Tuesday, November 17, 2020

French Neoclassical Painters in Rome - 1780s and 90s

Bénigne Gagneraux
Education of Achilles with Chiron the Centaur
1785
oil on canvas
private collection

Bénigne Gagneraux
Jupiter as a Satyr approaching the Nymph Calliope
1787
oil on panel
Galleria Borghese, Rome

Gagneraux has his languid nymph assume the pose of an admired and frequently imitated antique sculpture assembled in the early 16th century by restorers from a composite of parts, housed at the Vatican, and known as Sleeping Ariadne, or alternatively as Dying Cleopatra.

Bénigne Gagneraux
Cupid with Lion
1791
oil on canvas
private collection

Bénigne Gagneraux
Oedipus commending his Children to the Gods
1784
oil on canvas
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

"Bénigne Gagneraux (1756-1795) has always been a well known and much admired figure in Dijon, where he was born and trained, and in Sweden, where there have been sizeable collections of his work since 1784, when King Gustav III visited Gagneraux's studio in Rome and made his first purchase, Oedipus commending his Children to the Gods, in many ways the finest history painting Gagneraux ever produced.  During his lifetime Gagneraux was undoubtedly one of the most highly esteemed of all French artists working in Rome in the late eighteenth century.  He was praised by a contemporary critic in 1788 as the best colourist in Rome  . . .  and Goethe, in his Italienische Reise, Vol. III, ranked him with Drouais, Desmarais, Gauffier and Saint-Ours as the artists to whom France owed its great reputation.  He was certainly among the cultural élite of Rome in the late 1770s, when Piranesi and Mengs were still alive, when Fuseli and Sergel were still working there, and in the early 1780s, when he kept company with Canova, Batoni, Gavin Hamilton, Goethe and [Jacques-Louis] David.   . . .   Gagneraux left Rome in February 1793 after the second uprising against the French.  His studio had been ransacked, his brother, a démocrate enragé, had already been hounded out of Rome; he had suffered with a high fever and arrived in Florence . . . in a nervous and troubled state.  On 18th August 1795 he fell from a window and died two hours later. This was interpreted as suicide, not accident." 

– from a review article by Helen Weston in the Burlington Magazine (November, 1983)

Bénigne Gagneraux
Horse frightened by Snake
1787
oil on canvas
Musée Magnin, Dijon

Bénigne Gagneraux
Genius of Peace halting the Horses of Mars
1793
oil on canvas
Musée d'art et d'histoire de Genève

Jean-Baptiste-Frédéric Desmarais
Paris with Golden Apple
1787
oil on canvas
National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa

Jean-Germain Drouais
Marius at Minturnae
1786
oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre

Jean-Germain Drouais
Wounded Roman Soldier
1785
oil on canvas
Musée du Louvre

Louis Gauffier
Odysseus discovers Achilles amongst the Daughters of Lycomedes
1791
oil on canvas
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Louis Gauffier
Pygmalion and Galatea
1797
oil on canvas
Manchester Art Gallery

Jean-Pierre Saint-Ours
Wedding among the Germanic Tribes
1787
oil on canvas
Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen, Munich

Jean-Pierre Saint-Ours
Reunion of Cupid and Psyche
ca. 1789-92
oil on panel
Los Angeles County Museum of Art

Jean-Pierre Saint-Ours
Ancient Olympic Games
ca. 1786-91
oil on canvas
Musée d'art et d'histoire de Genève

In the background of his Olympic Games, at upper right, Saint-Ours has placed a pastiche of one of the two "Horse Tamer" statue groups, which had survived since antiquity on the Quirinal Hill in Rome.