The Rosscourt

Russell Cotes Bournemouth 2022

27
June

The Art Collections
The distinctive tastes and personalities of Merton and Annie are still very much preserved today in the style of the building and the range of artwork on display.

In his voluminous autobiography, Home and Abroad (1921), Merton stated that “Art in all its various phases has always been my strong weakness”. The founding and subsequent acquisitions amount to something of a grand tour through art history. Indeed, commentators often surmise that his purchase of this impressive selection of paintings was driven by a self-conscious attempt to demonstrate his artistic connoisseurship and liberal patronage of the arts, as opposed to an interest in excellent individual works of art. But whilst, undoubtedly, vanity was a factor in Merton’s ambitions, the quality of the key works are undeniable.

Merton’s collecting activities mirrored those of the nouveaux riches merchants and industrialists of Britain’s cities, such as Liverpool, Bristol and Manchester. Generated by the products of Empire and burgeoning industry, the new wealth of these self-made men fuelled a huge boom in art. Eager to display their taste and affluence, these men endowed art galleries and museums on an unprecedented scale. Since most were associated with the great cities of the industrial North, Merton was relatively unusual among museum founders in being established in a town in the south of England. It is perhaps no coincidence that he too came from the industrial North, where there were many role models. His generosity to the public is comparable to that of Sir Henry Tate and Lord Leverhulme. Yet his was not a ‘museum’ approach, but rather he treated his collecting as a dynamic entity. As his interests changed, he regularly bought and sold paintings from artists and dealers, and ‘traded up’ as paintings came onto the market. Generally a shrewd customer, he sought out copies of famous works from artists whose reputations were on the wane and were therefore cheaper, such as Edwin Long and William Powell Frith.

Whilst idiosyncratic and personal, Merton’s choice of subjects was typical of the taste of the middle-class Victorian art collector. Like many of his contemporaries, he admired high art and favoured work that affirmed his own belief sets. He saw history painting (including Biblical, mythological and literary subjects) as the pinnacle of the recognised hierarchy of themes. He was fond of landscapes, small genre scenes and animal subjects and admired works with a ‘plein air’ approach. However, his tastes were generally conservative and did not extend to impressionism, the avant-gard or the abstract.