Thursday, November 5, 2015

Constantin Guys

Constantin Guys
Young Woman with Blue & Black Dress
c. 1863
Metropolitan Museum

Constantin Guys
Parisian Woman seen from the Back
1850s
Metropolitan Museum

Constantin Guys
Woman with Parasol
c. 1860-65
Getty

Constantin Guys (1802-1892) was the favorite living artist of Charles Baudelaire, whose reputation as an art critic was (and remains) formidable. Baudelaire could have chosen Manet or Delacroix instead, but it turns out that they too were huge fans of the cosmopolitan Guys. He was born in the Netherlands and traveled the world in his youth as journalist-illustrator, later settling for long periods in Paris and in London. Both magazines and collectors were keen for his seemingly casual drawings. More than Delacroix, even more than Manet, Guys was perceived as a guide to the new rootless urban superficial fashionable life in the streets. On the other hand, he never became a full-fledged art star, courted by museums, as many of the orthodox easel-style Romantics and Impressionists would be. Thus, Manet and Delacroix are still highly admired, while Guys seems chiefly to be remembered for the sake of Baudelaire.

Constantin Guys
Woman in Tiered Gown
19th century
Metropolitan Museum

Constantin Guys
Two Grisettes
19th century
Metropolitan Museum
(gift of Louisine Havemeyer)

Constantin Guys
Two Women with Fans
19th century
Metropolitan Museum
(gift of Louisine Havemeyer)

Constantin Guys
Leaving the Theatre
19th century
Metropolitan Museum

Constantin Guys
Women in Carriage
19th century
Morgan Library

Constantin Guys
Coachmen
19th century
National Gallery of Art (U.S.)

Constantin Guys
The Brighton Coach
19th century
National Gallery of Art (U.S.)

Constantin Guys
A Carriage in London
c. 1848-56
Metropolitan Museum

Constantin Guys
Promenade in the Bois
19th century
National Gallery of Art (U.S.)

Constantin Guys
Officers in a Brothel
19th century
National Gallery of Art (U.S.)

Constantin Guys
Women Dancing in a Brothel
c. 1865
Metropolitan Museum