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F.R. Leyland's grade II listed tomb, designed by Edward Burne Jones, in Brompton Cemetery |
On
Tuesday the 4th January 1892 the 60 year shipping magnate Frederick Richards
Leyland was travelling on the Metropolitan Line with Colonel Robert Rainsford
Jackson, the managing director of the National Telephone Company (of which
Leyland was also president).. Within a few minutes of entering a first class
carriage in Cannon Street Leyland was gasping for air and clutching his chest.
At Mansion House station Colonel Jackson summoned the train’s guard for help.
At Blackfriars the train was held in the platform whilst the Station Inspector,
who suspected that Leyland was already dead, called for a stretcher and had him
removed from his carriage and put in his office. A doctor was sent for who
arrived at 5.15pm and confirmed the Inspectors suspicions, Leyland had died of
a heart attack. An inquest was held on 7 January (“death by natural causes” the
verdict) and the funeral at Brompton took place next day, on the Friday morning.
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Leyland by Dante Gabriel Rossetti |
The
son of a bookkeeper from Liverpool, Leyland started work at the age of 13 in
1844 as an apprentice at the city’s oldest independent shipping line, John
Bibby and Sons. He rose steadily in the company becoming a merchant in the firm
in 1859, a partner n 1861 and finally, in 1871, the owner when he bought out
his employers and renamed the company the Leyland Line. Leyland’s real passions were art and women.
He was a notable patron of the pre-Raphaelites especially Rossetti and Burne
Jones (who designed his tomb) and had a close relationship and spectacular
falling out with James McNeill Whistler.
Leyland
bought a mansion 49 Princes Gate in Knightsbridge in 1874 and brought in
architects Thomas Jeckyll and Richard Norman Shaw to remodel the interior of
the house to create a suitably opulent setting for his collection of paintings
and objets d’art. Whistler, whom
Leyland had been patronising for several years, became involved when Leyland asked
him to design the colour scheme of the hall and stairway and then was foolish
enough to ask for his opinion on Jeckyll’s scheme for the dining room. Here, along
with his collection of blue and white Chinese porcelain, Leyland intended to
hang Whistler’s painting La Princesse du pays
de la porcelain. To display the
china Jeckyll had designed a range of
open shelves in the Japanese fashion, completely covered the walls with 16th
century gilt leather hangings painted with red flowers and green foliage (once
owned by Anne Boleyn, the antique leather alone cost Leyland £1000),and created
a Tudoresque wood and canvas ceiling. The room was constructed by a local
builder who fitted it into the existing room on a framework which meant that
the whole thing could be dismantled and removed.
In
April 1876 Leyland, who was staying in Liverpool for an extended spell while
the works on the new house were completed, asked Whistler for suggestions for the
colour scheme for the almost finished dining room. As a result of this
prompting Whistler began a series of adjustments to Jeckyll’s colour scheme,
calling in two of his Chelsea chums, the former boatmen turned artists Walter
and Henry Greaves, and setting them to work retouching the existing paintwork.
As the work progressed Whistler grew more dissatisfied with the results and
more ambitious in the scope of the changes he wanted. Jeckyll fortuitously fell
ill and with Leyland still in Liverpool and the two Greaves brothers to help
him there was nothing to stop Whistler completely altering the look of the room.
By August he was telling Leyland that the room was all but finished apart from
a ‘blue wave’ pattern he wanted to apply to the cornice and dado. The blue wave
transformed itself into peacock feathers and spread across the vastly expensive
antique gilt leather until the whole room had been painted cobalt blue with a
design of golden peacocks. Walter Greaves warned Whistler that the blue paint
they used discoloured very quickly after drying. Walter had had to rename one
of his paintings of a girl in a blue dress, “Girl in a green dress” after
experimenting with the same pigment. Whistler didn’t listen and today the
Peacock Room is no longer the intended colour but a sort of verdigris. The
artist was hugely proud of the completed room, so proud that he invited
numerous friends around to Leyland’s unoccupied house and held impromptu
parties to show it off, even inviting the press. Frances Leyland dropped in unexpectedly
one afternoon to find dozens of people milling around her house and Whistler
holding court in the Peacock Room where he dismissed a question from his audience
about what his patron thought by saying what did the opinion of a ‘parvenu’
matter?
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"The Gold Scab: Eruption in Frilthy Lucre"
Whistler's satire on Leyland |
Leyland apparently was not enthralled either by the room or Whistler’s
attitude especially when the painter presented him with a bill for two thousand
guineas for work that he had neither requested nor wanted. After seeking the
opinion of Rossetti Leyland responded by offering Whistler a cheque for £1000,
a calculated snub because the amount offered was too large for the hard up painter
to refuse but the payment was in tradesmen’s pounds and not artist’s guineas. Whistler
retaliated with a final bit of work on the room, a mural of two peacocks, the
bird on the right representing Leyland standing over a scattering of silver
discs, the shillings deducted from Whistler’s fee, whilst the other bird, representing
Whistler, calm and dignified walks away. Frances Leyland further inflamed the
situation between the two men by apparently taking Whistler’s side and allowing
herself to be seen in public with the artist in situations which gave rise to scandalous
gossip. Leyland wrote to Whistler on more than one occasion warning him to stay
away from his wife and family. In a letter dated 17 July 1877, Leyland wrote
"I am told that on Friday last you were seen walking about with my wife at
Lord's Cricket Ground. After my previous letter to you on the subject, it is
clear that I cannot expect from you the ordinary conduct of a Gentleman; and I
therefore now tell you that if after this intimation I find you in her society again,
I will publicly horsewhip you."
Leyland’s
£1000 cheque did little to stave off Whistler’s rapidly approaching financial
crisis. By late 1878 the artist could no longer satisfy his creditors (one of
the principal one’s being Frederick Leyland, who may have gone out of his way
to buy Whistler’s debts with the intention of ruining him) and was declared
bankrupt. Whistler reacted by painting ‘The Gold Scab: Eruption in Frilthy
Lucre” which shows Leyland in the old familiar guise of a peacock seated upon
Whistler’s Chelsea house. It ridicules his miserliness, his frilly shirts
(hence the apparently misspelled title) and his piano playing skills (of which
he was presumably proud). In 1879
Leyland’s wife Frances (who is buried with him at Brompton), finally tired of
her husband’s philandering and forced him to accept a formal separation. Leyland went on to have a son with a married
mistress Rose Caldecott. The boy was registered as Frederick Richards Leyland Caldecott
– Rose’s husband apparently either very forgiving or very stupid. By the
following year the first of his son’s by another mistress, Anne Wooster, was
born in Kent. The couple went on to have another child and to set up house
together in Broadstairs.
In Leyland’s will he provided fully for Anne Wooster and her two sons, leaving her the income from £20,000 which was to be held in trust for the boys. To raise the capital for this bequest Leyland’s family were forced to sell his house at 49 Prince’s Gate and all it’s contents. The Peacock Room was left in situ when the house was sold to Blance Watney, the widow of a well known brewer. Blanche thought the Peacock Room was hideous and was about to have the fittings ripped out and thrown away when the artist W. Graham Robertson pointed out that they might be worth something. It took Mrs Watney a decade to decide what to do – in 1904 she finally disposed of it to Messers Obach & Co, picture dealers of New Bond Street for the staggering sum of 10,000 guineas to the American industrialist and collector Charles Lang Freer. Freer had the room dismantled and reconstructed in his Detroit Mansion where it served to display his own collection of oriental ceramics. It is now on permanent display at the Smithsonian in Washington DC.