“Youngsters enjoy showing off with banners. It is
usually those young men that carry them who have been conscripted for military
service that year or those who have already completed their service. At some
places, the banners from all chapels of ease are brought to the parish for
Resurrection Procession.” (Niko Kuret, Praznično leto Slovencev [Holidays
through the Year in Slovenia])
A church banner is
an ecclesiastical flag bearing religious symbols and hanging on a horizontal
bar. The canvas is painted with sacred motifs on both sides and is sewn into a
bigger piece of colour cloth or brocade, characteristically shaped at the lower
edge. The edge is decorated with tassels and hemmed with fringes. The very
image can be bordered with a golden band in the manner of a frame. The banner
on the horizontal bar is freely suspended on one or more load-bearing poles,
depending on its size and weight. Whether carried in a procession or placed
inside a church, the banners considerably contributed to the rich atmosphere of
a religious holiday, and at many places they were exhibited throughout the
year.
Several banners
have found their home in the holdings of the National Gallery of Slovenia, with
some of them being included in its permanent exhibition. As a rule, only the
pictorial parts of the objects have been preserved.
Since 2009, during preparation works for the exhibition An Outline of Late Baroque Painting in Carniola and for the Gallery’s new permanent exhibition, we,
the National Gallery restorers−conservators, have treated three banners and one
is still in the process. All of them were already restored in the past, which,
however, does not facilitate the work. In spite of the unquestioned quality of
the paintings and the importance of the artists, the banners were usually lined
onto a secondary canvas (completely or just onto bands) on the side that seemed
less interesting or more extensively damaged, and were subsequently treated and framed as conventional pictures.
Professional
ethics and understanding of a work of art as an entirety require different
approaches nowadays as regards both the restoration−conservation process and
the presentation of this type of art objects. The examples we present here are
works by four Slovenian painters, three from the Baroque period and one from
the time of Realism: Fortunat Bergant (1721–1769), Anton Cebej (1722–after
1774), Leopold Layer (1752–1828) and Jurij Šubic (1855–1890).
Equally important
for the National Gallery of Slovenia as restoration-conservation interventions
meeting the latest standards of profession is to come as close as possible, in
terms of displaying and in accordance with the space available, to the
character and content of the work of art. Trends in exhibiting banners indicate
that they should be hung freely, provided the structural firmness allows it.
10 May–6 June 2018
National Gallery of Slovenia
Prešernova 24
1000 Ljubljana