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The facade of the Victoria and Albert Museum | 0:00:04 | 0:00:07 | |
is a pantheon of the greatest names in British art. | 0:00:07 | 0:00:10 | |
The likes of JMW Turner... | 0:00:14 | 0:00:16 | |
John Constable... | 0:00:16 | 0:00:18 | |
William Morris. | 0:00:18 | 0:00:20 | |
But one figure is far less well known than these giants | 0:00:22 | 0:00:26 | |
not a painter or designer, but a woodcarver. | 0:00:26 | 0:00:30 | |
His name? Grinling Gibbons. | 0:00:31 | 0:00:34 | |
From the decadence of 17th century Restoration London, | 0:00:40 | 0:00:43 | |
came a carver who was called our own Michelangelo... | 0:00:43 | 0:00:46 | |
..who transformed wood into pure art. | 0:00:49 | 0:00:53 | |
It's completely jawdropping. | 0:00:56 | 0:00:58 | |
Many people are completely blown away with the sheer technical skill. | 0:00:58 | 0:01:02 | |
How on earth could someone actually produce something like this? | 0:01:02 | 0:01:05 | |
When the capital was at its lowest ebb, | 0:01:07 | 0:01:10 | |
he made heavenly decoration. | 0:01:10 | 0:01:12 | |
His carvings adorned the greatest buildings in Britain, | 0:01:14 | 0:01:18 | |
his clients, the most powerful men of their age. | 0:01:18 | 0:01:22 | |
It became the blue-chip style of the day, | 0:01:23 | 0:01:27 | |
and came to dominate interiors | 0:01:27 | 0:01:29 | |
during one of the great periods of British building. | 0:01:29 | 0:01:32 | |
It's a clever bloke showing off to toffs, | 0:01:32 | 0:01:34 | |
but it overwhelms me with how beautiful it is. | 0:01:34 | 0:01:38 | |
He introduced new ways of working with wood, | 0:01:40 | 0:01:44 | |
his innovation's kept alive today by a select band of carvers. | 0:01:44 | 0:01:48 | |
I connected with Grinling Gibbons, | 0:01:48 | 0:01:50 | |
I connected with the 17th century. It was an epiphany, literally. | 0:01:50 | 0:01:55 | |
Gibbons' own career ended in failure. | 0:01:55 | 0:01:58 | |
His legacy is highly precarious, | 0:01:58 | 0:02:01 | |
surviving floods, fire | 0:02:01 | 0:02:04 | |
and the whims of fashion. | 0:02:04 | 0:02:07 | |
And yet Gibbons' work endures - | 0:02:08 | 0:02:11 | |
a unique window into this turbulent age, | 0:02:11 | 0:02:14 | |
created by the greatest woodcarver in British history. | 0:02:14 | 0:02:18 | |
The career of Grinling Gibbons | 0:02:43 | 0:02:45 | |
was born out of a national calamity. | 0:02:45 | 0:02:48 | |
On 2nd September 1666, as every schoolchild knows, | 0:02:54 | 0:03:00 | |
a fire began in a bakery here on Pudding Lane in the City of London. | 0:03:00 | 0:03:04 | |
It quickly spread out of control. | 0:03:09 | 0:03:11 | |
Within a few hours, London was engulfed in flames. | 0:03:11 | 0:03:15 | |
Over three days, the medieval city was almost totally destroyed | 0:03:20 | 0:03:26 | |
and a world of handcrafted wooden architecture was lost. | 0:03:26 | 0:03:31 | |
In the Victoria & Albert Museum, this ornate oak house facade, | 0:03:40 | 0:03:46 | |
belonging to a London merchant, | 0:03:46 | 0:03:48 | |
is a unique survivor of this inferno... | 0:03:48 | 0:03:51 | |
..a taste of what old, wooden London would've looked like. | 0:03:53 | 0:03:56 | |
The Fire of London was completely devastating. | 0:04:04 | 0:04:10 | |
It destroyed a third of the buildings, | 0:04:10 | 0:04:13 | |
about 80 churches, all the guild halls, | 0:04:13 | 0:04:17 | |
the great warehouses, stuffed with stuff down by the Thames. | 0:04:17 | 0:04:21 | |
And so, after the fire, | 0:04:21 | 0:04:23 | |
it was seen as a great opportunity for rebuilding. | 0:04:23 | 0:04:26 | |
The mammoth reconstruction of the capital | 0:04:29 | 0:04:33 | |
was an overwhelming task for London's craftsmen. | 0:04:33 | 0:04:36 | |
And for a young apprentice across the North Sea, | 0:04:38 | 0:04:41 | |
the fire was not to be a tragedy, but a glorious opportunity. | 0:04:41 | 0:04:46 | |
As the embers were still warm on the destroyed City of London, | 0:05:00 | 0:05:05 | |
a teenage Grinling Gibbons was busy learning his craft in Amsterdam. | 0:05:05 | 0:05:10 | |
Gibbons had English parents, | 0:05:12 | 0:05:14 | |
but he was brought up in the Netherlands. | 0:05:14 | 0:05:17 | |
His father, a draper, had travelled here to make his fortune. | 0:05:17 | 0:05:21 | |
This was a smart move. | 0:05:23 | 0:05:26 | |
In the 17th century, the Dutch people were enjoying a "Golden Age", | 0:05:26 | 0:05:30 | |
in terms of commerce and also art. | 0:05:30 | 0:05:34 | |
Gibbons was schooled by the most famous sculptors of the day, | 0:05:36 | 0:05:40 | |
the Quellin family, headed by Artus Quellin. | 0:05:40 | 0:05:43 | |
They created the classical statues that decorated Amsterdam Town Hall, | 0:05:51 | 0:05:57 | |
declaring the power and confidence of Holland's new merchant class. | 0:05:57 | 0:06:02 | |
Amsterdam Town Hall was a very impressive secular building, | 0:06:07 | 0:06:12 | |
which was for the citizens of Amsterdam. | 0:06:12 | 0:06:15 | |
So a middle-class, but a very grand, middle-class building. | 0:06:15 | 0:06:19 | |
The exterior was impressive, | 0:06:22 | 0:06:24 | |
but it was the carvings that Quellins created inside the building | 0:06:24 | 0:06:28 | |
that were to shape Gibbons' creative imagination. | 0:06:28 | 0:06:31 | |
It was very luxuriously decorated | 0:06:35 | 0:06:38 | |
with all sorts of figurative and non-figurative carvings in marble. | 0:06:38 | 0:06:44 | |
And the Quellins were the major artists in the city at that time. | 0:06:44 | 0:06:49 | |
That was a very important part of Gibbons' training | 0:06:55 | 0:07:00 | |
and there is no question he couldn't have become what he became, | 0:07:00 | 0:07:04 | |
without that background in the Netherlands, in Amsterdam. | 0:07:04 | 0:07:08 | |
Down-to-earth Dutch merchants liked their art to appear | 0:07:10 | 0:07:14 | |
as realistic as the goods they traded in, | 0:07:14 | 0:07:18 | |
and their tastes were catered to by carvers far more skilled | 0:07:18 | 0:07:21 | |
than any to be found in Britain. | 0:07:21 | 0:07:23 | |
Here you can see, in marble, objects that Gibbons was to spend | 0:07:26 | 0:07:31 | |
the rest of his career transforming into wood - | 0:07:31 | 0:07:33 | |
musical instruments... | 0:07:36 | 0:07:38 | |
sea shells and creatures from the sea... | 0:07:38 | 0:07:42 | |
cherubs, so lifelike, they look as if they might breathe. | 0:07:42 | 0:07:46 | |
But Gibbons was schooled in far more than just carving, | 0:07:48 | 0:07:52 | |
because the Dutch were also obsessed with botany. | 0:07:52 | 0:07:56 | |
This was a "Golden Age" of Dutch still-life painters | 0:07:58 | 0:08:01 | |
and their naturalistic rendering of flowers | 0:08:01 | 0:08:05 | |
and Gibbons' wood carvings were always imbued with this passion | 0:08:05 | 0:08:08 | |
for flowers, in their many varieties. | 0:08:08 | 0:08:13 | |
But, most importantly or the young Gibbons, | 0:08:18 | 0:08:22 | |
there was a great woodwork tradition in Northern Europe | 0:08:22 | 0:08:25 | |
that hadn't yet reached Britain. | 0:08:25 | 0:08:27 | |
While we painted our wooden sculptures - | 0:08:35 | 0:08:37 | |
raw wood was seen as vulgar - | 0:08:37 | 0:08:39 | |
in Northern Europe, artists revelled | 0:08:39 | 0:08:42 | |
in the natural textures of the medium. | 0:08:42 | 0:08:45 | |
And like them, Gibbons was to never paint his work. | 0:08:45 | 0:08:49 | |
So, an optimistic teenage Gibbons, armed with all this training, | 0:09:00 | 0:09:05 | |
arrived in London, hoping to make his fortune | 0:09:05 | 0:09:08 | |
as the capital rebuilt itself after the Great Fire. | 0:09:08 | 0:09:13 | |
To a young Dutchman and Gibbons is only 19 - | 0:09:16 | 0:09:19 | |
it must've seemed that there was a real opportunity for joinery, | 0:09:19 | 0:09:23 | |
but also for this decorative woodwork that he's been studying, | 0:09:23 | 0:09:26 | |
he's been an apprentice this would be just the place. | 0:09:26 | 0:09:29 | |
Everybody wants overmantels, they want fireplaces, | 0:09:29 | 0:09:33 | |
they want doors and door lintels, | 0:09:33 | 0:09:35 | |
so he must've thought it was THE place to be. | 0:09:35 | 0:09:39 | |
But if he expected to be an overnight success, | 0:09:41 | 0:09:44 | |
the young Gibbons was in for a shock. | 0:09:44 | 0:09:47 | |
He spent his early years in England | 0:09:48 | 0:09:50 | |
living in penury in the port town of Deptford, | 0:09:50 | 0:09:54 | |
carving decoration not for fine houses, but boats! | 0:09:54 | 0:09:57 | |
Fortunately for the young carver, in 1671, | 0:09:59 | 0:10:03 | |
he was discovered at work here, in what was described as a | 0:10:03 | 0:10:07 | |
"poore, solitary thatched house", | 0:10:07 | 0:10:10 | |
by one of the most influential men of Restoration London. | 0:10:10 | 0:10:14 | |
The story of Gibbons' discovery is legendary. | 0:10:14 | 0:10:19 | |
It's told by that great diarist, John Evelyn. | 0:10:19 | 0:10:21 | |
And Evelyn tells this wonderful story | 0:10:23 | 0:10:25 | |
of how he's walking, one afternoon, through Deptford, | 0:10:25 | 0:10:28 | |
and he sees, through a window of a cottage, this young man | 0:10:28 | 0:10:34 | |
working at this piece of wood, carving it away. | 0:10:34 | 0:10:38 | |
And he recognises it's a completely extraordinary piece of art. | 0:10:38 | 0:10:43 | |
The piece that astounded Evelyn was this crucifixion, | 0:10:50 | 0:10:54 | |
now in a country house in Cheshire. | 0:10:54 | 0:10:56 | |
It's based on a scene by the Italian artist Tintoretto, | 0:11:11 | 0:11:15 | |
and the piece has the drama of a great Renaissance painting, | 0:11:15 | 0:11:21 | |
with its figures of Mary, swooning in agony... | 0:11:21 | 0:11:24 | |
..the torture of crucifixion | 0:11:26 | 0:11:29 | |
and its array of callous onlookers. | 0:11:29 | 0:11:32 | |
But with this design, the young Gibbons was playing with fire. | 0:11:37 | 0:11:41 | |
In Protestant England, | 0:11:41 | 0:11:43 | |
this would've been an extremely shocking artwork. | 0:11:43 | 0:11:47 | |
This was only a few years after the English Civil War, | 0:11:48 | 0:11:52 | |
when Puritans consigned this kind of art | 0:11:52 | 0:11:55 | |
to the bonfire as "idolatrous". | 0:11:55 | 0:11:57 | |
But the art-loving Evelyn was clever enough to realise | 0:11:59 | 0:12:03 | |
this was a new kind of sculpture, not seen in Britain before. | 0:12:03 | 0:12:08 | |
I think to understand why Gibbons was so revolutionary, | 0:12:18 | 0:12:22 | |
you need to understand what woodwork was like before Gibbons. | 0:12:22 | 0:12:25 | |
The carvings are relatively flat, they're oak. | 0:12:25 | 0:12:29 | |
So they blend in with the background. | 0:12:29 | 0:12:31 | |
And you're working with very hard material, so you can't cut it | 0:12:31 | 0:12:35 | |
back so much, you've got a very flat decoration, however hard you try. | 0:12:35 | 0:12:39 | |
But this is the period of the Baroque, | 0:12:39 | 0:12:42 | |
and people want lots of decoration. | 0:12:42 | 0:12:44 | |
The British loved oak it was seen as being robust, proud, | 0:12:48 | 0:12:55 | |
a part of our national character. | 0:12:55 | 0:12:58 | |
But to the Dutch-born Gibbons, oak was old-fashioned - | 0:12:59 | 0:13:04 | |
he chose a different medium - the much lighter limewood. | 0:13:04 | 0:13:08 | |
The American woodcarver | 0:13:20 | 0:13:22 | |
and the world's greatest authority on Gibbons, David Esterly, | 0:13:22 | 0:13:26 | |
only works in limewood, | 0:13:26 | 0:13:28 | |
bringing a modern twist to Gibbons' style of carving. | 0:13:28 | 0:13:31 | |
And so he has a unique insight | 0:13:38 | 0:13:41 | |
into the properties of this special material. | 0:13:41 | 0:13:44 | |
There's no wood like limewood. It's remarkably crisp and firm | 0:13:51 | 0:13:57 | |
soft enough to be easily cut, | 0:13:57 | 0:14:01 | |
but strong enough to be radically undercut. | 0:14:01 | 0:14:04 | |
It has a terrific zip to it. | 0:14:04 | 0:14:06 | |
Which comes from its close, crisp grain. | 0:14:08 | 0:14:11 | |
In fact, you can see | 0:14:11 | 0:14:13 | |
if you look at the chip I'm producing, it's really a curl. | 0:14:13 | 0:14:18 | |
You see, I managed to get a whole huge curl of wood with one stroke. | 0:14:22 | 0:14:26 | |
By contrast, oak, which was in use by the British carvers | 0:14:27 | 0:14:31 | |
before Gibbons's arrival, | 0:14:31 | 0:14:33 | |
I don't know if you can hear, it's a crunchier sound. | 0:14:33 | 0:14:37 | |
It simply doesn't have the wonderful... | 0:14:37 | 0:14:41 | |
..zip and closeness of the grain. | 0:14:43 | 0:14:46 | |
Limewood allowed Gibbons to transform wood | 0:14:56 | 0:14:59 | |
into three-dimensional forms. | 0:14:59 | 0:15:02 | |
He could create scenes like this depiction of the martyrdom | 0:15:04 | 0:15:07 | |
of St Stephen. | 0:15:07 | 0:15:09 | |
Gibbons captures the drama of the precise moment | 0:15:17 | 0:15:21 | |
when Stephen is about to be stoned. | 0:15:21 | 0:15:24 | |
Evelyn described Gibbons' talent as "incomparable" and he secured | 0:15:28 | 0:15:33 | |
a meeting for this obscure carver with the Stuart monarch, Charles II. | 0:15:33 | 0:15:39 | |
It should've been the perfect opportunity to finally launch | 0:15:39 | 0:15:43 | |
his carving career. | 0:15:43 | 0:15:47 | |
But sadly, for Gibbons, Charles rejected his work | 0:15:47 | 0:15:50 | |
on their first meeting. | 0:15:50 | 0:15:52 | |
It had an aura of Catholicism about it, | 0:15:55 | 0:15:58 | |
and this was positively radioactive in Britain in the 1670s. | 0:15:58 | 0:16:03 | |
Charles had the sensitivity to understand | 0:16:04 | 0:16:07 | |
that any show of the outward trappings of the religion | 0:16:07 | 0:16:11 | |
would be utterly politically unacceptable. | 0:16:11 | 0:16:14 | |
With his gloomy, serious Biblical subjects, Gibbons badly misjudged | 0:16:19 | 0:16:25 | |
the fun-loving mood of Restoration England. | 0:16:25 | 0:16:29 | |
Charles became famous for being a "merry monarch". | 0:16:29 | 0:16:33 | |
His reign was about flamboyance and theatricality. | 0:16:33 | 0:16:38 | |
Cromwell had closed the playhouses but one of Charles' first actions | 0:16:38 | 0:16:44 | |
was to reopen them, as all of London became a kind of grand theatre. | 0:16:44 | 0:16:49 | |
The ambitious Gibbons abandoned his religious work. | 0:16:53 | 0:16:57 | |
Realising the prevailing tastes in England, he found a job | 0:16:57 | 0:17:01 | |
working as a carver on the interior of the grand Duke's Theatre. | 0:17:01 | 0:17:07 | |
And now, at last, Gibbons' luck was about to turn. | 0:17:07 | 0:17:12 | |
In the 1670s, Charles II rebuilt the medieval Windsor Castle | 0:17:15 | 0:17:20 | |
as a pleasure palace, in the new continental baroque style. | 0:17:20 | 0:17:24 | |
And because of his work at the Duke's Theatre, | 0:17:26 | 0:17:29 | |
Gibbons was commissioned to work on it. | 0:17:29 | 0:17:31 | |
This is the King's Dining Room, | 0:17:46 | 0:17:48 | |
decorated with images of feasting - a visual celebration designed | 0:17:48 | 0:17:54 | |
to glorify the Restoration of monarchy. | 0:17:54 | 0:17:56 | |
But the room's tour de force were the carvings by Grinling Gibbons. | 0:18:00 | 0:18:05 | |
Drawing on his Dutch training, he created flowers, fruit, | 0:18:14 | 0:18:20 | |
and sea creatures good enough to eat. | 0:18:20 | 0:18:23 | |
Nobody in Britain had seen anything like it. | 0:18:27 | 0:18:30 | |
Suddenly, as if out of nowhere, a spectacular form of carved ornament | 0:18:34 | 0:18:41 | |
burst on the scene. | 0:18:41 | 0:18:43 | |
Wood that was carved with extraordinary realism and fluency. | 0:18:43 | 0:18:49 | |
It became the blue-chip style of the day and came to dominate | 0:18:51 | 0:18:56 | |
interiors during one of the great periods of British building. | 0:18:56 | 0:19:00 | |
Visitors were bewildered at how Gibbons could transform solid wood | 0:19:03 | 0:19:08 | |
into these forms. | 0:19:08 | 0:19:09 | |
It was because he'd introduced a new technique for carving. | 0:19:12 | 0:19:15 | |
Gibbons never worked just from a single piece of wood. | 0:19:17 | 0:19:21 | |
His decorative pieces were constructed from many blocks | 0:19:21 | 0:19:27 | |
or layers that he'd stick together at the end of the process. | 0:19:27 | 0:19:31 | |
Steve Bisco, like Gibbons, also uses this layering technique | 0:19:40 | 0:19:45 | |
to create his limewood sculptures. | 0:19:45 | 0:19:47 | |
The first stage in carving is to trace the pattern onto | 0:19:52 | 0:19:57 | |
the block of wood and cut it out. | 0:19:57 | 0:20:00 | |
So we have to start separating the various flowers. | 0:20:04 | 0:20:11 | |
It's really just a case of working things down to the level you want. | 0:20:14 | 0:20:20 | |
We eventually get to the point where | 0:20:32 | 0:20:35 | |
we've separated the individual elements. | 0:20:35 | 0:20:38 | |
So we now need to start putting the details on the crocuses, | 0:20:38 | 0:20:43 | |
and this is where it starts to get more skilled | 0:20:43 | 0:20:47 | |
and you have to take your time | 0:20:47 | 0:20:50 | |
and be patient with this because you can easily remove wood | 0:20:50 | 0:20:56 | |
that you wanted to keep. | 0:20:56 | 0:20:59 | |
Unlike a lot of carvers, who kept the things fairly stylised, | 0:20:59 | 0:21:04 | |
with Gibbons you've got to carve it as close to nature | 0:21:04 | 0:21:08 | |
as you possibly can. | 0:21:08 | 0:21:11 | |
Which is where you the benefit of Gibbon's method of | 0:21:11 | 0:21:15 | |
separating his carvings into layers. | 0:21:15 | 0:21:17 | |
Because although we can shape a lot of this from the front, | 0:21:17 | 0:21:22 | |
what we really need to do is turn it over and get at it from the back. | 0:21:22 | 0:21:28 | |
So with it turned it over, we can pare down to create | 0:21:28 | 0:21:36 | |
nice sharp edges, and I have to be careful not to press too hard, | 0:21:36 | 0:21:41 | |
because the carving is getting increasingly more fragile now, | 0:21:41 | 0:21:46 | |
and you have to be patient and not rush it | 0:21:46 | 0:21:50 | |
otherwise you hear a sickening crack. | 0:21:50 | 0:21:53 | |
And this is a finished section of a Gibbons-style carving, | 0:22:03 | 0:22:09 | |
which would then be attached to the rest of the carving | 0:22:09 | 0:22:13 | |
to create a whole floral spray. | 0:22:13 | 0:22:15 | |
Because of his work at Windsor, | 0:22:26 | 0:22:28 | |
Gibbons was now very much in Charles II's favour. | 0:22:28 | 0:22:33 | |
Gibbons created this spectacular bronze statue of the monarch, | 0:22:33 | 0:22:38 | |
now in the Royal Hospital in Chelsea. | 0:22:38 | 0:22:40 | |
It showed the king as a pagan Roman emperor, a work that displays | 0:22:40 | 0:22:46 | |
the power but also the gilded glamour of the monarchy. | 0:22:46 | 0:22:50 | |
MUSIC: "Gloria" by Handel | 0:22:50 | 0:22:54 | |
# Gloria, Gloria. # | 0:22:54 | 0:22:56 | |
And Charles' patronage meant that Gibbons' woodwork | 0:22:56 | 0:23:00 | |
was now to reach an international stage. | 0:23:00 | 0:23:02 | |
The king commissioned the carver to create | 0:23:06 | 0:23:09 | |
a panel for his political ally Cosimo III of Florence. | 0:23:09 | 0:23:15 | |
It was supposed to be a simple diplomatic gift. | 0:23:15 | 0:23:18 | |
But Gibbons went well beyond his brief to create his most complex | 0:23:18 | 0:23:23 | |
and beautiful piece to date. | 0:23:23 | 0:23:26 | |
This is the Cosimo Panel. | 0:23:30 | 0:23:33 | |
It shows art triumphing over hatred and turmoil. | 0:23:35 | 0:23:40 | |
Here you can see arrows safely put out of harm's way in their quiver, | 0:23:40 | 0:23:45 | |
and a medallion of Pietro da Cortona, Cosimo's favourite painter. | 0:23:45 | 0:23:50 | |
Gibbons even signed the piece, | 0:23:53 | 0:23:56 | |
showing that he too should be judged as a great artist. | 0:23:56 | 0:23:59 | |
But not everything is as it seems about the Cosimo Panel. | 0:24:12 | 0:24:17 | |
It was recently dismantled to undergo restoration in this | 0:24:19 | 0:24:23 | |
Florentine conservation studio. | 0:24:23 | 0:24:26 | |
This celebration of peace has been in the wars | 0:24:30 | 0:24:33 | |
since its creation. | 0:24:33 | 0:24:35 | |
In the 1960s Florence was almost destroyed | 0:24:44 | 0:24:47 | |
as the River Arno broke its banks. | 0:24:47 | 0:24:50 | |
The panel was covered in putrid water and mud | 0:24:50 | 0:24:53 | |
as floods poured into the museum that housed it. | 0:24:53 | 0:24:57 | |
And having survived water, the next peril was fire. | 0:25:00 | 0:25:04 | |
The work was nearly blown up during a gas explosion in the 1980s. | 0:25:07 | 0:25:12 | |
Shane Raven is a carver whose work is imbued | 0:26:50 | 0:26:54 | |
with the spirit of Gibbons' Cosimo Panel. | 0:26:54 | 0:26:57 | |
Shane's Augustus Panel, | 0:26:59 | 0:27:02 | |
in the Carpenter's Company building in London, | 0:27:02 | 0:27:05 | |
has many visual nods towards Gibbons' masterpiece. | 0:27:05 | 0:27:09 | |
Shane creates grand fantasies in limewood - like this horn of plenty. | 0:27:40 | 0:27:45 | |
His life and work changed for ever when he saw the Cosimo Panel | 0:27:48 | 0:27:53 | |
when it came to the V&A in the late '90s. | 0:27:53 | 0:27:56 | |
I found it quite emotional - it was like childbirth, | 0:28:01 | 0:28:05 | |
when my daughter was born. | 0:28:05 | 0:28:07 | |
I just went in. Being a grown man, I just wanted to cry. | 0:28:07 | 0:28:11 | |
I just looked at this thing and thought | 0:28:11 | 0:28:13 | |
"My God, this is phenomenal". | 0:28:13 | 0:28:15 | |
And the piece that struck me the most was the cravat that was carved | 0:28:15 | 0:28:18 | |
which was hanging underneath one of the crowns. | 0:28:18 | 0:28:20 | |
And it was unbelievably beautiful. It was so tactile. It almost moved. | 0:28:20 | 0:28:26 | |
And also, one of the nicest things for me was actually looking | 0:28:26 | 0:28:30 | |
to the side of the Cosimo Panel. I actually saw chisel marks. | 0:28:30 | 0:28:34 | |
They were almost my chisel marks. I remember doing things like that. | 0:28:34 | 0:28:37 | |
I thought "Yes, that's how he's done it". It was so personal. | 0:28:37 | 0:28:40 | |
And then I connected with Grinling Gibbons, | 0:28:40 | 0:28:43 | |
I connected with the 17th century. | 0:28:43 | 0:28:45 | |
That was the moment for me that I just thought was phenomenal. | 0:28:45 | 0:28:48 | |
It was an epiphany, literally. | 0:28:48 | 0:28:50 | |
I carve because it's a passion, I love to create things from wood. | 0:28:52 | 0:28:57 | |
I love to make furniture, but with this, it's almost living, | 0:28:57 | 0:29:01 | |
it's almost organic, it's very, very tactile | 0:29:01 | 0:29:04 | |
although hopefully, people won't go touching it. | 0:29:04 | 0:29:06 | |
But you WANT to touch it. | 0:29:06 | 0:29:08 | |
People want to go up and run their hands over it, and "Does this move? | 0:29:08 | 0:29:11 | |
"Does this move?" It's a great feeling. It's almost... | 0:29:11 | 0:29:14 | |
Especially things like the music sheet - it's going to be carved | 0:29:14 | 0:29:17 | |
so thin, that you're hoping somebody will blow it, and flick it up. | 0:29:17 | 0:29:21 | |
The Cosimo Panel is a joyous celebration | 0:29:25 | 0:29:29 | |
but it's also a kind of elegy, marking the end of the golden age | 0:29:29 | 0:29:33 | |
of Charles II. | 0:29:33 | 0:29:36 | |
It was to be the final piece Gibbons completed for the "merry monarch", | 0:29:37 | 0:29:42 | |
who died in 1685, to be succeeded by his brother. | 0:29:42 | 0:29:46 | |
James II was the polar opposite of the clever, political Charles. | 0:29:49 | 0:29:54 | |
Dictatorial, arrogant, James was openly Roman Catholic | 0:29:54 | 0:29:59 | |
at a time when the religion was feared by his subjects. | 0:29:59 | 0:30:03 | |
But like his brother, | 0:30:09 | 0:30:11 | |
the new monarch did recognise Gibbons' talents. | 0:30:11 | 0:30:14 | |
Impressed by the Cosimo Panel, | 0:30:14 | 0:30:17 | |
James commissioned the carver to create a gift for another | 0:30:17 | 0:30:20 | |
Italian aristocrat, the Duke of Modena. | 0:30:20 | 0:30:23 | |
But the Modena Panel, | 0:30:26 | 0:30:28 | |
housed in the city's museum, was to be a far darker | 0:30:28 | 0:30:33 | |
and almost prophetic piece of work. | 0:30:33 | 0:30:36 | |
Gibbons made this extraordinary panel for James II. | 0:30:48 | 0:30:52 | |
And it's what we call a memento mori, a classical piece | 0:30:52 | 0:30:56 | |
with the skull and the fruit. | 0:30:56 | 0:30:59 | |
You can see that it's going. Everything is transient. | 0:30:59 | 0:31:03 | |
There is a wonderful detail which is a song, in the middle, by Shirley, | 0:31:03 | 0:31:06 | |
which says "The icy hand of death doth lay on kings | 0:31:06 | 0:31:11 | |
"Septer and crown must tumble down." | 0:31:11 | 0:31:13 | |
So, it's a very gloomy, | 0:31:15 | 0:31:19 | |
modest piece for someone who has just become king. | 0:31:19 | 0:31:23 | |
As if to say "I will only be here for a short while." | 0:31:23 | 0:31:27 | |
The piece displays Gibbons' growing confidence. | 0:31:33 | 0:31:36 | |
It even includes a self-portrait. | 0:31:36 | 0:31:39 | |
But the imagery is so morbid, it seems to prefigure the downfall | 0:31:44 | 0:31:49 | |
of his new patron. | 0:31:49 | 0:31:51 | |
James couldn't help but display his Catholicism. | 0:32:06 | 0:32:10 | |
He commissioned Gibbons to make another object. | 0:32:10 | 0:32:14 | |
One that would've utterly appalled his Protestant subjects. | 0:32:14 | 0:32:18 | |
It can now be found in the church of St James's, Piccadilly. | 0:32:23 | 0:32:26 | |
This grand, Italian-style organ loft was originally constructed | 0:32:29 | 0:32:34 | |
by Gibbons for James's private Catholic chapel - | 0:32:34 | 0:32:38 | |
itself an inflammatory statement in a protestant country. | 0:32:38 | 0:32:42 | |
It's full of angels and cherubs heralding the glory of God... | 0:32:45 | 0:32:50 | |
and the crown. | 0:32:50 | 0:32:52 | |
But also, within this church, is one of Gibbons' finest masterpieces. | 0:32:59 | 0:33:04 | |
This reredos - a decorative screen behind the altar. | 0:33:04 | 0:33:10 | |
It contains a beauty even hard-line protestants could enjoy. | 0:33:15 | 0:33:20 | |
He avoided controversial pictures of the saints | 0:33:20 | 0:33:23 | |
and instead drew on images from the natural world. | 0:33:23 | 0:33:27 | |
Finna Ayres has managed St James' since 1999, | 0:33:42 | 0:33:47 | |
and feels a special affinity for this type of religious sculpture, | 0:33:47 | 0:33:51 | |
going back to being a child. | 0:33:51 | 0:33:53 | |
My father was a sculptor in almost all materials you can imagine. | 0:33:58 | 0:34:02 | |
He used to work in ivory, brick, stone and wood, | 0:34:02 | 0:34:06 | |
so, yes, I think I knew about Grinling Gibbons | 0:34:06 | 0:34:09 | |
before I knew about Enid Blyton, you know. | 0:34:09 | 0:34:12 | |
We didn't have children's books at home, | 0:34:12 | 0:34:14 | |
we had books on Grinling Gibbons! | 0:34:14 | 0:34:16 | |
It is so abundant. | 0:34:16 | 0:34:19 | |
It's air flying with the bird, | 0:34:19 | 0:34:23 | |
it's the sea with the shells, grain to eat, it's flowers to enjoy. | 0:34:23 | 0:34:27 | |
It's trying to keep alive | 0:34:27 | 0:34:29 | |
and give immortality something which is perishable. | 0:34:29 | 0:34:32 | |
You know, they will all be consumed and will rot away, | 0:34:32 | 0:34:34 | |
but they're here now for ever, we can all see them. | 0:34:34 | 0:34:38 | |
There's an intellectual part of me that doesn't like it | 0:34:38 | 0:34:42 | |
because it's so excessive. | 0:34:42 | 0:34:44 | |
And you know, it's a clever bloke that's showing off to toffs, | 0:34:44 | 0:34:47 | |
so there are a few bits of it that I don't like at all. | 0:34:47 | 0:34:51 | |
But it overwhelms me with how beautiful it is, | 0:34:51 | 0:34:55 | |
how incredibly abundant it is, how rich it is. | 0:34:55 | 0:34:59 | |
I like very much, something we don't do now, which, if you look at that, | 0:34:59 | 0:35:03 | |
it's not at all symmetrical, and yet it's perfectly harmonious | 0:35:03 | 0:35:07 | |
one side with the other and the top with the bottom. | 0:35:07 | 0:35:10 | |
There's no repetition, there's no boring old symmetry. | 0:35:10 | 0:35:13 | |
It's just very strong, terribly clever. | 0:35:13 | 0:35:17 | |
James II's pride knew no bounds. | 0:35:26 | 0:35:28 | |
Like his brother Charles, | 0:35:30 | 0:35:32 | |
he commissioned Gibbons to create | 0:35:32 | 0:35:34 | |
a bronze statue of him as a Roman emperor, | 0:35:34 | 0:35:37 | |
which today stands outside London's National Gallery. | 0:35:37 | 0:35:41 | |
But this statue was in stark contrast to political reality - | 0:35:44 | 0:35:49 | |
there was nothing triumphant about James' reign, | 0:35:49 | 0:35:52 | |
as his Protestant court plotted to overthrow him. | 0:35:52 | 0:35:55 | |
In 1688, a desperate James was forced to flee to France, | 0:35:57 | 0:36:02 | |
at midnight - a coup which came to be known as the Glorious Revolution. | 0:36:02 | 0:36:07 | |
And for Gibbons, this had to be a terrifying moment. | 0:36:10 | 0:36:15 | |
He'd spent nearly two decades | 0:36:15 | 0:36:17 | |
celebrating the glories of the Stuart kings. | 0:36:17 | 0:36:20 | |
By now he was 40 years old, | 0:36:22 | 0:36:24 | |
with a large family and studio to support - | 0:36:24 | 0:36:27 | |
would his work fit in with the new regime? | 0:36:27 | 0:36:30 | |
However, favour was to smile on the carver once more. | 0:36:38 | 0:36:43 | |
Because after the fall of James, | 0:36:43 | 0:36:46 | |
William of Orange took the throne - | 0:36:46 | 0:36:48 | |
a Protestant but, just as importantly, a Dutchman. | 0:36:48 | 0:36:52 | |
This was a monarch who was about the same age as Gibbons, | 0:36:54 | 0:36:57 | |
who'd also imbued the spirit of the Dutch Golden Age. | 0:36:57 | 0:37:01 | |
They spoke the same language, both literally and artistically. | 0:37:01 | 0:37:06 | |
When William and his wife Mary chose to transform | 0:37:07 | 0:37:11 | |
the palace of Hampton Court, | 0:37:11 | 0:37:13 | |
Gibbons found his services in demand once again. | 0:37:13 | 0:37:17 | |
William and Mary, from 1688, are the good Protestant monarchs. | 0:37:20 | 0:37:25 | |
And everything must be a contrast to the Catholic James, | 0:37:25 | 0:37:29 | |
who has now left. And when they remodel Hampton Court, | 0:37:29 | 0:37:34 | |
it's plain, it's formal, and yet they want to employ | 0:37:34 | 0:37:39 | |
the best of current craftsmanship, | 0:37:39 | 0:37:43 | |
and Gibbons comes in there. | 0:37:43 | 0:37:44 | |
And it's interesting, because the things that we love about him, | 0:37:46 | 0:37:50 | |
some of the things, absolutely fall away - | 0:37:50 | 0:37:53 | |
I mean, there are no lobsters and there's no drapery | 0:37:53 | 0:37:56 | |
and there are no musical instruments - | 0:37:56 | 0:37:59 | |
the playfulness and elaborate design has gone. | 0:37:59 | 0:38:03 | |
And he uses this much simpler vocabulary, really, | 0:38:03 | 0:38:07 | |
of fruit and flowers and swags. | 0:38:07 | 0:38:09 | |
It's taking the best of the past, | 0:38:15 | 0:38:17 | |
but it's not looking decadent or overdone any more. | 0:38:17 | 0:38:20 | |
Gibbons created some of his most beautiful carvings | 0:38:30 | 0:38:33 | |
for King William - but as a decorator, | 0:38:33 | 0:38:37 | |
he wasn't above cutting a few corners, | 0:38:37 | 0:38:39 | |
as you can see if you get up close and personal with his work. | 0:38:39 | 0:38:43 | |
This is designed to be seen from below, | 0:38:59 | 0:39:01 | |
and when you come up on the scaffolding, | 0:39:01 | 0:39:04 | |
what you look at is what you shouldn't be seeing. | 0:39:04 | 0:39:07 | |
So if you look at the top of this angel's head, for example, | 0:39:07 | 0:39:10 | |
if you look at it from below, it is absolutely perfect. | 0:39:10 | 0:39:13 | |
Lovely mouth, lovely nose, beautiful hair. | 0:39:13 | 0:39:17 | |
And as you get towards the top where nobody sees it, | 0:39:17 | 0:39:20 | |
you can see where the chisel has been. | 0:39:20 | 0:39:23 | |
This is a carver who really knows what he's doing. | 0:39:23 | 0:39:28 | |
And if you have at look round at the back of the bird, | 0:39:28 | 0:39:31 | |
in order to make it light, can you see the little cuts inside, | 0:39:31 | 0:39:34 | |
with a very tiny chisel - can you see that? | 0:39:34 | 0:39:37 | |
And as a conservator, you can see that, | 0:39:37 | 0:39:39 | |
and nobody else sees it, | 0:39:39 | 0:39:40 | |
which is, I think, the reason we all become conservators, | 0:39:40 | 0:39:43 | |
so we can look at stuff nobody else can! | 0:39:43 | 0:39:45 | |
To achieve these kinds of effects, | 0:39:47 | 0:39:48 | |
Gibbons had literally hundreds of tools. | 0:39:48 | 0:39:52 | |
He amassed them over a lifetime of carving, | 0:39:54 | 0:39:58 | |
far more than any of his contemporaries. | 0:39:58 | 0:40:00 | |
David Esterly has spent decades building up | 0:40:08 | 0:40:11 | |
a collection of the kinds of implements | 0:40:11 | 0:40:13 | |
that Gibbons would've had at his disposal. | 0:40:13 | 0:40:16 | |
Why so many tools? Well, with wood... | 0:40:18 | 0:40:21 | |
you slice through it, and it leaves behind on the wood | 0:40:23 | 0:40:28 | |
the shape of the blade. Therefore, if you're doing | 0:40:28 | 0:40:31 | |
something as complicated as the sort of very high relief, | 0:40:31 | 0:40:35 | |
very naturalistic foliage carving that Gibbons is doing, | 0:40:35 | 0:40:39 | |
then you need to have a multitude of tools to get the various shapes. | 0:40:39 | 0:40:44 | |
You would have back-bent tools | 0:40:44 | 0:40:48 | |
and front-bent tools for deep excavations | 0:40:48 | 0:40:51 | |
and he would have had some really very sophisticated tools, | 0:40:51 | 0:40:55 | |
for example, a front-bent veiner, | 0:40:55 | 0:40:58 | |
a small tool which you would use | 0:40:58 | 0:41:00 | |
for putting a vein of a leaf in at a very low level. | 0:41:00 | 0:41:04 | |
One of the reasons why I'm sure | 0:41:06 | 0:41:08 | |
that this is what Gibbons' tool bench would have looked like | 0:41:08 | 0:41:11 | |
is that some of these tools go back almost halfway to Gibbons' era, | 0:41:11 | 0:41:16 | |
and some of the old carvers wrote their names | 0:41:16 | 0:41:19 | |
or stamped their names on their chisel handles. | 0:41:19 | 0:41:22 | |
A Gordon. I wonder who he was. | 0:41:22 | 0:41:25 | |
It's sort of like shaking hands with the old fellow | 0:41:25 | 0:41:28 | |
whenever I use it, so there's a romance about these tools | 0:41:28 | 0:41:31 | |
which affects me, even after all these years. | 0:41:31 | 0:41:34 | |
And in the 1690s, Gibbons would've needed every one of his tools | 0:41:42 | 0:41:47 | |
and tricks to please his most demanding patron yet. | 0:41:47 | 0:41:51 | |
Because the most difficult client Gibbons ever had to deal with | 0:41:52 | 0:41:56 | |
wasn't a monarch, but a duke, | 0:41:56 | 0:41:59 | |
the owner of Petworth House in Sussex. | 0:41:59 | 0:42:02 | |
One of the most influential men in Britain, | 0:42:11 | 0:42:13 | |
and a close ally of King William, was Charles Seymour - | 0:42:13 | 0:42:18 | |
and he was fully aware of his own importance. | 0:42:18 | 0:42:21 | |
He was so famously vain, people called him the Proud Duke. | 0:42:23 | 0:42:28 | |
There are all sorts of anecdotes about Charles Seymour, | 0:42:32 | 0:42:35 | |
the Proud Duke, and why he was so proud. | 0:42:35 | 0:42:38 | |
For a start, there's the one where he docked his daughter's inheritance | 0:42:38 | 0:42:43 | |
by some 20-odd thousand pounds | 0:42:43 | 0:42:45 | |
because she sat down in his presence. | 0:42:45 | 0:42:48 | |
He was actually asleep at the time. | 0:42:48 | 0:42:50 | |
There's another famous one where he dismissed one of the servants | 0:42:50 | 0:42:54 | |
for turning his back upon him, forgetting the fact | 0:42:54 | 0:42:57 | |
that the servant, poor chap, was actually fanning the fire | 0:42:57 | 0:42:59 | |
with bellows and it's very difficult to do that | 0:42:59 | 0:43:02 | |
without turning your back. | 0:43:02 | 0:43:03 | |
So this is the sort of man we're talking about. | 0:43:03 | 0:43:06 | |
But he was a very cultured man, and brought in | 0:43:06 | 0:43:08 | |
many of the finest craftsmen in England | 0:43:08 | 0:43:11 | |
to work at Petworth House, | 0:43:11 | 0:43:12 | |
one of whom, of course, was Grinling Gibbons. | 0:43:12 | 0:43:14 | |
This is Gibbons' masterpiece - | 0:43:18 | 0:43:21 | |
a magnificent carved room, | 0:43:21 | 0:43:24 | |
full of ingenious nods towards the Proud Duke's obsessions. | 0:43:24 | 0:43:29 | |
We can certainly get a sense of his interest in gardening, | 0:43:31 | 0:43:33 | |
which, of course, was very fashionable, | 0:43:33 | 0:43:35 | |
in the wonderful floral arrangements represented by Gibbons. | 0:43:35 | 0:43:39 | |
There are the great Grecian urns - | 0:43:41 | 0:43:43 | |
there's very much an allusion there to the Proud Duke's interest | 0:43:43 | 0:43:47 | |
in classical culture and so on and so forth. | 0:43:47 | 0:43:49 | |
As we might expect, the Proud Duke was a Knight of the Garter. | 0:43:51 | 0:43:56 | |
We can see very clearly the George hanging from a ribbon, | 0:43:56 | 0:43:59 | |
as carved by Gibbons. | 0:43:59 | 0:44:00 | |
But also music is represented very firmly here. | 0:44:02 | 0:44:05 | |
Amid the violins in Gibbons' great musical group | 0:44:07 | 0:44:10 | |
is an open manuscript of Purcell's Fairy Queen, | 0:44:10 | 0:44:13 | |
which was hot off the press - | 0:44:13 | 0:44:16 | |
it had only just been performed on the London stage in 1692. | 0:44:16 | 0:44:19 | |
So it's a very important celebration | 0:44:22 | 0:44:24 | |
of not only the Proud Duke's cultural sensibility, | 0:44:24 | 0:44:27 | |
but also his connection with the royal court. | 0:44:27 | 0:44:30 | |
It's completely jaw-dropping. Every time I walk into this room, | 0:44:41 | 0:44:46 | |
I am completely overwhelmed by the brilliance of what surrounds me. | 0:44:46 | 0:44:49 | |
Many people have just never really experienced | 0:44:50 | 0:44:53 | |
anything like this before, and for a start, | 0:44:53 | 0:44:55 | |
they are completely blown away with the sheer technical skill. | 0:44:55 | 0:44:59 | |
It's something which is frequently remarked upon - | 0:44:59 | 0:45:01 | |
how on earth could someone actually produce something like this? | 0:45:01 | 0:45:04 | |
This room was a tribute to a Proud Duke. | 0:45:08 | 0:45:11 | |
But if you look closely enough, | 0:45:11 | 0:45:14 | |
you can see Grinling Gibbons' "GG" initials, | 0:45:14 | 0:45:18 | |
facing away from each other in this great swirl. | 0:45:18 | 0:45:21 | |
And by now, Gibbons could've been forgiven | 0:45:24 | 0:45:27 | |
for displaying a fair bit of pride himself. | 0:45:27 | 0:45:30 | |
You have to have a Gibbons if you've got a great house. | 0:45:32 | 0:45:35 | |
You have to have a Gibbons surround. | 0:45:35 | 0:45:37 | |
It's the piece to have to show off your wealth, | 0:45:37 | 0:45:42 | |
your understanding of art. | 0:45:42 | 0:45:44 | |
The must-have piece of decoration. | 0:45:44 | 0:45:47 | |
And so he's risen way beyond being an artisan. | 0:45:47 | 0:45:50 | |
He's now an artist. | 0:45:50 | 0:45:53 | |
The dark days of Deptford were now well behind him - | 0:46:03 | 0:46:07 | |
as early as the 1670s, | 0:46:07 | 0:46:10 | |
he'd established premises inside the City of London, | 0:46:10 | 0:46:13 | |
in the fashionable Ludgate Hill area. | 0:46:13 | 0:46:16 | |
And throughout his career, | 0:46:19 | 0:46:21 | |
a number of portraits were completed of Gibbons. | 0:46:21 | 0:46:24 | |
They were all to have one thing in common - | 0:46:24 | 0:46:26 | |
they NEVER showed him in the role | 0:46:26 | 0:46:28 | |
for which he was most famous - as a wood carver! | 0:46:28 | 0:46:32 | |
I think he wanted to project an image of himself as a gentleman. | 0:46:33 | 0:46:37 | |
There's a marvellous engraving of Grinling Gibbons and his wife, | 0:46:37 | 0:46:41 | |
and they could almost be a duke and duchess. | 0:46:41 | 0:46:45 | |
There's another marvellous painting of Grinling Gibbons | 0:46:47 | 0:46:50 | |
holding compasses with a head - and very interestingly, | 0:46:50 | 0:46:53 | |
that head is from a sculpture by Bernini, | 0:46:53 | 0:46:57 | |
so he clearly saw himself in the footsteps | 0:46:57 | 0:47:00 | |
of the great sculptors of the past. | 0:47:00 | 0:47:02 | |
Having a studio in Ludgate Hill, | 0:47:06 | 0:47:08 | |
Gibbons would also have seen first-hand | 0:47:08 | 0:47:11 | |
the gradual rebuilding of the most potent symbol of London itself - | 0:47:11 | 0:47:16 | |
St Paul's Cathedral. | 0:47:16 | 0:47:18 | |
Designed by Sir Christopher Wren in the aftermath of the Great Fire, | 0:47:19 | 0:47:23 | |
this was the most important building project of the 17th century. | 0:47:23 | 0:47:27 | |
And every craftsman, | 0:47:29 | 0:47:31 | |
especially one as ambitious as Gibbons, | 0:47:31 | 0:47:34 | |
was desperate to be a part of it. | 0:47:34 | 0:47:36 | |
Gibbons had a big problem, though - | 0:47:38 | 0:47:40 | |
Wren was decidedly not a fan of his work. | 0:47:40 | 0:47:44 | |
Wren met Gibbons very early on, | 0:47:44 | 0:47:48 | |
but he was singularly unimpressed | 0:47:48 | 0:47:49 | |
and didn't actually use Gibbons for a good decade. | 0:47:49 | 0:47:54 | |
Wren's architecture is always quite severe - | 0:47:56 | 0:47:58 | |
he's always worried about being accused of being popish. | 0:47:58 | 0:48:01 | |
This wildly over-decorated stuff is just too close to Italian baroque. | 0:48:01 | 0:48:06 | |
But eventually, Grinling Gibbons becomes so famous | 0:48:08 | 0:48:12 | |
that he cannot not employ him. | 0:48:12 | 0:48:14 | |
And, of course, it is at St Paul's we see this most dramatically. | 0:48:14 | 0:48:20 | |
At last, Wren fully embraced the exuberant style of Gibbons, | 0:48:23 | 0:48:29 | |
and his work decorated the most important part of his cathedral. | 0:48:29 | 0:48:33 | |
The choir is where everything is going to happen. | 0:48:35 | 0:48:37 | |
So this has to be the grandest, the most dramatic, | 0:48:37 | 0:48:40 | |
the most splendid piece of the whole cathedral. | 0:48:40 | 0:48:42 | |
And so this has to be the bit | 0:48:42 | 0:48:45 | |
where you use the greatest carver of the age. | 0:48:45 | 0:48:48 | |
You have to use Grinling Gibbons. | 0:48:48 | 0:48:50 | |
This is Gibbons' most personal work. | 0:49:01 | 0:49:03 | |
Many believe the faces of the putti are based on his own children. | 0:49:07 | 0:49:11 | |
This is a wonderfully rhythmic design, | 0:49:14 | 0:49:18 | |
with the putti, and the lovely swags going along. | 0:49:18 | 0:49:21 | |
And the light limewood reliefs that we associate with Gibbons | 0:49:21 | 0:49:26 | |
sort of merge into the darker oak surrounds, | 0:49:26 | 0:49:31 | |
so that too is like tradition, | 0:49:31 | 0:49:33 | |
because the oak is the absolutely central British wood. | 0:49:33 | 0:49:38 | |
As spectacular as Gibbons' work appears in St Paul's today, | 0:49:43 | 0:49:48 | |
we can only really glimpse a little of the splendour | 0:49:48 | 0:49:51 | |
the carver intended for the cathedral. | 0:49:51 | 0:49:53 | |
He constructed a grand organ case, | 0:49:55 | 0:49:58 | |
separating the choir stalls from the rest of the church, | 0:49:58 | 0:50:02 | |
that now only survives in old drawings. | 0:50:02 | 0:50:05 | |
In the Victorian era, | 0:50:07 | 0:50:09 | |
worshippers turned against Gibbons' baroque work - | 0:50:09 | 0:50:13 | |
it was broken in half, and pushed to either side of the choir stalls, | 0:50:13 | 0:50:18 | |
much of it lost on the way. | 0:50:18 | 0:50:21 | |
And the destruction at St Paul's | 0:50:24 | 0:50:27 | |
gives a clue to the strange downfall of Grinling Gibbons. | 0:50:27 | 0:50:31 | |
Even as he was putting the finishing touches to the cathedral, | 0:50:33 | 0:50:36 | |
his elaborate form of woodcarving was falling out of favour. | 0:50:36 | 0:50:41 | |
Fashions changed. | 0:50:44 | 0:50:46 | |
A plainer style came into play. | 0:50:46 | 0:50:51 | |
Famously, Sarah, Duchess of Marlborough | 0:50:51 | 0:50:53 | |
talked about how she didn't want a single thing carved in her house - | 0:50:53 | 0:50:57 | |
she wanted her wainscoting as plain and simple as a lady's face - | 0:50:57 | 0:51:03 | |
and gradually the taste for elaborate baroque carving faded. | 0:51:03 | 0:51:09 | |
It was a very sad thing for Gibbons, | 0:51:09 | 0:51:12 | |
because he had an extraordinary workshop | 0:51:12 | 0:51:15 | |
and no work, really, for them. | 0:51:15 | 0:51:17 | |
Even at Hampton Court, the writing is on the wall. | 0:51:17 | 0:51:20 | |
That was a very low profit operation for Gibbons. | 0:51:20 | 0:51:24 | |
He was paid very, very little for his grand overmantels there - | 0:51:24 | 0:51:28 | |
I think it's 28, 30 pounds, | 0:51:28 | 0:51:31 | |
that sort of price, which was not enough, not enough - | 0:51:31 | 0:51:35 | |
he clearly did it at a loss to keep his workshop together. | 0:51:35 | 0:51:38 | |
And thereafter, work just began to dry up for him. | 0:51:39 | 0:51:45 | |
For Gibbons, this change of fashion was a professional disaster. | 0:51:48 | 0:51:52 | |
At the end of the 17th century, the 50-year-old carver | 0:51:55 | 0:51:58 | |
could no longer make a living just from wood. | 0:51:58 | 0:52:01 | |
His workshop had always worked in other mediums, | 0:52:04 | 0:52:07 | |
but now the only way to make ends meet | 0:52:07 | 0:52:10 | |
was by constructing marble tombs. | 0:52:10 | 0:52:12 | |
But Gibbons' peers were absolutely scathing about his efforts in stone. | 0:52:15 | 0:52:20 | |
He was constantly harried by complaints during these years. | 0:52:24 | 0:52:30 | |
Some of his sculptures were sent back to be reworked. | 0:52:30 | 0:52:34 | |
With some, he was urged to take a reduction in the price. | 0:52:34 | 0:52:40 | |
He never did master the human figure. | 0:52:40 | 0:52:43 | |
The energy which there might've been in the human form, | 0:52:43 | 0:52:48 | |
he was only able to express somehow in his foliage. | 0:52:48 | 0:52:52 | |
In the early 18th century, his reputation was fatally breached | 0:52:54 | 0:52:59 | |
by a damning review of this work in Westminster Abbey, | 0:52:59 | 0:53:02 | |
the tomb of the naval officer Cloudesley Shovell. | 0:53:02 | 0:53:06 | |
The influential critic Joseph Addison | 0:53:09 | 0:53:11 | |
wrote it was a matter of "great offence" | 0:53:11 | 0:53:14 | |
that the manly Shovell should be depicted as a dandy, | 0:53:14 | 0:53:19 | |
"reposing himself on a velvet cushion." | 0:53:19 | 0:53:21 | |
When Gibbons died in 1721 at the age of 73, | 0:53:29 | 0:53:34 | |
he was buried not in St Paul's Cathedral, | 0:53:34 | 0:53:37 | |
but the less prestigious St Paul's, Covent Garden. | 0:53:37 | 0:53:41 | |
This great craftsman was yesterday's man. | 0:53:43 | 0:53:46 | |
He was given no monument at the time of his death. | 0:53:48 | 0:53:53 | |
This limewood carving was only placed here, | 0:53:53 | 0:53:57 | |
at the back of the church, in the 1960s. | 0:53:57 | 0:54:00 | |
Gibbons might have been written out of history, | 0:54:11 | 0:54:15 | |
but for one eccentric art collector and taste-maker | 0:54:15 | 0:54:19 | |
who was three years of age when the carver died. | 0:54:19 | 0:54:22 | |
Horace Walpole loved going against the grain. | 0:54:24 | 0:54:29 | |
In the mid 18th century,, | 0:54:29 | 0:54:31 | |
when the taste was for classical architecture, | 0:54:31 | 0:54:33 | |
he constructed a gothic mansion, Strawberry Hill - | 0:54:33 | 0:54:38 | |
and he used the house to celebrate the unfashionable Gibbons. | 0:54:38 | 0:54:43 | |
This carving of a cravat, once owned by Walpole, | 0:54:51 | 0:54:55 | |
is now in the Victoria & Albert Museum. | 0:54:55 | 0:54:57 | |
Walpole prized this piece very highly. | 0:55:00 | 0:55:03 | |
He kept it in a glass case | 0:55:03 | 0:55:05 | |
in the Tribune Room at his Thameside villa Strawberry Hill. | 0:55:05 | 0:55:10 | |
It's essentially a virtuoso demonstration | 0:55:10 | 0:55:14 | |
of the carver's skill. He's portrayed a length | 0:55:14 | 0:55:18 | |
of super-expensive Venetian needle lace, | 0:55:18 | 0:55:23 | |
the most opulent and expensive dress accessory of its day, | 0:55:23 | 0:55:29 | |
and Walpole even mentions this cravat | 0:55:29 | 0:55:33 | |
as "an art which arrives even unto deception," | 0:55:33 | 0:55:38 | |
and he describes in a letter | 0:55:38 | 0:55:40 | |
how he'd received a party of foreign guests at the villa, | 0:55:40 | 0:55:45 | |
and he met them at the gates wearing the cravat around his neck. | 0:55:45 | 0:55:50 | |
And he describes the visitors staring at him, | 0:55:50 | 0:55:55 | |
presumably incredulous that an English gentleman | 0:55:55 | 0:55:58 | |
would dress like this. We can also see - | 0:55:58 | 0:56:01 | |
it's perhaps easier looking at the back - | 0:56:01 | 0:56:04 | |
the way that a number of these pierced loops | 0:56:04 | 0:56:07 | |
have actually been broken off, and I can't help but speculate | 0:56:07 | 0:56:11 | |
how many of those loops might've been broken off | 0:56:11 | 0:56:14 | |
during Horace Walpole's practical joke. | 0:56:14 | 0:56:17 | |
Gibbons' work was honed in the service of the royal court, | 0:56:23 | 0:56:27 | |
and delighted eccentrics like Horace Walpole. | 0:56:27 | 0:56:29 | |
But does this decoration of grand houses and baroque ornamentation | 0:56:31 | 0:56:36 | |
have any relevance to the modern world? | 0:56:36 | 0:56:38 | |
Why should we care about a woodcarver who fell out of fashion | 0:56:40 | 0:56:44 | |
even within his own lifetime? | 0:56:44 | 0:56:46 | |
In the 17th century, Gibbons' woodcarving was valued | 0:56:52 | 0:56:56 | |
for its triumphal relationship to the natural world. | 0:56:56 | 0:57:00 | |
In other words, this showed the great families' command | 0:57:00 | 0:57:04 | |
over earth and ocean and sky. | 0:57:04 | 0:57:06 | |
But that sort of triumphalism is something | 0:57:07 | 0:57:11 | |
that's likely to make us nervous these days. | 0:57:11 | 0:57:14 | |
Gibbons' carvings are all about the beauty of the natural world, | 0:57:18 | 0:57:21 | |
which we're in the midst of laying waste to now. | 0:57:21 | 0:57:24 | |
So there's a kind of poignancy. | 0:57:24 | 0:57:26 | |
Looking at Gibbons' work, partly you look at it and think, | 0:57:30 | 0:57:33 | |
"How did he do it?" | 0:57:33 | 0:57:34 | |
It draws you in like a painting, | 0:57:34 | 0:57:37 | |
and yet you know, it's so tactile, | 0:57:37 | 0:57:41 | |
you know that someone has actually worked that with their hands. | 0:57:41 | 0:57:45 | |
It's something that schoolchildren should be taught. | 0:57:48 | 0:57:50 | |
It should become a national curriculum, to learn to wood-carve. | 0:57:50 | 0:57:53 | |
If children were taken to museums to see work like this, | 0:57:53 | 0:57:57 | |
it would inspire people. I'm sure it would. | 0:57:57 | 0:57:59 | |
I don't think somebody like me needs to tell you to go and see Gibbons. | 0:58:02 | 0:58:05 | |
I think if you come across Gibbons, it's breathtaking. | 0:58:05 | 0:58:08 | |
It is...just like nothing else. | 0:58:10 | 0:58:13 | |
In the next episode, | 0:58:26 | 0:58:28 | |
we'll see how medieval carvers and carpenters transformed wood | 0:58:28 | 0:58:33 | |
into images of the divine that still astound us today. | 0:58:33 | 0:58:38 | |
Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd | 0:58:58 | 0:59:02 |