ART 4
2-DAY 17 March
v.7.20 |
| 1901:
VAN GOGH EXHIBITION |
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Born on 17 March 1685: Jean-Marc
Nattier, Parisian painter specialized in portraits,
who died on 07 November 1766. Like his brother Jean-Baptiste Nattier [27
Sep 1678 – 23 May 1726], he worked as a history painter, as had been
the intention of their father, the portrait painter Marc Nattier [1642 –
24 Oct 1705], but Jean-Marc is best known for his fashionable portraits.
His mother was the miniature painter Marie Nattier (née Courtois) [1655
– 13 Oct 1703]. — As well as being taught by his father, Jean-Marc Nattier was trained by his godfather, Jean Jouvenet, and attended the drawing classes of the Académie Royale, where in 1700 he won the Premier Prix de Dessin. From around 1703 he worked on La Galerie du Palais du Luxembourg. The experience of copying the work of Rubens does not, however, seem to have had a warming effect on his draftsmanship, which was described by the 18th-century collector Pierre-Jean Mariette as ‘cold’. Nattier was commissioned to make further drawings for engravers in the early part of his career, including those after Hyacinthe Rigaud’s famous state portrait of Louis XIV (1701) in 1710, which indicates that he had established a reputation while he was still quite young. Although he was offered a place at the Académie de France in Rome on the recommendation of Jouvenet, Nattier preferred to remain in Paris and further his career. In 1717 he nevertheless made a trip to Holland, where he painted portraits of Peter the Great and The Empress Catherine. The Tsar offered Nattier work at the Russian court, but the artist declined the offer. He remained in Paris for the rest of his life. — Nattier succeeded Hyacinthe Rigaud as the leading court portraitist of France. The son and brother of artists, he began his studies under the sponsorship of his godfather, Jean-Baptiste Jouvenet. He received early professional encouragement from Louis XIV when, in 1701, Nattier presented his drawing for the engraving after Rigaud's full-length portrait of the king. He was also influenced by Le Brun and Rubens, whose paintings he copied in Paris. In 1717 he went to Holland to work for Peter the Great and the next year was elected to membership in the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture. Thereafler he specialized in oil and pastel portraits, depicting the sitters as mythological figures. While reminiscent of a genre popular in the sixteenth century, these are completely different in spirit. Nattier portrayed many of the leading members of the court of Louis XV, but his reputation is firmly based on his portraits of the king, Queen Marie Lesczinska, and their daughters. He excelled as a painter of women, flattering his sitters by endowing them with the attributes of goddessesof Olympus and posing them against a backdrop of classical columns, sumptuous draperies, and decorative elements. — Giuseppe Baldrighi and Louis Tocqué [19 Nov 1696 – 10 Feb 1772] {qui, n'étant pas toqué, a épousé la fille de Nattier} were students of Nattier. LINKS Marie Adélaïde of France as Flora (1742, 94x128cm) _ In 1742 the Queen of France, Maria Leczinska, wife of Louis XV, impressed by Nattier's remarkable talent for portraits, requested that he paint her first daughter Henrietta [1727-1752]. A replica was made in 1745, probably for the Spanish Infanta Luisa Elisabetta, Henrietta's twin sister. The portrait shows Nattier's ability to construct an image that is something between 'naif' and 'flatterie'. The transposition into the mythological figure, the perfect turning of the body and the regularity of the brushstrokes do not suppress the characterization and recognizability of the face; the whole is rendered with a polished, silken pictorial style drawn from studies on Lebrun and Rubens. Marie Adélaïde of France as Diana (1745, 95x128cm) _ This painting represents Marie-Adélaïde (1732-1800), the third daughter of Louis XV. It is signed and dated lower left: Nattier pinxit 1745. The pendant of the painting (Marie Adelaide of France as Flora) is also in the Uffizi. Nattier specialized in portraying his sitters in mythological or allegorical fancy dress, and achieved great success with these portraits. Mademoiselle de Clermont "en Sultane" (1733, 109x105cm) _ The picture is a vivid example of French "turquerie" fashion; an elegant lady of the court, still wearing her ermine cloak, is painted as a sultana at the bath, surrounded by her slaves. Comtesse de Tillières (1750, 80x63cm) _ The silk pelisse of the the Comtesse is trimmed with squirrel fur. == Marc Nattier had a royal licence to reproduce the famous cycle of paintings The History of Marie de’ Medici by Rubens. Before he died, Marc made the licence over to his sons who produced a series of drawings after it for some of the foremost engravers of the day, including Gérard Edelinck, Bernard Picart and Gaspard Duchange. The drawings appeared in book form in 1710 under this cover:
In small print,
below the left corner of each is written something such as Rubens
pinxit I.M. Nattier delineavit, or just Rubens
pinxit; and at the lower right corner Carol!
Simonneau major scul:1709 or I.M.
Nattier delin. Cornellis Vermeunlen sculp. or I.M.
Nattier delin. B. Picard sculpsit or A.
Loir Sculp. ; at the lower right corner of each sheet
potential purchasers are notified by a notice such as Se
Vend à Paris chez le Sr.Duchange Graveur ordinaire du
Roy rüe St.Jacques au dessus de la rue des Mathurins devant
un Tapissier. Avec Privilege du Roy. or A
Paris chez le Sr. Nattier peintre de l'Academie Royale rue
Frementeau. Avec Privilege du Roy.
—(060311) |
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Died on 16 April (17 March?) 1619:
Denys Calvaert Dioniso
Fiammingo, Flemish painter and draftsman from Antwerp,
born in 1540, who emigrated to Italy in about 1562 and remained there for
the rest of his life. (In Italy he was called Dionisio Fiammingo.). He specialized
in Landscapes. He settled in Bologna, and although his work is in an undistinguished Mannerist style, he played an important role as a teacher. He established an academy in 1572 and had more than 100 students, among whom were some of the most distinguished artists of the Bolognese School:Albani, Domenichino, and Reni. The more celebrated academy of the Carracci was probably inspired by Calvaert's. — In 15567 he was inscribed in the registers of the painters corporation in Antwerp as a pupil of the landscape painter Kerstiaen van Queboorn (151578). Calvaert went to Bologna c. 1560, where he was to remain for the rest of his life. There he came under the protection of the influential Bolognini family and entered the workshop of Prospero Fontana the elder. After about two years he left Fontana to work with Lorenzo Sabatini, with whom he collaborated on several pictures, including the Holy Family with the Archangel St Michael (Bologna, S Giacomo Maggiore) and an Assumption (Bologna, Pin. N.). Calvaerts oeuvre is composed almost exclusively of religious works, ranging in size from vast altarpieces to small devotional pictures on copper. This sets him apart from other Netherlandish painters, notably those of the school of Prague, for whom Classical mythology was a constant source of inspiration. His first signed and dated work was Vigilance (1568; Bologna, Pin. N.); thereafter he developed a more original style, as in the Noli me tangere (Bologna, Pin. N.). However, these early works reveal Calvaerts inexperience in painting figures and the influence of Marten de Vos, whose work Calvaert must have seen in Antwerp before leaving for Italy. — Calvaert's students included Francesco Albani, Guido Reni, Domenichino, Francesco Gessi, Emilio Savonanzi, Giovan Giacomo Sementi. LINKS The Presentation of Mary (93x78cm; 850x485pix, 87kb) The Mystic Marriage of Saint Catherine (1490; 127kb) —(060311) |
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Born on 17 March 1686: Jean-Baptiste
Oudry, French artist specialized in Animals
who died on 30 April 1755. Studied under Nicolas
de Largillière. Oudry was a painter, tapestry designer, and illustrator. He was a student of Largillière and painted some portraits, but he is renowned chiefly as one of the outstanding animal painters of the 18th century. With Desportes he was the foremost exponent of hunting scenes and still-life with dead game. Some of his best work was done as a tapestry designer, and he was head of the Beauvais and Gobelins factories from 1734 and 1736 respectively. He also did book illustrations, notably for an edition of La Fontaine's Fables (1755). His son Jacques-Charles (1720-78), a flower and animal painter, sometimes collaborated with him. — Oudry's students included Jean-Germain Drouais LINKS Dead Roe (1721, 193x260cm) _ Dead Wolf (1721,193x260cm) _ These are two of Oudry's finest paintings. Swan Attacked by a Dog Louis XV Chassant le Cerf dans la Forêt de Saint Germain (1730) _ Fils du peintre Jacques Oudry, Jean-Baptiste développe un sens aigu de la vie animale et du paysage, qui amènent Louis XV à lui commander en 1728 une scène de chasse. Le tableau se présente comme un épisode pris sur le vif de la vie de cour au XVIIIe siècle, et témoigne d'un immense souci de précision dans les détails: chaque personnage est traité comme un portrait à part entière, et est parfaitement identifiable. Jean-Baptiste Oudry s'est lui-même représenté en bas à droite, en train de dessiner la scène, confirmant ainsi qu'il a peint cette toile d'après nature. De même, les chiens adoptent des attitudes très individualisées, et le peintre semble avoir traduit le caractère propre de chaque animal. Une attention particulière est également apportée au paysage qui présente une multitude de plans; ainsi, dans le lointain, se devine la ville de Saint-Germain-en-Laye. Une grande variété des mouvements et des attitudes, associée à une composition soignée, donne à cette oeuvre une grande qualité décorative, parfaitement reconnue en son temps: en effet, le roi acheta l'oeuvre dès 1730, et la fit immédiatement placer dans son cabinet de Marly. Laie et ses marcassins attaqués par des dogues (1748, 258x400cm). |
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Died on 17 March 1690: Jan
van Mieris, Dutch painter born on 17 (07?) Jun 1660. Born in Leiden, elder brother of Willem van Mieris and the son of Frans van Mieris the elder, under whom he first studied. He had intended to study under Gerard de Lairesse, but was dissuaded by the latter's dissolute lifestyle; it is not known under whom he then studied. He became a member of the Leiden guild in 1686 and in 1688 set out for Italy. In Venice he failed to find purchasers, and in Florence he received an invitation from Cosimo III de' Medici but was turned away on religious grounds. He died in Rome. He painted principally history subjects, but his earliest works were apparently genre scenes in his father's manner. — Jan van Mieris werd op 17 juni 1660 geboren in Leiden. Na een korte leertijd in het atelier van zijn vader, Frans van Mieris de Oude, ging Jan in de leer bij Gerard Lairesse om historische schilderkunst te studeren. Maar vanwege de weinig voorbeeldige levenswijze van Lairesse zag hij daar vrij snel weer van af. Op 14 juni 1686 voegde hij zich bij het St. Lucasgilde. Twee jaar later vertrok van Mieris naar Italië, waar hij, blijkende uit brieven gericht aan zijn moeder, geen schilderij verkocht. Op 17 maart 1690 stierf Jan van Mieris, ongehuwd en kinderloos, in Rome. Lady and Cavalier (1680, 29x22cm) — /S#*>Nude Sleeping in an Armchair (40x32cm; 1420x1141pix, 145kb) _ Her skin is covered with a dense network of black cracks. There is a silver gilt pitcher on the ground next to the armchair, which is backed up against a sculpted stone stela. Either she is in a forest, or the wall is covered with a tapestry landscape of a forest. —(060316) |
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Born on 17 March 1851: Julien
Dupré, French painter who died in April 1910. Dupré was one of the leading exponents of the second generation of Realist painters; a group that also includes Léon Lhermitte (1844-1925), Jules Bastien-Lepage (1848-1884) and Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret (1852-1929). Like J.F. Millet (1814-1875) and J. Breton (1827-1906) before them, these artists devoted their artistic careers to the depiction of the toils of the French peasant - often seen hard at work in the fields. Salon critics rightly perceived Julien Dupré as Breton's closest follower. Through idealization of form, he invested his peasant women with a heroic aura, though unlike his predecessor, his figures are usually engaged in vigorous action. His landscapes, with their cloudy skies and varied motifs, are also much more active. Their high key color and spontaneous brushwork have a vivacity and freshness that distinguishes them from the somber calm of Breton's scenes. Dupré's most enduring and powerful image is that of BAD>renXxXxxxx>>>a single Herculean female, positioned dramatically and elegantly in the foreground of the painting, pitching hay. His finely modeled figures pay tribute to his academic training, as well as his study of the works of Breton and Bouguereau; while his freer handling of the background areas, at times done with a palette knife, shows the influence of the Impressionists. Dupré received his artistic training in the academic studios of Isidore Pils (1815-1875), Desire-Francois Laugée and Henri Lehmann (1814-1882). He exhibited his first painting at the Paris Salon in 1876 and thereafter, became a regular exhibitor until his death in 1910. In 1880 he was awarded a third-class medal for Faucheurs de Luzerne and in 1881 he received a second-class medal for his La Récolte des Foins. His work was sought after internationally and he found a good market in the United States. In 1891 Dupré was described as: "one of the most rising artists of the French School. He is individual in his work, accurate as an observer, earnest as a painter, healthy in his instincts and intensely artistic in his impressions and translations of them... he is always one of the attractions at the Salon." Acknowledging his mastery at portraying both animals and humans powerfully, yet gracefully, one cannot help but pay tribute to his immense talent in being able to re-create nature's light on canvas a feat that many have attempted but few have succeeded in accomplishing. Whether it is the light filtering through a group of trees onto the figures and animals below or the warm effulgent sun bathing the lush French countryside, Dupré is always true to nature. In The White Cow several of M. Dupré's merits as a painter are exemplified. The cow taking a patient and intelligent interest in the operation of milking is superbly drawn, and her expression admirably rendered. The light and shade, the balance of composition, and the rendering and disposition of the figures combine in this picture to produce a canvas which pleases the spectator the more he examines it. — {Dupré du pré tirait son inspiration}. LINKS — La Vachère (48x65cm; _ ZOOMable) Dans le Pré (1881) Shepherdess with Goat, Sheep and Cow _ This Shepherdess is a beautiful example of the emerald green expanses for which he is so renowned. Country life was neither glorified nor depressing for Dupré, who repeatedly endeavored to capture life as it really was. Our young shepherdess affectionately glances at her goat who, by staring out at us, the viewers, has become the focal point of the canvas and makes us feel part of the action. Le Repos (71x48cm) La Faneuse (66x81cm) Laitière (39x55cm) Le Déjeuner de la Faneuse (56x66cm) Peasant Woman with Cows and Sheep (38x55cm) Returning From the Fields (46x33cm) — Back from the Fields (1895, 124x150cm) — The Harvesters (1889, 39x46cm) The Wheatfield (1882) La Récolte des Foins (1881, 65x81cm) A Shepherdess with her flock (61x50cm) different A Shepherdess with her flock (50x61cm) — Feeding Time (65x81cm) — In the Meadow (1881) —(060311) |
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>Died on 17 March 1890: John
Rogers Herbert, English painter born on 23 January
1810. — In 1826 he entered the Royal Academy Schools, London. He began exhibiting portraits at the Royal Academy in 1830 and until 1836 made his living chiefly through portraiture and book illustration. In 1836 Herbert visited Italy, and for the next few years his work consisted chiefly of Italian historical genre paintings such as The Appointed Hour (1835). Herbert greatly admired the architect A. W. N. Pugin and probably in 1840, through Pugin’s influence, was converted to Roman Catholicism. Subsequently, Herbert’s religious beliefs dictated the subjects of his work, for example Sir Thomas More and his Daughter (1844). Herbert was employed by William Dyce at the Schools of Design by 1842, at which time the two artists collaborated on a book of nursery rhymes, tales and jingles. Herbert’s style, like that of Dyce, was influenced by the Nazarenes, and he shared their concern with historical authenticity and their use of bright colors and hard outlines. LINKS –- “Wine To Gladden Our Hearts” Psalm 104 (77x64cm; 546x667pix, 78kb _ .ZOOM to 820x1000pix, 119kb _ .ZOOM+ to 1230x1500pix, 156kb) _ Psalm 104:14~15: You raise grass for the cattle and plants for our beasts of burden. You bring bread from the earth, and wine to gladden our hearts, oil to make our faces gleam, food to build our strength. — Sir Thomas More and his Daughter (1844, 85x110cm) _ Saint Thomas More [07 Feb 1478 – 06 Jul 1535], Lord Chancellor of England, was imprisoned in the Tower of London and charged with treason for not acknowledging King Henry VIII as the supreme head of the Church. He was beheaded on Tower Hill. While in the Tower, More was visited by his daughter Margaret Roper. Looking out of his window, More saw a group of monks being led away for execution for refusing to take the oath of supremacy. In all humility, More instantly drew a comparison between their situation, going to their deaths happily following a life of religious devotion, and his own: for his life had been spent in 'pleasure and ease'. — Laborare est Orare (1862, 97x176cm) _ harvesters. –- The Youth of Our Lord (1856; 444x700pix, 62kb _ .ZOOM to 888x1400pix, 96kb) _ Jesus, aged about 12, is perhaps winnowing (?), while Mary is spinning and Joseph is chiseling a piece of wood. –- The Hebrew Mother of Moses(1858, 140x96cm; 900x613pix, 45kb) _ In a rocky desert landscape, she is looking over her shoulder while giving from an amphora a drink to Moses, aged about 5. —(070122) |
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Born on 17 March 1591: Gerard
Seghers (or Zegers), Antwerp Flemish Baroque
painter of religious subjects, dealer, and collector, active mainly in Antwerp
but also in Italy and Spain, who died on 18 March 1651. — He grew up in Antwerp, a city that had only recently been liberated from the rebels by the Spanish troops. His father, a keeper of a wine tavern, originally had Calvinist sympathies but returned to the Catholic faith after 1585. Gerard was possibly trained, as afterwards his younger brother Jan Baptist Seghers who later became a goldsmith, by Gaspar de Crayer [1551–], the father of the well-known painter of the same name. At the age of 12 Seghers was listed as a student in the Guild of Saint Luke in Antwerp; the documents, unfortunately, fail to mention the name of his teacher, who may have been Abraham Janssen or Hendrick van Balen. At some time between 1611 and 1620 he visited Italy (and probably also Spain) and he became one of the very few noteworthy Flemish Caravaggesque artists. By the time he painted The Assumption of the Virgin (1629), however, he had fallen under the all-pervasive influence of Rubens. Seghers had a successful career supplying altarpieces for churches in Antwerp and Ghent and also enjoyed considerable patronage from clients in Spain. Pieter Franchoys was a student of Seghers. — LINKS — The Patient Job (192x242cm; 671x850pix, 92kb) _ This painting belongs to the series of large biblical scenes painted by the artist when he fell under the influence of Rubens. — Christ's Resurrection (324x240cm; 700x518pix, 202kb) _ Seghers fut l'un des peintres favoris des Jésuites dans les Pays-Bas du sud. Ce tableau, peut-être peint en Italie, fut placé sur le nouvel autel majeur de l'église des Jésuites de Courtrai construite de 1607 à 1611, qui devint l'église paroissiale Saint-Michel en 1785. Compris dans la vente des biens de l'ordre en 1776, le tableau restera en place du fait de ses dimensions. — Saint Francis of Assisi comforted by angels after his stigmatization (236x161cm; 700x477pix, 192kb) _ Le style de l'oeuvre se rattache encore à la période italienne et caravagesque de l'artiste. La présence d'un troisième ange musicien est inhabituelle dans l'iconographie des artistes flamands. — Saint Peter Repentant (1628, 700x481pix, 161kb) _ Les attributs du saint - le livre et la clef - apparaissent près du coq associé au reniement. Ce tableau connaîtra un grand succès et donnera naissance à plusieurs copies et répliques, dont une version est conservée à la cathédrale de Séville. |

In
1956, he went on a cruise; when the ship made a stop in Stockolm, he obtained
political asylum. There was not much demand for engravers there, but in 1959 the
chief royal engraver suddenly fell ill; Slania filled in and completed an assignment
very quickly, so he was hired full time. Slania engraved stamps for 32 countries
or postal jurisdictions, including the US, UK, France, Germany, China, and the
US, for which he made in 1993 a stamp that commemorated Grace
Kelly and another of Dean
Acheson. He engraved banknotes for 10 countries. He also engraved portraits
of prominent persons, and at least one of himself [image >].
He would sell a stamplike label showing Marilyn Monroe for as much as $50.
^
1901 show: Van
Gogh paintingsPaintings by the late Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh [30 Mar 1853 – 29 Jul 1890] are shown at the Bernheim-Jeune gallery in Paris. The 71 paintings, which captured their subjects in bold brushstrokes and expressive colors, caused a sensation across the art world. Eleven years before, while living in Auvers-sur-Oise outside Paris, van Gogh had committed suicide without any notion that his work was destined to win acclaim beyond his wildest dreams. In his lifetime, he had sold only one painting. One of his paintings--the Yasuda Sunflowers--sold for just under $40 million at a Christie's auction in 1987. Born in Zundert in the Netherlands on 30 March 1853, van Gogh worked as a salesman in an art gallery, a language teacher, a bookseller, and an evangelist among Belgium miners before settling on his true vocation as an artist. What is known as the "productive decade" began in 1880, and for the first few years he confined himself almost entirely to drawings and watercolors while acquiring technical proficiency. He studied drawing at the Brussels Academy and in 1881 went to the Netherlands to work from nature. The most famous work from the Dutch period was the dark and earthy The Potato Eaters (1885), which showed the influence of Jean-François Millet, a French painter famous for his peasant subjects. In 1886, van Gogh went to live with his brother, Théo, in Paris. There, van Gogh met the foremost French painters of the postimpressionist period, including Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Paul Gauguin, Camille Pissarro, and Georges Seurat. He was greatly influenced by the theories of these artists and under the advice of Pissarro he adopted the kind of colorful palette for which he is famous. His painting Portrait of Père Tanguy (1887) was the first successful work in his new postimpressionist style. In 1888, van Gogh, mentally exhausted and feeling he was becoming a burden on Théo, left Paris and took a house at Arles in southeastern France. The next 12 months marked his first great period, and working with great speed and intensity he produced such masterful works as his sunflower series [14 Sunflowers in a Vase >] and The Night Café (1888). He hoped to form a community of like-minded artists at Arles and was joined by Gauguin for a tense two months that culminated when van Gogh threatened Gauguin with a razor blade and then cut a piece of his own ear off. It was his first bout with mental illness, diagnosed as dementia. Van Gogh spent two weeks at the Arles Hospital and in April 1889 checked himself into the asylum at Saint-Rémy-de-Provence. He stayed there for 12 months and continued to work between recurrent attacks. One of the great paintings from this period was the swirling, visionary Starry Night (1889). In May 1890, he left the asylum and visited Théo in Paris before going to live with Paul-Ferdinand Gachet, a homeopathic doctor and friend of Pissarro, at Auvers-sur-Oise. He worked enthusiastically for several months, but his mental and emotional state soon deteriorated. On 27 July 1890, feeling that he was a burden on Théo and others, he shot himself. He died on 29 July 1890, in the arms of his brother. He had exhibited a few canvases at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris and in Brussels, and after his death both salons showed small commemorative exhibits of his work. Over the next decade, a handful of other van Gogh exhibits took place, but it was not until the Bernheim-Jeune show in 1901 that he was recognized as a truly important painter. In subsequent decades, his fame grew exponentially, and today his paintings are among the most recognized works of art in the world. LINKS |
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