Rare Drawings Aired in National Gallery's "Red Chalk: Raphael to Ramsay"

Submitted by edg on Fri, 27 Jan '12 8.53am

Edinburgh will be seeing red next month when the Scottish National Gallery on the Mound opens a new exhibition exploring the versatile and striking drawing medium of red chalk.

Comprising some 35 works from the Gallery’s collection, Red Chalk: Raphael to Ramsay will showcase a diverse range of drawing styles by distinguished artists such as Peter Paul Rubens, Salvator Rosa, Jean-Antoine Watteau, Francois Boucher and David Allan.

The free exhibition, running 18th February to 10th June, will feature works which, due to their delicate nature are rarely on show, as well as a number of drawings being shown publicly for the first time.

Colour it red

Red chalk was first used for drawing on paper in late-15th century Italy.

Chalk is a naturally occurring mineral, quarried directly from the earth then cut into drawing sticks which can be hand-held or chipped into a point and set into a holder.

Drawing chalk can also be made, using ground up natural chalk mixed with water to form a paste then rolled into drawing sticks.

The exhibition will highlight the ways in which artists have, over the centuries, exploited the unique nature of red chalk to produce an array of distinctive effects that cannot be achieved in any other drawing medium.

Raphael (Raffaello Santi), A Kneeling Nude WomanKneeling Nude

The earliest drawing on display, and a highlight of the show, will be Raphael’s Study of a Kneeling Nude.

This life-study was made in about 1518 and is a preparatory drawing for one of a series of Raphael’s painted frescos. The delicately drawn figure reveals not only the artist’s phenomenal skill as a draughtsman, but also his meticulous preparation for each composition.

Other works include Rosa’s expressive mid-17th century drawing, Head of a Bearded Man.

A sheet of figurative studies by the influential Baroque draughtsman Pompeo Girolamo Batoni (1708 – 1787), reveals the precision and control that can be achieved with red chalk, whilst Rubens’ Four Women Harvesting from c.1630 demonstrates how effectively chalk can be used for rapid sketching, with the simplest and most minimal strokes.

French connection

Red chalk experienced a surge in popularity with French artists in the 18th century.

Drawings in the display by Watteau and Boucher will showcase how the medium was used by artists of the Rococo period to produce highly decorative and elegant drawings. Studies by Fragonard and Hubert will also provide superb examples of red chalk being chosen as a useful medium for highly evocative depictions of the landscape.

Allan Ramsay's second wifeOther highlights will include a preparatory study by Guercino for his monumental oil painting of Erminia Finding the Wounded Tancred (currently displayed in the main gallery), and Edinburgh Enlightenment portrait painter Allan Ramsay’s iconic drawing from 1776 of his second wife, Margaret Lindsay (pictured).

The show will also include works by artists David Allan, William Delacour and Archibald Skirving to illustrate how the medium was adopted in Scotland.

Whether used to draw a detailed study from nature, a summary sketch or a highly polished finished drawing, red chalk is an enduringly popular, richly expressive and unique medium for draughtsmen.