Showing posts with label still-life. Show all posts
Showing posts with label still-life. Show all posts

Thursday, August 22, 2019

Painted Scenes and Figures from the Nineteenth Century

Jean Béraud
Sunday at the Church of Saint Philippe du Roule, Paris
1877
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"When this painting was exhibited in the Salon of 1877 it was seen as a document of contemporary Parisian life.  Béraud depicts a view of the rue du Faubourg St-Honoré, which had recently become a fashionable shopping street.  The church was designed in the eighteenth century by the architect J.F. Chalgrin."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

Samuel Butler
Mr Heatherley's Holiday - An Incident in Studio Life
1874
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

"It was Heatherley's that set me wrong.  This is Butler's largest and most successful painting.  It satirises the dusty, macabre jumble out of which 'grand style' Victorian classicism was expected to arise.  Heatherley's art school in Newman Street, which Butler attended for a number of years, was run by the old man shown here, who famously never took a holiday.  His mending of a skeleton misused by students pinpoints Butler's rejection of academicism."

– curator's notes from Tate Gallery

Charles Chaplin
Young Girl Drawing
ca. 1860-66
oil on panel
Bowes Museum, Barnard Castle, County Durham

"Chaplin rarely used dark colours, preferring to apply a standard palette of pastel shades of pink, blue and yellow.  His fondness for these shades accentuates his almost transparent flesh tones.  His contemporaries praised his handling of lavish fabrics, paying tribute to his life-like portrayal of satins, gauzes and taffetas." 

– curator's notes from the Bowes Museum

Thomas Eakins
Between Rounds
1898-99
oil on canvas
Philadelphia Museum of Art

"Most of Eakins's paintings after 1886 were portraits, but he returned to sporting subjects in the late 1890s with a series that he began after attending professional boxing matches at the Philadelphia Arena (then located at the intersection of Broad and Cherry Streets, diagonally across from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts).  The resulting canvases were as revolutionary in their subject matter as his rowing scenes had been more than two decades earlier."

– curator's notes from the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Thomas Eakins
Billy Smith - Sketch for Between Rounds
ca. 1898
oil on canvas
Philadelphia Museum of Art

"Eakins fastidiously planned Between Rounds.  Susan Macdowell Eakins later recalled, 'In Between Rounds every person in the picture posed for him.  The interior was the Hall used by the fighters.'  Although the painting does not depict a specific bout, Eakins combined details from several to give it verisimilitude and worked diligently to capture the atmospheric effects of dust and smoke in the arena."

 – curator's notes from the Philadelphia Museum of Art

circle of Théodore Géricault
Portrait of a Young Man
ca. 1822-23
oil on canvas
Harvard Art Museums

Acquired in the 1940s by the Fogg Art Museum at Harvard University, at a time when the painting was still erroneously believed to be a Géricault self-portrait.

William Michael Harnett
Still Life with Bric-a-Brac
1878
oil on canvas
Harvard Art Museums

"This painting portrays a group of exotic objects from the collection of William Hazleton Folwell, the Philadelphia dry-goods importer who commissioned the work.  Comprising genuine antiques, contemporary ceramics, and modern replicas, Folwell's collection reflects the eclecticism of Victorian taste and the influence of the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition held in 1876.  This international fair introduced Americans to objects form around the world and sparked widespread interest in collecting exotica."

– curator's notes from the Philadelphia Museum of Art

Antonio Mancini
St John the Baptist
ca. 1890-95
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

"Provenance: Until 1920, Mary Smyth (Mrs. Charles) Hunter (b. 1856 - d. 1933), London and Hill House, Epping, England.  Mrs. Hunter almost certainly acquired the painting directly from the artist.  She and her husband patronized him, and Mancini stayed with them during a visit to London in 1908.  Sold in 1920 by Mrs. Hunter to the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston for £2000 ($8200)."

– curator's notes from the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Édouard Manet
The Brioche
1870
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"Manet reportedly called still life the 'touchstone of the painter.'  From 1862 to 1870 he executed several large-scale tabletop scenes of fish and fruit, of which this is the last and most elaborate.  It was inspired by the donation to the Louvre of a painting of a brioche by Jean-Siméon Chardin, the eighteenth-century French master of still life.  Like Chardin, Manet surrounded the buttery bread with things to stimulate the senses – a brilliant white napkin, soft peaches, glistening plums, a polished knife, a bright red box – and, in traditional fashion, topped the brioche with a fragrant flower."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

Jean-François Millet
Retreat from the Storm
ca. 1846
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"The impending storm poses a real threat to this woman and her child, whose subsistence depends on the stray sticks of firewood they have gathered.  Throughout the 1840s the number of homeless peasants increased dramatically in France, reaching a crisis in the recession of 1847 and contributing to the fall of King Louis-Philippe in the 1848 revolution."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

Eduardo Rosales
After the Bath
ca. 1869
oil on canvas
Museo del Prado, Madrid

"Este desnudo es uno de los cuadros más unánimemente admirados del pintor  hasta el punto de haber sido comparado con la Venus del espejo (National Gallery, Londres) de Diego Velázquez  aun cuando se trata, sin lugar a dudas, de un boceto.  Representa a una mujer madura en pie, desnuda ye de espaldas, que se inclina hacia la izquierda para secarse la pierna, levemente flexionada, con un paño blanco.  El cortinaje verde, que cae ampuloso por la derecha, ye la pose de la modelo, refinada y cauta, aseguran que se trata de una composición de estudio." 

– curator's notes from Museo del Prado

Paul Signac
Jetty at Cassis - Opus 198
1889
oil on canvas
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"Between 1887 and 1891 Signac spent the warmer months pursuing his two passions, marine painting and boating, on excursions to seaside resorts.  One of five views made during a trip to the Mediterranean port of Cassis in April-June 1889, this work was singled out for praise when the series debuted at the Salon des Indépendants later that year.  At Cassis, Signac found 'white, blue and orange, harmoniously spread over the beautiful rise and fall of the land – all around the mountains, with rhythmic curves.'  Until 1894 he evoked analogies with musical compositions by inscribing each of his pictures with an opus number."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

Alfred Sisley
The Seine at Port Marly - Piles of Sand
1875
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

"Of all the landscapes Alfred Sisley painted in and around Marly-le-Roi, where he lived from 1875 to 1878, this scene of workers dredging sand to facilitate barge traffic is perhaps the most original.  Generally, the Impressionists showed the Seine as a place of weekend leisure for Parisians, painting activities such as boating, yachting, promenading, and dining.  Sisley depicted the river during the workweek, along with some of the men who depended on it for their livelihood."

 curator's notes from the Art Institute of Chicago

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
The Streetwalker
ca. 1890-91
oil on cardboard
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

"As early as 1901 the woman in this painting was identified as a streetwalker.  Her name, however, has been lost to history, only the nickname La Casque d'Or (Golden Helmet), which refers to her wig, has survived.  She sits in the garden of Monsieur Forest, Lautrec's neighbor in Montmartre."

– curator's notes from the Metropolitan Museum

French Pictures (19th-century) from the Art Institute

Edgar Degas
Henri Degas and his Niece, Lucie Degas
ca. 1875-76
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Portrait of Jeanne Wenz
1886
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Edgar Degas
Singers on the Stage
ca. 1877-79
pastel over monotype
Art Institute of Chicago

The Singer

Nay! sing no more thy wild delusive strain
(I heard them say, while I my song pursued),
'Tis but the rage of thy delirious brain
(I heard them say, yet still my song renewed);
Nay! sing no more with reckless, idle breath
Of man immortal and of life to come,
For one brief moment scan the face of death,
Then be thy foolish song for ever dumb;
Behold the dusty ash that once was fire,
And mark the summer leaf in autumn fall,
Watch thou the wavering breath of man expire,
And know that Death hath lordship over all
(I heard them say with many a scornful word,
Yet still sang on as one who nothing heard.)

– William Gay (ca. 1890)

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
Ballet Dancers
1885
oil on plaster, transferred to canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Edgar Degas
The Ballet Master
ca. 1872
watercolor
Art Institute of Chicago

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
May Milton
1895
oil and pastel on cardboard
Art Institute of Chicago

Édouard Manet
Sea View, Calm Weather
1864
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Édouard Manet
Beggar with a Duffle Coat (Philosopher)
ca. 1865-67
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Édouard Manet
Fish (Still Life)
1864
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Édouard Manet
The Man with the Dog
ca. 1882
pastel on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Édouard Manet
The Absinthe Drinker
1862
etching
Art Institute of Chicago

Édouard Manet
Dead Christ with Angels
ca. 1866-67
etching and aquatint
Art Institute of Chicago

Édouard Manet
Dead Christ with Angels
ca. 1866-67
copperplate, etched and aquatinted
Art Institute of Chicago

Henri Fantin-Latour
Édouard Manet
1867
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Monday, August 19, 2019

18th-century Paintings by Prominent Academicians

Jean-Joseph Taillasson
Cleopatra discovered by Rodogune to have Poisoned the Nuptial Cup
(scene from Pierre Corneille's Rodogune)
1791
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

François-Guillaume Ménageot
Martyrdom of St Sebastian
ca. 1780
oil on canvas
Haggerty Museum, Marquette University, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Nicolas-Guy Brenet
Sleeping Endymion
1756
oil on canvas
Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, Massachusetts

François Boucher
Judgment of Paris
1754
oil on canvas
Wallace Collection, London

Jean-Jacques Bachelier
Still-life with Flowers and a Violin
ca. 1750
oil on canvas
Art Gallery of South Australia, Adelaide

Noël Hallé
Death of Seneca
1750
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Jean-François de Troy
Bathsheba at her Bath
1750
oil on canvas
Philbrook Museum of Art, Tulsa, Oklahoma

Jean-François de Troy
Judgment of Solomon
1742
oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Lyon

Jean-François de Troy
Cupid and Psyche
ca. 1735
oil on canvas
private collection

Jean-François de Troy
Time unveiling Truth
ca. 1733
oil on canvas
National Gallery, London

Jean-François de Troy
Ariadne on Naxos
1725
oil on canvas
Musée Fabre, Montpellier

"If the opportunities in the field of easel painting were increasing in the eighteenth century, commissions for altarpieces or large decorative schemes were diminishing.  This latter was Cochin's primary concern when he considered the position of painting in the decade that followed the death of Louis XIV and described Cazes's studio, where Chardin had trained:  At this time, the art of painting had neither support nor protector and made its pitiful way amid many tribulations.  With the exception of Monsieur Le Moyne, Monsieur de Troy, and some portraitists, all artists lived in a mediocrity close kin to penury.  There were few pictures to paint for individuals, and church commissions were rare and paid at so low a price that it was barely enough to live on.  . . .  They were nevertheless much coveted, since there was at the time no other means of making one's talent known."

– The Académie Royale de Peinture et de Sculpture: The Birth of the French School, 1648-1793 by Christian Michel, published in France in 2012, translated by Chris Miller and published by Getty Research Institute in 2018

Jean Jouvenet
Raising of Lazarus
ca. 1711
oil on canvas
Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Charles-Antoine Coypel
Athalie questions Joas
(scene from Jean Racine's Athalie)
1741
oil on canvas
Musée des Beaux-Arts de Brest

Charles-Antoine Coypel
Psyche abandoned by Cupid
(scene from ballet)
1730
oil on canvas
Palais des Beaux-Arts de Lille

Noël-Nicolas Coypel
Triumph of Galatea
1727
oil on canvas
private collection

Jean-Baptiste Santerre
Portrait of a Young Woman with a Letter
before 1717
oil on canvas
private collection

Jean-Baptiste Santerre
Portrait of a Sculptor
ca. 1700-1710
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Jean-Baptiste Santerre
Self-portrait
1704
oil on canvas
Château de Versailles

Friday, August 9, 2019

Giorgio Morandi (1890-1964) - Paintings (1920-1962)

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1920
oil on canvas
Pinacoteca di Brera, Milan

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
ca. 1925
oil on canvas
Hermitage, Saint Petersburg

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1943
oil on canvas
Musei Vaticani, Rome

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1946
oil on canvas
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

"Giorgio Morandi was born on July 20, 1890, in Bologna, Italy, one of the oldest and most prestigious University towns in Europe.  Nearly all his life was spent there working quietly in a modest studio and apartment that he shared with his three sisters.  Except for occasional trips to Venice, Florence, or Rome for exhibitions of his paintings and etchings, or summer excursions to the village of Grizzana in the Apennine hills above his native city, Morandi scarcely ever left Bologna.  He was exceptionally tall, thoughtful, and soft spoken, and notwithstanding his low-key public profile – Morandi agreed to only two published interviews, both toward the end of his life  his paintings came to be known and in demand throughout Europe and North and South America.  He was quickly embraced by the intellectual elite of Italy, being taken up by well-known painters, prominent writers and publishers, and distinguished art historians and professors.  As early as 1934, in a public address by Roberto Longhi, then Professor of Renaissance Art at the University of Bologna and unofficial cultural czar of Italy, Morandi was recognized as perhaps the greatest living painter in his country."

– from exhibition notes (2008) at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1946
oil on canvas
Tate Gallery

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1948-49
oil on canvas
Museo Thyssen-Bornemisza, Madrid

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1949
oil on canvas
Museum of Modern Art, New York

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1950
oil on canvas
private collection

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1952
oil on canvas
private collection

"A picture is a gadget.  It uses its technical devices to bring off its desired effects.  For example, there's the question of how a picture creates depth and distance.  How does it indicate which of the things it depicts are further away than which?  And by how far?  There are basically five ways.  The first is overlapping.  Things are simply laid behind one another.  The second is scale.  Things become smaller as they retreat.  The third is ground position.  Receding things are placed further upstage on a ground surface.  The fourth is volume.  Things use their dimensions to establish distances amongst themselves.  The fifth is focus.  Remoter things get blurrier.  Each device is a distancer, a depth-maker.  Each can be used independently; often they will be used together.  They can also be used inconsistently.  

The ones to pay attention to here are overlap, ground position and volume.  Giorgio Morandi's still lives are famous for their quiet but tense poetry.  They feature a cast of smallish inanimate objects.  These are bottles, vases, bowls, jugs, cups, tubs, boxes – but no fruit or vegetables.  These objects stand on a blank tabletop, and quite often backed against a wall.  They're typically arranged like a group portrait, with two rows, one in front of another.  They form close and nervous families – huddled, withdrawn.  They appear in numerous variations on this theme.  The poetry arises from a recurring trick involving the way they handle depth and distance." 

– Tom Lubbock, from an exhibition review (2009) published in The Independent (London)

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1955
oil on canvas
Art Institute of Chicago

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1955
oil on canvas
private collection

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1956
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Australia, Canberra

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
ca. 1956
oil on canvas
private collection

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1957
oil on canvas
private collection

Giorgio Morandi
Still Life
1962
oil on canvas
National Galleries of Scotland

Paolo Monti
Studio of Giorgio Morandi, Bologna
1981
photograph
Fondo Paolo Monti, Civico Archivio Fotografico, Milan