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Sarah Lucas, Got a Salmon On in the street #3, 2001, R-type photograph

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Posts tagged sewellims

Mar 26

Sewellisms # 16: The Prince and the Pudding

In his review of ‘Victoria and Albert: Art and Love’ at the Queens Gallery, Brian Sewell continues to criticise the appearance of British queens. Having described Lady Jane Grey as ‘plain Jane’ last week in his review of the Delaroche exhibition at the National Gallery, he now turns to Queen Victoria, taking up a position of sympathy with Prince Albert, who he speculates must have been a long suffering man to put up with a ‘pudding’ like Queen Vic.

She is described as…

‘a woman of utmost plainness […] with goitrous eyes to boot, retreating chin and teeth a trifle prominent’, [while Albert is a] ‘tall and handsome German princeling’.


Sewell finds it impossible to imagine that Albert could have loved Victoria as they grew older, asking…

‘could he, if ever he enjoyed their conjugations, still relish playing stallion to this plain pudding of a woman now that they were verging on their forties?’


…and can only conclude, in his typically misogynistic fashion, that she loved him, while he could not have:

‘Whatever the mature Albert thought of Victoria in a court crowded with notably prettier women, there can be no doubt that she demandingly adored him, perhaps to the point of close-focused nymphomania.’

Sewell seems astonished that there is no evidence to suggest that Albert was unfaithful, asking:

‘Was he so seduced by the deceitful improvements to Victoria’s features introduced by [artists] Winterhalter and his peers that he never saw her as she really was? Was he never tempted to taste tart instead of pudding?’


Obviously the hideous troll would be too much for any red blooded male to bear. And only one conclusion is possible. Albert submitted to a trifling bit of typhoid to get away from her:

‘Were the restraints imposed by her exhausting demands, physical, emotional and (it is whispered) sexual (there was no driving need for them to enrich most of the dynastic bloodlines of Europe with their Saxe-Coburg-Gotha genes), so dire that at 42, when typhoid took him to his grave, he had lost the will to live?’

Sewell cannot conceive of a successful relationship where the woman is more prominent, and so Albert’s life is characterised as a drudge:

‘Albert was trapped and caged by married life; Victoria was inescapable […] as the years wore on he became, in effect, her private and public secretary and a slave to affairs of state and family.’


But all of this is of course a prelude to what I suspect is the real thrust of Sewell’s argument:

‘That with his death her patronage of the arts fell away to nothing suggests that these were much more his interest than hers.’


All the Victorian era’s achievements in terms of patronage and stimulation of the arts are therefore due to the ‘educated’ husband, while the wife ‘commissioned their portraits by the dozen’ because she could not bear to be out of reach of him.


Mar 22

Sewellisms # 15: Lady Jane fails to interest doubting John Thomas

Lady Jane Grey by Paul Delaroche

‘Jane Grey has always left me cold and does so still. […] I can only suppose that the modern public has fallen sentimentally for a Plain Jane in a wedding dress confronted with a rather worse predicament than being jilted at the altar.’
  • Brian Sewell, ‘Painting History: Delaroche and Lady Jane Grey’, The Evening Standard, 18 March 2010. <http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/arts/review-23816725-delaroche-paints-plain-jane.do>


AW: Brian Sewell just can’t let the public enjoy something without calling them idiots. We think you’re wrong Brian. Jane’s not plain, she’s hot!


Mar 15

Sewellisms # 14: Self-professed ignorance

‘I knew nothing of the Kingdom of Ife in what is now Western Nigeria, until the British Museum’s catalogue of its new exhibition under that title dropped onto my doormat.’

Brian Sewell, ‘The Kingdom of Ife: Sculptures from West Africa’, 11 March 2010

Read more: http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/arts/review-23814446-heads-of-africa-on-show-at-the-kingdom-of-ife.do

AW: What! I though every first year Courtauld undergraduate had a basic knowledge of eleventh-century West African sculpture! Frankly I was rather taken aback to read Brian Sewell admitting ignorance on any subject. At least until he made his defence in the next sentence; simultaneously showing off his classical education while taking a side swipe at a dead celebrity:

‘it is not quite the same as knowing nothing about Michelangelo, Rembrandt  and Velázquez and the whereabouts of Rome, Amsterdam  and Madrid  (though that appalling level of ignorance now seems the not uncommon consequence of an education system that produced Jade Goody and her ilk)’


Mar 8

Sewellisms #13: More, More, Moore

‘Reclining Figure of 1931 […] could perhaps be interpreted as a female figure in thrusting ecstatic anticipation of entry by a penis.’

Brian Sewell, ‘Does Henry Moore deserve his monumental reputation?’, Evening Standard, 25 February 2010


Feb 25

Sewellisms #12: more willies

‘Two elements among these figures have defied explanation […]. One is a small penis, erect at 45 degrees, the other a much larger tumescent penis, horizontal, in an alien masturbating right hand, the thumb towards the root; neither is attached to a body and both are far larger in scale than the neighbouring figures. […] And what are we to think of Michelangelo, fumbling in his trousers as he drew these phalluses […]?’

Brian Sewell, ‘Michaelangelo and his boy’, The evening Standard, 18 February 2010

Read more: http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/arts/article-23807304-michelangelo-and-his-boy.do


Feb 9

Sewellisms #11: ‘My cock’s bigger than your cock’

‘What then happened in the auction room? Put very simply, two rich bidders fought the “my cock’s bigger than yours” battle for a status symbol until sanity whispered in the ear of one that he had gone too far and he dropped out.’

Brian Sewell, ‘The status symbol that commanded a king’s ransom’, 5 February 2010

Read more: http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard/article-23802781-the-status-symbol-that-commanded-a-kings-ransom.do

AW: Its for quotes like this that ‘Sewellisms’ was initiated on this blog. More of this please Brian, and less of your recent offensiveness (see Sewellisms 7, 8 and 10).