Provenance: The Artist's family
Literature: Llewellyn, Sacha, and Paul Liss. Portrait of an Artist. Liss Llewellyn, 2021, p.349.
Exhibited: Inspired by Italy, Exeter Museum and Art Gallery, August - September 1996, (21)
Monnington's
Allegory (Tate Gallery) was the major work of his tenure as Rome
Scholar in Decorative Painting.
The cartoon and related studies,
commenced in the Spring of 1924, occupied the larger part of his
second year. He commenced the execution of the painting, which was to
occupy his third and final year, in March 1925; it was purchased in
Rome, by Jim Ede for the Contemporary Art Society before it was
completed, and was presented to the Tate Gallery in 1939.
The exact meaning of the Allegory is unclear and Monnington himself
remained elusive about it; invited by the Tate to explain it, he
replied, The idea is a bit complex and was based on the story of the
Garden of Eden, but rather a personal interpretation of it� (letter of
17 May 1953). When pressed, a few years later to elaborate, he
answered, �I don�t think this picture has anything to do with the
Garden of Eden story, but I am no more able to explain its exact meaning
now than I was at the time I painted it. The whole design certainly
had a very particular meaning and purpose and was an attempt to express
in pictorial form my attitude to life - almost my faith (2nd April
1957). Having to be content with this, the Tate Gallery retitled the
picture Allegory - Monnington having always referred to it simply by the
title Decoration. Iconogrpahically it contains elements of several
myths but most obviously The Garden of Love; specific episodes within
the painting are reminiscent of Adam and Eve; Apollo and Daphne; The
Fountain of Youth.
Luciano Chelles has pointed out that the composition is to some extent
an adaptation of Piero della Francesca�s Death of Adam (San Francesco,
Arezzo) and reproduces specific elements such as the figure sitting on
the ground and the placing of a large tree at the centre of the
composition. Ricketts and Shannon, asked by the Faculty of Painting at
the British School to report on Monnington�s progress commented that
they found Monnington, �keenly alive to the merit of the Masterpieces
he had seen in Italy and alive to the technical practises of the
Masters� (12.1.25)