Charles Townley

For the British officer of arms, see Charles Townley (officer of arms).
Charles Townley by Nollekens, 1807.
Charles Townley, miniature by Josiah Wedgewood

Charles Townley FRS (1 October 1737 – 3 January 1805[1]) was a wealthy English country gentleman, antiquary and collector. He travelled on three Grand Tours to Italy, buying antique sculpture, vases, coins, manuscripts and Old Master drawings and paintings. Many of the most important pieces from his collection, especially the Townley Marbles (or Towneley Marbles) are now in the British Museum's Department of Greek and Roman Antiquities. The marbles were overshadowed at the time, and still today, by the Elgin Marbles.

Biography

Charles Townley was born in England at Towneley Hall, the family seat, near Burnley in Lancashire, on 1 October 1737. (He regularly spelt his name Townley, so this is the spelling usually used in modern literature for him, but still usually not for his marbles.[lower-alpha 1]) From a Catholic family and thus excluded both from public office and from English universities, he was educated at the English College, Douai, and subsequently under John Turberville Needham, the biologist and Roman Catholic priest.

Bust of Charles Townley (1735-1805 CE), by Christopher Hewetson, Rome, 1769 CE. Collector and Trustee of the British Museum. It is housed in the British Museum, London

In 1758 he took up his residence at Towneley Hall , where he lived the ordinary life of a country gentleman until 1767, when he left England on the Grand Tour, chiefly to Rome, which he also visited in 1772-3 and 1777. He also made several excursions to the south of Italy and Sicily. In conjunction with various dealers, including Gavin Hamilton, and Thomas Jenkins, a dealer in antiquities in Rome, he got together a splendid collection of antiquities, known especially for the "Towneley Marbles" (or "Townley"), which was deposited in 1778 in a house built for the purpose in Park Street, in the West End of London, where he died on 8 January 1805.

His solitary publication was an account of the Ribchester Helmet in Vetusta Monumenta, a Roman cavalry helmet found near Towneley Hall,[2] and now in the British Museum.[3] He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in March 1791.[4] He became a member of the Society of Dilettanti 1786, and made a trustee of the British Museum in 1791.[2]

A large archive of Townley's papers, including diaries, account books, bills, correspondence, and catalogues, was acquired by the British Museum in 1992.

A bust of Townley was made in Carrara marble in 1807 by his associate and friend, sculptor Joseph Nollekens. It shows Townley in herm form – head and neck only, without full shoulders or arms – with a bare neck, dishevelled hair and a pensive expression. The National Heritage Memorial Fund, in whose 2008-9 annual report the bust is described as "masterfully executed", made a grant of £187,000 to help purchase the bust so that it could be returned to Towneley Hall Museum in the collector's former family home on the outskirts of Burnley.

Townley Collection

Bust of Clytie.

The antiquities collected by Townley, which now constitute the Townley Collection at the British Museum, consists of some 300 items and includes one of the great collections of Graeco-Roman sculptures and other artefacts. Prominent amongst this collection are:

A relief from Townley's collection, from Hadrian's Villa near Tivoli, ca. 125 AD.

When Townley died in 1805 his family sold the collection of marbles, larger bronzes and terracottas to the British Museum for £20,000 – a sum probably a fraction of its original purchase price. The trustees of the museum obtained a parliamentary grant specifically for the purpose.[8] The smaller antiquities, including coins, engraved gems, and pottery, followed in 1814.

Townley fully intended to leave this collection to the British Museum, as indicated in his will. However, shortly before his death he decided to leave it to the care of his brother Edward and his uncle John Townley on the condition that the sculptures should be exhibited in a purpose-built gallery. The gallery was duly constructed, but as the collection of the Museum's Greek and Roman antiquities grew, it became clear that the old Montague House, the original home of the Museum, was too small for its purpose. The old Jacobean mansion and its Palladian-style Townley Gallery were pulled down in 1823 and gradually replaced with grand rooms arranged over two floors around a central courtyard, today's quadrangular building.[9]

Painting by Johann Zoffany

Charles Townley in the Park St. Gallery by Zoffany, 1782, Burnley. Top, on the bookcase, the Townley Vase. Right, on a puteal, the Townley Venus.

Charles Townley became the most famous member of the family and another of the treasures now at Towneley is a conversation piece by Johan Zoffany of Townley in his London house surrounded by an imaginary arrangement of his major sculptures (over forty are represented).[lower-alpha 2] Engaged in discussion with him are three fellow connoisseurs, the palaeographer Charles Astle, Hon. Charles Francis Greville, F.R.S., and Pierre-François Hugues D'Hancarville.

Prominent in front are Townley's Roman marble of the Discobolos,[lower-alpha 3] the Nymph with a Shell, of which the most famous variant was also in the Borghese collection[lower-alpha 4] and a Faun of the Barberini type. On a pedestal in front of the fireplace, the Boys Fighting from the Barberini collection had been Towneley's first major purchase, in 1768 (Winckelmann had identified it as a lost original by Polyclitus). In point of fact, Towneley's only Greek original appears to have been the grave relief on the left wall above the Bust of a Maenad posed on a wall bracket.

The so-called Bust of Clytie[lower-alpha 5] perches on the small writing-table, in Zoffany's assembly of the Townley marbles. It was extensively reproduced in marble, plaster, and the white bisque porcelain called parian ware for its supposed resemblance to Parian marble. Goethe owned two casts of this.[10] The Bust of Clytie was apparently Townley's favourite sculpture and the one he took with him when he was forced to flee his home during the anti-Catholic riots of 1780.

The Townley Venus on a Roman well-head that serves as drum pedestal had been discovered by Gavin Hamilton at Ostia and quietly shipped out of the Papal States as two fragmentary pieces.[11] The marble Townley Vase, also furtively exported, stands on the bookcase at the rear: it was excavated about 1774 by Gavin Hamilton at Monte Cagnolo.

Notes

  1. Although the British Museum now uses "Townley" for all, as in the book by B.F. Cook – see below.
  2. In August 1781 Townley wrote to James Byres, the antiquary and dealer in Rome, that "Mr Zoffany is painting, in the Stile of his Florence tribune, a room in my house, wherein he introduces what Subjects he chuses in my collection. It will be a picture of extraordinary effect & truth..." (Kitto 2005).
  3. It was discovered at Hadrian's Villa in 1790 and purchased by Towneley in 1792; it was such an important addition to the Towneley marbles that Zoffany was called in to add it to the painting. The head looking forward was a controversial restoration.
  4. Now at the Musée du Louvre.
  5. Towneley purchased it directly from the Laurenzano family in Naples in July 1772 for 530 ducats (Kitto 2005)

References

  1. The Dictionary of National Biography.
  2. 1 2  Wroth, Warwick William (1885–1900). "Towneley, Charles". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  3. "Cavalry sports helmet". British Museum. Retrieved September 2010.
  4. "Lists of Royal Society Fellows 1660–2007". London: The Royal Society. Archived from the original on 24 March 2010. Retrieved 19 July 2010.
  5. Part of a marble sculpture of two boys fighting over a game of knucklebones. The British Museum.
  6. Charles Townley's cista mystica. The British Museum.
  7. Statue of a pair of dogs. The British Museum.
  8. Petition from the British Museum, Respecting Mr Townley's Collection. Hansard HC Deb 5 June 1805 vol 5 cc170-2.
  9. History of the collection. The British Museum.
  10. Francis Haskell and Nicholas Penny, 1981 Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture 1500–1900, p 68.
  11. Haskell and Penny 1981:68.
Attribution

Further reading

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