which he had an unquestionable talent. And the critics augured a great future for him.

His big opportunity came in 1900, when the Bishop of Vich, Josep Torras i Bages, commissioned him to decorate the city's cathedral. This project, for which Sert ultimately made three different designs, became the centrepiece of his career, due to the unusual characteristics involved and the many vicissitudes suffered by the piece. While his reputation among the cosmopolitan elite of Paris and the eastern seaboard of the United States was built on private commissions, the worldwide fame he achieved with his decorations for Vich cathedral opened the door to international public commissions. It also obliged him to make a number of key decisions in his fledgling career. He decided to organise his business on a workshop basis, working with assistants and production in stages – an entirely normal approach, given the size of the assignment.

Sert exhibited his paintings for the first time at the 1907 Salon d'Automne. A few months later, he met his future wife Misia, already a legendary figure on the Parisian artistic scene. These two circumstances catapulted him out of his former anonymity, turning him into a rising star in the most aristocratic of Parisian circles, and earning him a host of new commissions. From the beginning of his career, Sert's decorative painting displayed a surprising and singular creative freedom in a genre that was inevitably tied to commissions and subject to architectural restrictions. He knew how to play with perception. He appropriated and transformed the space he decorated. And he was capable of misleading viewers with apparently real scenes of such profusion and artifice that the eye cannot fully take them in. Following the Great War, he began to water down the Italian influences and the mythological themes that had been such a feature of his earlier work. He developed instead a more plethoric style, with bright colours and intense golds, full of exotic 'oriental' features such as elephants and palm trees. Sert had an innate ability to observe, select and catalogue motifs, gestures and forms of different kinds, which he blended wildly in his compositions. The self-reference and repetition of this whole catalogue of works has much to do with the crucial role played by photography in his obsessive search for motifs. Sert travelled extensively, camera in hand, photographing scenes of all kinds. He used these to feed his inspiration and create an endless repertoire, constantly recycled from one work to another over the years. It was, however, in the workshop that photography played a key role in his creative process. He would build highly theatrical arrangements, first with models and later with figurines from nativity scenes and dolls, recreating the scenes he saw in his imagination and then drawing them. He used photography to work on every gesture and every shape. He studied the light and shade, the perspective and the framing of his compositions, which he often set up on platforms and daises.

The 1920s were a decade of change and success for Sert. His fame spread to the United States, where he exhibited for the first time in 1924 at the Wildenstein Gallery. The next year, he met the young Roussy Mdivani. It marked a turning-point in his life. After several years during which the trio were rumoured to be conducting a ménage à trois, the painter finally separated from Misia. The apparently Bohemian existence he had shared with his first wife morphed into a life of refined elegance and glamour. The couple travelled frequently to the eastern states of the US, where Roussy's brothers, known popularly as the 'Marrying Mdivani,' held sway. Roussy liked the sea. The couple took long Mediterranean cruises on their boat and bought a house, the Mas Juny, on the coast of Catalonia. In the 1930s, it became a summer meeting point for their large and varied circle of friends, a place where projects were hatched and deals struck. Surprisingly, despite these summer visits, the Mediterranean practically disappeared from Sert's repertoire of themes in the 1930s, even though it had inspired many of his earlier works, together with the Orient and other parts of Spain. For Sert there was a clear relationship between temperament and form, and he saw links between the Baroque and the Mediterranean. It was that baroque nature of the Mediterranean that attracted and inspired him. Perhaps this was why he decided to return to it once more in 1934, when asked to decorate his brother-in-law Alexis’s palazzo in Venice, for which he painted his Mediterranean Fantasy. This work explores the sentiment even further, superimposing the theme of the 'Mediterranean' on that of the 'Orient', in a possible reference to the city of Venice or his client's eastern origins. Be that as it may, by blending the two themes, Sert once again showed his skill in understanding his clients' expectations. He brilliantly employed a series of common clichés from the collective imagination to create a fantasy atmosphere ideally suited to the ballroom setting.

Around the same time, the project for the cathedral at Vich, which had been abandoned due to disagreements over financing since Bishop Torras' death in 1916, received the necessary backing from Francesc Cambó to go ahead. The ensemble —the second in the series— was installed almost in its entirety in 1929. The triumph of the piece, which was widely lauded in the press, attracted further public commissions. Over the following years, Sert made paintings for two of the most iconic buildings of the political, economic and artistic order of the 1930s. The first was the Palais des Nations in Geneva (1935), headquarters of the League of Nations (the body created to ensure world peace). The second was the lobby of the RCA building, the best known art deco construction in Manhattan's Rockefeller Center complex, built between 1933 and 1940, at the height of the Great Depression, by John D. Rockefeller. The two projects gave Sert an opportunity to publicly manifest his belief in the place of decorative painting in modernism and the crystallisation of a language of vast, imposing quasi-sculptural forms, in keeping with the scale of the spaces he was decorating.

However, the triumphalist, celebratory tone of the two pieces was soon dimmed by the outbreak, in quick succession, of the Spanish Civil War and World War Two. On 21 July 1936, a group of Republican milicianos set fire to the cathedral in Vich, destroying Sert’s paintings. The choice of target was no accident. The city and its cathedral —whose decoration had been financed by the leader of a conservative middle-class Catalanist party— was seen by the revolutionary forces as symbolising the power and influence of the Catalan bourgeoisie. A similar attack in Madrid damaged the paintings Sert had made for the Duke of Alba in 1931. Sert was pained by these losses, but it was not until well into the war that he openly came out in support for Franco's national side. Roussy had been in ill-health since the death of her brother Alexis in 1935. She died in 1938, adding yet another misfortune to Sert's final years.

With the outbreak of World War II and the occupation of Paris, Sert saw a sharp decline in his work. He devoted his last years to projects in Spain. In particular, under the watchful eye of the Franco regime, he created a new decoration for Vich cathedral, which was partially re-opened in October 1945. Sert died just a few weeks later in a clinic in Barcelona. His funeral in the cathedral was packed. The people of Vich paid tribute to him by closing shops and hanging black ribbons from their balconies.

Pilar Sáez Lacave

 
 
Alfonso E. Pérez Sánchez & Julián Gállego Banco de España. Colección de pintura, Madrid, Banco de España, 1985. María del Mar Arnús & Francisco de Sert José María Sert (1874-1945), Madrid, Ministerio de Cultura, 1987. Alfonso E. Pérez Sánchez, Julián Gállego & María José Alonso Colección de pintura del Banco de España, Madrid, Banco de España, 1988. Vv.Aa. Colección Banco de España. Catálogo razonado, Madrid, Banco de España, 2019, vol. 1.