Originally exhibited at the Royal Academy' Summer Exhibition in 1895, the year before Leighton died, Flaming June is one of the most important works by Sir Frederic Leighton. Almost 128 years after it was first shown at the RA, Leighton’s Victorian masterpiece returned to Piccadilly, where we went to see the show while in London. Having visited Leighton House in Holland Park a few years ago, we explored the artists extraordinary home and collections, so we were very keen to see this iconic painting. Displayed alongside additional works from the RA Collection, his contemporaries, those which inspired him and those which he in turn influenced, the show was wonderfully inspiring.
Painted during the end of the 19th century, when Leighton, the then-President of the RA, was enjoying recognition as one of the period’s most admired artists, Flaming June is a vivid fusion of old and new. With its neoclassical leanings and pose borrowed from Michelangelo’s sculpture Night in Florence’s Medici Chapels, the scene typifies Leighton’s reverence for historic tradition and technique, while tapping into the peculiarly Victorian taste for gorgeous, comatose women.
Across from the RA is Fortnum & Mason — one of our personal favourites. Having made reservations for lunch, we toodled around for a while before heading down to the F&M Wine Bar nestled on the Lower Floor Food Hall. Beginning with a glass of champagne, we shared Day Boat Fish Goujons with chips and seaweed tartare sauce, a crisp mixed lettuce salad, followed by the cheese board featuring a selection of British cheese, including Westcombe Cheddar, Rachel Goat's Cheese and Beauvale Blue served with cracker bread, celery and Fortnum's delicious Chutney, before taking the tube back to Sloane Square to prepare for dinner at Daphne's, an exquisite and fashionable restaurant in the heart of Chelsea.