Art

For the tennis enthusiast looking for a cursory introduction to some distinguished paintings depicting tennis, it is hoped that the following few examples will suffice.

For the art enthusiast wanting to dig deep into tennis and art, Cees de Bondt’s website is highly recommended. His blog on The Death of Hyacinth not only deals with the mysterious painter of an early 17th century work, but also encompasses a wide selection of other real tennis works. Other works can be found in his Tennis and Art section, not to mention a history of lesser known tennis courts in Europe.

David and Bathsheba

As anachronisms and anatopisms go, slapping a real tennis court in the middle of a scene depicting David and Bathsheba (2 Samuel 11) is a pretty big one. This occurred not once, but at least eleven times in Flanders in the 16th century.

The series of paintings depict David twice, once as he gazes at the nude Bathsheba bating in a pool, and once as he hands sealed orders to her husband Uriah at the castle gate. In the middle of the scene is a tennis court, where singles or doubles is being played. The tennis court is pretty rudimentary and there is only a hint of a tambour or winning gallery in a couple of the paintings.

Most depict markers sitting on a bench, and some even show a chase being marked by hand.

One example of the painting, held by the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston, Massachussets, can helpfully be explored here, and more details about the series of unknown origins can be seen here.

 

Lucas Gassel – David and Bathsheba
 

Attributed to Herri met de Bles – David and Bathsheba
 

Also Lucas Gassel – David and Bathsheba

The Death of Hyacinth

 

The Death of Hyacinth was a popular theme in renaissance art, though most showed the original story where Apollo hits his lover with a discus by accident.

In 1561, however, a new, Italian translation of Ovid’s Metamorphoses by Giovanni Andrea dell’Anguillara was published. The story about a discus competition was replaced by a tennis match, which must by now have been a highly regarded and widely known sport.

Presumably inspired by this new translation, the death of Hyacinth could hence be depicted with a tennis racket or a discus.

The most popular depiction is probably that of Giambattista Tiepolo from 1752-3. As well as balls and racket in the foreground, a net and court can be glimpsed behind the crowd of onlookers.

Portrayals of the death of Hyacinth also concerns the most renowned tennis artist, Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio. Unfortunately for him, his renown comes from when he reportedly killed his tennis opponent in 1606 before being forced to flee Rome. An exploration of this famous incident, along with the moment’s inspiration for a Death of Hyacinth painting, can be seen in detail on Cees de Bondt’s blog.

 

Giambattista Tiepolo – The Death of Hyacinth
 

After Caravaggio – The Death of Hyacinth

French Revolution

 

The most notable tennis event of the 19th century may have happened on court, but rackets and balls were conspicuously absent. Tennis will forever have a place in French history for its small staging role in the French revolution.  It was 1789 and the third estate gathered on the court at Versailles and said:

“We swear never to separate ourselves from the National Assembly, and to reassemble wherever circumstances require, until the constitution of the realm is drawn up and fixed upon solid foundations.”

This landmark event of French history was intended to be immortalized in a painting by Jacques-Louis David. In the event, the planned 400 by 660cm work proved to be prohibitively expensive for David, but the surviving sketch provided inspiration for some of his successors. It also is a fine presentation of a tennis court, complete with a clearly identifiable tambour, penthouse and side galleries.

 

Jacques-Louis David – The Tennis Court Oath (drawing)
 

Jacques-Louis David – The Tennis Court Oath (incomplete)
 

Jacques-Louis David – The Tennis Court Oath (painting)
 

Auguste Couder – The Tennis Court Oath

Leamington Dinner Match

 

Originally commissioned to help fund Leamington Tennis Court Club repair its leaking roof in the early 1980s, The Dinner Match is now one of the most easily recognised paintings in the world of real tennis.

Believed to be the first painting to portray a tennis court front and centre in around 200 years, LTCC have gifted copies of the painting on tours all around the world. Hence you are likely to find The Dinner Match tucked away (or, more likely, front and centre) in the club rooms of every court you visit.

Full details can be found here.

 

Anthony Hobson – The Dinner Match