Nineteenth-Century Painting (Compass History of Art)
Nineteenth-Century Painting (Compass History of Art)
Nineteenth-Century Painting (Compass History of Art)
compass
Books century-
painting
georges peillex
compass history of art
$2.25
COMPASS HISTORY OF ART
Greek Painting
Renaissance Painting
Seventeenth-Century Painting
fury Painting
Nineteenth-Century
Painting
Georges Peillex
lolland.
Contents
Introduction 1
Neo-Classicism 4
David - Prud^hon - Ingres
Romanticism 8
Gros - Géricault - Delacroix - Chassériau
Realism 21
Courbet - Daumier - Millet
Impressionism 32
Monet - Pissarro - Sisley - Manet - Renoir - Degas - Cézanne
Illustrations
Biographical Notes
Captions
Nineteenth-Century Painting
Introduction
such were the developments it brought forth, such was the scale and im-
portance of their repercussions, that it deserves to be called 'unique'. That
century saw the end of one age and the opening of another - one whose
discoveries, inventions, novel problems and expedients can be compared
to mines of unknown ores, to windows opened wide upon a future whose
astounding richness we can begin to estimate only today. This was the
great century of revolutions. It turned its back upon the past, it sounded
the doom of unendurable conventions, and it made an effort greater than
any that had gone before to break the tyranny of habit and burst the
shackles by which art was bound. The nineteenth century did for art what
the French Revolution had done for politics and social life. It brought,
beyond all doubt, a transition from one world to another, and it launched
an irrevocable process in which one idea after another was overthrown
and replaced by concepts that left no single aspect of life the same.
The nineteenth century gave birth to modern times. However, this is
far from being an adequate statement, for the century presents us with a
spectacle made up of the richest and most varied elements, densely packed,
yet torn by violent contrasts and collisions - the products of the very
things thatmade it great. Death is rarely welcome, and the tenacity with
which the poor, surviving legacy of Michelangelo and Raphael was de-
fended by its dwindling band of champions served only to show how
hopeless their cause was.
Only perhaps, if it erupts with sufficient violence, can we tell a revolu-
tion for what it is. Such eruptions, nevertheless, are not spontaneous
events. They should be seen, rather, as the outcome of a series of isolated
and often unrelated happenings. The result is a state of apparent con-
fusion, and time alone can resolve it by the process of slow precipitation,
a crystallization of obscure phenomena, each one of which is a different
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 2
aspect of some great idea that is advancing irresistibly into human con-
sciousness. In the nineteenth century, therefore, two things can be
observed in coexistence or in conflict: the last exemplars of a moribund
tradition, and a new art, vehement in its self-assertion, aiming at the
conquest of freedom, and engaged in the greatand salutary task of re-
establishing the virtues of creativeness. Feeble as the old tradition had
become, it was buttressed by the bourgeoisie of the time (no matter
though their own traditions went no further back than 1789), and when
modern art had at last emerged triumphant, the bourgeois world was still
there, unsubdued.
The movement which set painting in the nineteenth century on the
road to such intoxicating possibilities was a great deal more than just a
change in taste. Its roots went very deep indeed, deep into the philosophic
flood that had overwhelmed the ancien régime. Not France alone, but
Europe and the whole of the western world, were in a state of radical
transformation, and one feature of this general metamorphosis was the
change that took place in the very fundamentals of art. Mankind's new
situation and the possibilities that now lay open to the art of painting
were both products of the same set of principles. To gain some notion of
their range and impact one need only recall that art had always in the past
been harnessed to some purpose which was not her own - to religion or
mythology or the \ agarics of princes.
It was not the citizen alone whose independence was assured by the
Declaration of the Rights of Man; the artist was emancipated too, set
free to thinkand paint as he pleased and to pursue whatever line his own
perceptions might suggest, in total liberty from all accepted canons. Pre-
viously unsuspected paths now disclosed themselves, roads leading to a
land too vast to be immediately surveyed. Never again was the artist to
be indentured to the powers that be, a slave bound hand and foot to aca-
demic rules whose deeper raison d'etre had long since disappeared. The
days of strictconvention, the days at force majeure, were over. The artist
was now called upon to answer for himself, to bring forth the fruit of
personal experience and give expression to the thoughts which his com-
merce with nature and with life had engendered deep within him. A task
was laid upon him now, both taxing and inspiring; side by side with phi-
losophers and social thinkers, with economists and men of science, he
was to take an equal share in the building of modern times. Countless
disco v e made in the pursuit of this vocation. New ideas, theories,
and methods emerged, and a whole range of possibilities was revealed
that widened the field of his enquiry and experiment far beyond its accept-
ed bounds he mould in which modern art is cast represents the aggre-
I
Then the pole that attracted painters began to shift. Little by little, but
irresistibly, it moved, and soon the world was acknowledging the primacy
of France.
Neo-Classicism
David {fig. 1)
When David started painting, fashion was still far from abandoning the
superficial charms of the Rococo, and the style of Fragonard was the
one in which David adorned Monsieur Ledoux's new house. It required
a visit to Italy two years later to show him where his true vocation lay. He
did not greatly like the antique at first, alleging that it lacked warmth.
Soon, however, the Graeco-Roman spirit proved too strong for him, and
he spent the next five years in Rome, Naples, and Pompeii, in a ceaseless
effort to penetrate the secret of its grandeur. He discovered Caravaggio
too, and was tempted for a w hile by the art of the Baroque, but the classic
order regained its hold on him in the end. After a visit to Flanders, where
he studied the work of Rubens, he went back to Italy to carry out a royal
commission. This was the Serment des Horaces (The Oath of the Horatii)
which Pans acclaimed, in 17S5, as the banner of the new classical school.
Indeed, it ma) have needed all the rigour of the cold intellect which was
at the core of Da\ id's nature to sweep away the simperings that still suf-
ficed for current taste. DavicTs incursion, therefore, seemed like an out-
burst of energy, a stern determination to re-establish order in thought
and works betray, for all that, the marks of the social
feeling alike. His
class for which the) were designed. His style, severe when handling
subjects taken from antiquity, full of feeling when concerned with the
emotions o( the common people, was always adaptable; he could cele-
brate Imperial pomp when required, just as he could be #0/0/// in his youth
when called on to adorn the apartment of some actress. Yet reason, that
same reason which the Jacobins had deified, never left him for a moment.
David knew nothing of nature or of man as an individual. Like his style,
he was shackled to the past, a prisoner of a pre-conceived 'grandeur'.
He can he considered a man oi' the nineteenth century, for he took part
in its events and gave account of them, but, in general, he was
a pictorial
less a member its pioneers. His powerful sense
o( the centur> than one of
o( design, lor example, invested the structure of his compositions with a
strict geometry which, to the lasting profit of his pupils, rescued many a
principle from neglect. It should also be noted that he made one capital
contribution to sending the new art on its way - not by any pictorial
achievement but by a far-reaching act m the realm of politics. In 1793, the
Convention, acting on his proposal, abolished the Royal Academy and
peak, proclaimed the emancipation of painting.
NEO-CLASSICISM 5
There is no denying
that David's work is of uneven quality, and the
reason for this fact deep in his own temperament. Inspiration was too
lies
Prud'hon {fig. 6)
Although the power of Neo-Classicism may have seemed absolute, on a
closer view its influence was small and its reign was relatively short. It
aroused no powerful echo outside France, and at home it was soon en-
gaged in a furious struggle which it lost. It was never more than a move-
ment of transition. With David and the Revolution it had its moments,
but it succumbed to the very ideas which the Revolution had proclaimed.
Pierre-Paul Prud'hon, one of its most talented adherents, showed himself
unorthodox to the verge of heresy. He was a Burgundian of modest birth
and had visited Italy like the rest, but archaeology was not the source of
the impressions he brought back. Canova, the Neo-Classic sculptor, was
his friend, but Raphael, Correggio, and Leonardo were his heroes, and
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 6
with them he felt himself to some extent in harmony. He was acutely sen-
sitive, and he charged the forms of compositions with quivering
his
emotion, while the velvety manner of his modelling lent them a quality
of poetry and freshness. Among his portraits, that of the Empress Marie-
Louise, in particular, shows remarkable sympathy between artist and
sitter, with a sensitive feeling for nature. Indeed, his works as a whole are
marked by delicate sensuality, a certain aura of nostalgia, and a sense of
humanity, all of which point towards Romanticism.
much which he and Prud'hon differed from each other. Ingres was a
in
painter whose work and personality were the subjects of misunderstand-
ing - for which Ingres himself was partially to blame - and it was not
until the present century that the true purposes and results of his work
were freed from the controversy that had so long obscured them. The
essential thing about him was that his nature was at war with his convic-
tions. Both sides of him were equally domineering. His nature, impulsive,
nervous, sensual, easily provoked, and very disinclined to moderation,
could have gamed him admission to the ranks of the Romantics, but his
convictions made him David's heir as chief of the Neo-Classicists.
'Monsieur Ingres', of course, was essentially a bourgeois, a man with
vigorous appetites. Earthly pleasures attracted him far more than the
raptures of the mind, and his imagination worked, by preference, on
concrete things. The theme of all his work, of all his thought, was woman,
woman most carnal form. She and she alone was his concern, in-
in her
deed very nearly his obsession. Hypnotised by the female body, he never
tired of studying its lines, its softly rounded forms, placing them again
and again in every possible pose as a means of renewing ad infinitum the
exquisite pleasure they afforded him. Two factors combined in aid of his
predilections: the study of the human nude was part of the classical tra-
dition, and Napoleon's campaign in Egypt put a sort of orientalism into
fashion. Nowhere could Ingres have found a better way to assuage his
irresistible desire than by conjuring up those harem scenes, those Turk-
ish baths, where logic could not hinder the accumulation of pearly, soft,
and tender flesh, the very food of his wish-fulfilling dreams. Ingres was,
in fact, a Jekyll and Hyde figure. At night, and in imagination, the faith-
fulbourgeois husband lived the voluptuous life of a satiated sultan and
sometimes, in that role, he struck a balance between form and feeling
that deserve* the name of greatness. One might almost say that he con-
trived to sublimate his instincts into purely formal terms. There is, at all
event v no better way to state the dualism of his nature or to point the
mce and the difference it made between him and David. Moreover,
NEO-CLASSICISM 7
this is what explains why people were so slow to grasp the true merit of
his work.
Official art no sooner scented the Romantic danger in the air than it
organized resistance and sought out a leader, a painter who would be the
Neo-Classicist incarnate. Ingres was appealed to and accepted, for he had
ardently absorbed all the principles of David, although he was unaware
that he did not always follow them and that his lapses were caused by his
very nature. He attached the greatest importance to his task. Soon he was
locked in mortal combat with Delacroix and the Romantics, flushing
deep with rage against all who dared assert (not without reason) that
more than one own style, too, had the Romantic look he so
feature of his
abhorred. Two
conceptions of art were face to face, yet the reasons did
not always strictly tally with the facts. As general of an army that was not
really his, Ingreswore the colours of an academic; however, his realism
(as everyone agrees today) made him the enemy of the school he led, just
as much as Delacroix's Romanticism. It is true, of course, that Ingres
claimed the heritage of the ancients and, indeed, much of what they had
to teach he had absorbed, notably a sense of pure design and of solid
form. This, however, did not last. He was the first to discover the Primi-
tives (barbarians, they were considered in those days), and from them he
learned that love of forms and of psychology - keys to a truly expressive
style - which weaned him from the false idealism of David and his follow-
ers.Realism is what makes Ingres one of the first of modern painters. It
isobvious in his numerous drawings, and it breathes a sense of life into
his most carefully constructed compositions. The point is proved by his
influence on posterity. With Courbet it turned into Naturalism, with
Monet into Impressionism and with the Cubists, as Apollinaire has ob-
served, became Surrealism.
it
Romanticism
The Romantic Movement that dominated art between 1820 and 1850 was
the first revolutionary explosion of the nineteenth century. In every way
it was the opposite ofthe theory ruling at the time when it appeared. It was
an individualist an. an art whereby each man gave free expression to his
feelings and to his personal approach to life, the fruit of his endeavours
to achieve the closest possible understanding of reality. Its origin lay in a
wholly new outlook on the painter's part. In aesthetic terms, it required
that painting should divorce itself from sculpture, exploit the suggestive
power of Cok)ui 10 the lull, and abolish the hard outline that imprisons
form. The conventional appearance of objects and bodies was gradually
broken up b\ the impact of emotion, while a certain sense of exaltation,
a specifically visionary gift, altered and substantially enlarged the psycho-
logical dimensions o\' the picture.
Despite the methods which it brought to bear and which did, indeed
prolong its life, Nec-ClassicisnVs war against Romanticism was bound to
end in defeat. or p\oo\ we need only recall that the best ofthe talent it
1
recruited passed over to the enenn camp. It was David's studio that gave
Gros his training, and it was Ciuerin's, where David's principles were
taught, that trained Ciencault and Delacroix. Thus, Romanticism was
born of Neo-Classicism, its enemy. The three names quoted, with the
addition of some dates, should enable us to fix the début of this new theo-
ry of art. Antoine-Jean Gros painted the Pestiférés de Jaffa {The Victims
ofthe Plague at Jaffa) in 1S04. Ten years later, when Géricault was enter-
ing the studio o{ Guérin, Gros was at the height of his success. In 1815
Delacroix, aged seventeen, entered the same studio himself, just as Géri-
cault was setting out for Italy. In 1N22 Delacroix exhibited his first im-
portant picture. Dante and J 'irgil Crossing the Styx, which caused a sen-
sation. On the death o\' Géricault, was Delacroix who
two years later, it
became comple-
the accepted 'leader of the colounst school', having just
ted the Massacre of Chios (tig. 23). Thus, two pictures, the Pestiférés and
the Massacre, twenty years apart, mark the birth o\' Romanticism and its
full development.
ROMANTICISM 9
Gros (fig. 3)
When Gros, aged twenty-two, set out for Italy in 1793, David had recog-
nized his and he was the master's favourite pupil. After visiting all
gifts,
parts of Italy he settled at Genoa, full of admiration for the great works
by Rubens and van Dyck which he found in the principal collections
there. A providential meeting with Josephine Bonaparte in 1796 rescued
him from the obscurity of his existence. She was attracted by his looks as
much as his talent, and carried him off to Milan to present him to her
dazzling husband. Gros lost no time in painting Bonaparte on the Bridge
at Areola (fig. 3). Thereafter, until 1801, Gros followed the army in each
campaign, and was present at the siege of Genoa. His memories of that
event, heightened by his visionary gifts, were a source of inspiration to
him later. Through the whole series of great compositions which Gros
produced in honour of his hero's deeds he put fresh life into history-paint-
ing. However, his enthusiasm made him forget the precepts of his vener-
ated master. Under the pressure of emotion, the theories preached by
David fell to pieces. The act outstripped the intention, and care for histor-
ical truth, far from acting as a damper, served only to fan the ardent
spirit of the painter, until its flights, although taking no account of detail,
lent these records of sublime events a vivid sense that they had actually
occurred.
Within Gros was a ferment of creativity that drove him on to new de-
partures in technique, fresh innovations from which a new art was to
develop. Vigorous design was allied with the expressive force of colour,
and by painting the various parts of the composition as simultaneously as
possible Gros secured its general cohesion. Above all, there was that very
negation of David's principles which consisted in working from internal
structure outwards, instead of inwards from the outline. Napoleon on
the Battlefield of Eylait, the masterpiece which he showed at the Salon
of 1808, has an unforced grandeur; it is alive with telling detail and
shows no inclination to idealize the horrors of war and the human
suffering it entails. Delacroix was full of admiration for it. The picture is
part of life itself, the hard reality of human fate, with no admixture of
pathos or of false 'literary' qualities. The price of glory is set down with
such frankness that Gros must be called the ancestor of Daumier. His
search for truth anticipates Géricault and Delacroix, and opens up the
way for many of the modern schools.
Unfortunately, Gros was unable to sustain this level of achievement.
The devotion he felt for David was so great that he began to see his own
audacity as something very close to treason. This, at least, must be the
cause of the concessions he made to his old master's teaching, although
fame could not be sought in that direction now. The inescapable dilemma
grew too great, and Gros committed suicide, perhaps with his thoughts
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 10
Romanticism has been called a sickness, a distemper. Had this been the
case,it would have been an obvious epidemic, striking at all and sundry,
leaving its stigma on every hand and imposing its manner not on art
alone but on every aspect of contemporary life. Géricault is its symbol,
not only by virtue of his particular kind of art, but because his personal-
ity and were themselves typically romantic. With talents
his tragic destiny
such as his, the question ine\ itably arises of what heights he might have
scaled, what influence he might have had upon the future course of art,
if he had not been suddenly struck down at the age of thirty-three.
finalremnants of the old academic style, and showed himself every whit
as great as the drama that had moved the whole of France. The hand
that grasps the ensign is the despair that grips the doomed and ship-
wrecked sailors. The image is a bold and powerful one. The lyric surge
miraculously sustains it without doing violence to the composition, in
which every figure is involved in a single and embracing situation. The
painting was a manifesto, and Géricault used its vigour and its bold design,
its brilliant colour and the pathos it portrays, as a way of implicitly pro-
claiming the right to freedom of inspiration. He thereby gave a new con-
ception of beauty to the world.
The uproar caused by the picture had still not quieted down a year
later, when Géricault went off to England. There, for the next three years,
he lived as a man of fashion and indulged his great love of horses. Horses
played for him the role that women played for Ingres. His sketch-books
were full of them they often appeared on whatever canvas was on his
;
neglected consequences of a fall. On the eve of his own first great success,
Delacroix paid him a and recorded in his diary his sense of sorrow
visit
and of admiration 'I : came away filled with enthusiasm for his painting -
"Study for the Head of a Rifleman". Remember
especially the it : it is out-
standing. splendid studies! What strength! What mastery! And to
What
think of his dying - with all he did in the vigour and impetuosity of youth
- and now he cannot even move in his bed unless someone helps him!'
Yet the two men, although they had much mutual regard, were never
intimate friends, and there was more than a touch of formality in their
manner to one another. They are linked in the history of painting none-
theless, for it is impossible to escape the thought that the dreams which
the older man took with him to the grave were fulfilled with genius in the
younger's work.
the hero of the Romantic movement, the man who made a certainty of its
ifetu ithout his 'classical' side his genius would have lacked some
of itsbrilli. ice, and his work would not have achieved such greatness. He
ROMANTICISM 13
May, 1808. Goya was a complex man, and his work, for all the unity of
its style, contained discordant elements. He painted scenes of popular
life, Majas, rustic games, and craftsmen at work in the open air. He was
a portrait-painter too, as well as a gripping realist of ferocious cruelty;
he was also a religious painter and, as the frescos in San Antonio de la
Florida testify, a magnificent decorator. He was a visionary as well. But
more than anything else he was the freest painter of his day, more free
than Delacroix since he allowed no theory to restrain him nor any system
to interfere with his work. Goya's was a many-sided genius whose great-
est strength lay in the unbridled expression of the ego, which makes him
the very incarnation of revolt against the conventions of the eighteenth
century. He recognized no source of inspiration but the realities of human
life.These he rendered with a pitiless and ever-growing penetration, and
it was this that determined his technique. Sometimes his drawing was at
fault, sometimes there was a lack of skill about his colour, but both these
faults were part of his brusque and powerful genius. To that genius we
owe the revelation o\~ a world of forms that transcends everyday reality
and reveals a vision that is very close to prophecy. 'All I see', he used to
k
say, are planes receding and planes advancing, salients and hollows.
Neither line nor colour exist in nature! Give me a bit of charcoal and I
will make you a picture. All painting is made up of what you keep and
1
what you throw away.
Goya's observation was not lost on Delacroix, and the art of throwing
away became a part o\' his technique. He studied the Caprichos with care;
he made a comparative study of Goya and Michelangelo, copied some
of Goya's punts and. incidentally, admitted a desire to May about me
like Goya absorbed from Goya were the vi-
does". \\ hat Ciuerin's pupil
sions of Hell, a feeling for abrupt transitions, for the bold patch of co-
lour and the violent contrast. These were already the means by which in
1N22 he Staggered painters and public opinion alike with his Dante and
Virgil Crossing the Styx, and he did it again two years later with the
Massacre of Chios. Alter that came his visit to England, and a few years
later, in 1832, he made a journey to Spain, Morocco, and Algeria that
cient nobility intact. His knowledge, education, and the visions he con-
m the studio, were all transcended now by an experience that went
t
head: 'the sublime itself, alive and dazzling' beneath the radiant
S
him to be the greatest decorator of his age, his scenes of lion-hunts and
tiger-hunts, the famous Women oj Algiers, the Sultan with his Bodyguard
(fig. 22), and many others, proved him its greatest orientalist as well.
of his talent. The pathos of the Descent from the Cross in the church of
Saint-Philippe-du-Roule is memorable, but the War and Peace he painted
in the 'Cour des Comptes' (only the wrecks of them survived the burnings
of the Commune) are charged with such classic and symbolic grandeur as
to constitute his masterpieces. Chassériau here applied the principles of
Ingres, but he did so with greater suppleness and with more variety of
rhythm. Moreover, he used emotion with a touch both firmer and more
sometimes echoing Géricault and sometimes Prud'hon. But, like
delicate,
Gustave Moreau (rig. 58) after him. tie was too inclined to compromise,
and the effect he made might have been greater if he had projected his
own personality more strongly.
and Frana ire, of course, ver) different countries, and this, no doubt,
relj one product of" the différence between the British and the
THE BIRTH OF LANDSCAPE-PAINTING 17
of nature. He never abandoned this attitude, but he never felt that he was
doing anything revolutionary either. What moved him was simply com-
mon sense and a desire to do the best he could. His ambitions were mod-
est. All he really loved were the changing aspects of the English country-
side and the charm of meadows, trees, and streams; all he needed were
light and air. The picturesque and the literary left him cold; he asked no
more than to set his easel up in front of nature. He was the first to paint
in the open air. This immediate contact with nature from the beginning
of a picture to its end brought with it a degree of realism that was the
prelude to Impressionism. One day, or even one hour, he said, was never
like the next, and two leaves had never been the same since the Creation.
Constable was thus the first who tried to catch the fleeting moment,
the ever-changing scene before his eyes. To give expression to what he
he invented new techniques, but he never formulated any theory. He
felt,
painters. When Delacroix saw it, he said: 'Constable is good for me', and
retouched the sky of the Massacre. Its message certainly was not lost on
Corot; Courbet, Boudin, and Monet derived great benefit from it too.
washes of colour. By the time this triumph was achieved, he was fifty
years old. Atmospheric effect! he then heightened to the utmost possible
degree, so that first they smothered and then annihilated all but what was
directly relevant to the truly cosmic dramas that absorbed his vision.
was this more the ease than when he discovered Venice. It sent his
imagination reeling; to him it was like a world of dreams, and no man
ever equalled him as its interpreter. His painting thus entered a phase of
dream- in te rotation, of Traumdeutungt where colour alone appeared
througt et of ever-greater abstraction. This was, beyond question,
the first tiple of pure painting. It anticipates the Impressionists by
THE BIRTH OF LANDSCAPE-PAINTING 19
fifty years, and reaches forward into that realm of ambiguous, suggestive
for Turner's work, that Turner was too far above their heads.
Rousseau had already made nature the fashion, of course, but it was only
with Corot that landscape-painting came of age. Before then, it was bound
hand and foot to the academic rules, or else it was spent on artificialities
and decorations that had no connection with genuine feeling. As a genre,
it fully justified Constable's gibe at those who did their work with draw-
had a feeling for nature, but he suppressed it out of respect for the old
principle that the subject must be idealized.
Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot was born in 1796 of a family of shop-
keepers. He was a simple man, a good man, who had few needs and hated
any kind of complication. He led a quiet life wholly devoted to his work,
and his work turned out to be among the greatest of the century. A small
allowance from his family enabled him to give himself up entirely to what
he called his 'madness*, and he had no need to sell his paintings or attract
attention. Indeed, he did not sell a single picture until 1852 when he was
sixty-six. The buyer was an American who had climbed the stairs to his
studio. Corot was both indifferent and surprised; in fact he was rather
puzzled. 'Oh well', he said as his customer went away, 'it's his look-out.'
Unlike the other painters of his time, Corot started painting rather late,
for he was twenty-six before he resolved to abandon business. The only
lasting result of his studies under two rather academic painters was a
sound piece of ad\ ice from one of them which he never forgot. His men-
tor was a man named Michallon, brilliant and wealthy and about the
same age as himself, who urged him to stick to nature and simply copy
what he saw. Tins, in fact, was all that Corot did; the rest was done by his
natural talent and his concentration on the task in hand.
In 825 he made the first of his three famous visits to Italy. There, even
1
face to face w ith his subject, he could preserve his feeling for classical tra-
dition from the artificialities in which convention still required the histor-
ic scencr\ of Italy to be disguised. These were years of exciting discover-
ies and hard schooling. The Roman sun, pitiless and almost white, was
him to give a Living, accurate account of atmosphere while paying all pos-
sible attention to reality. No painter ever got closer to nature or had more
intimate relations with her. By scrupulous observation, by refusing
all preconceptions, he worked out his techniques and formed a style
REALISM 21
of the Villa d'Esté (1843) and Mantes Harbour (1870) are the pictures
that mark the stages in the expansion of an ever-widening horizon. But
he was still almost unknown in 1846 when Baudelaire and Champfleury
noticed him and showed some interest. Even so, it was some time before
anyone realized he had always painted figures too, and that these were
marked by the same grace and sense of poetry as his landscapes.
The three thousand odd paintings that Corot left behind can be grouped
under various headings sketches and paintings done from nature in Italy
:
Realism
With Corot we can close what may be called the first chapter of the nine-
teenth century. The line is arbitrarily drawn, of course, but the charge
can be made against any other attempt at chronological classification in a
century so marked by cross-currents, overlappings, and parallels, both in
the development of the various artistic trends and in the field of biogra-
phy. Corot, indeed, lived long enough to see the advent of Impressionism.
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 22
However, by his approach to art and the place which his painting holds
in it, he is really the last of the avant-garde that led the way from the
eighteenth century to the various schools which form the immediate
background to the twentieth. If, then, we consider the outstanding paint-
ers of 1800 to 1850 we shall find they are the sources of all succeeding
movements. For all their differences of approach, the general phenomenon
that dominates their work is an unmistakable urge towards reality and
nature, a shift of balance from technique to feeling, with a gradual loss of
respect for all conventions. The lesson which these artists had to offer was
accepted in varying degrees by their successors, irrespective of adherence
to principle, and hence we can imagine the prodigious ferment their dis-
coveries set up. Some broad and general groupings can be made never-
theless. A concern for reality was general, true enough, but it took a number
of different paths. Starting with the English landscape-painters, it led via
Corot, touched Delacroix and passed through the schools of Bar-
Lightly,
bizon and Honfleur to the Impressionists. Géricault and Delacroix took
a route of which one fork ended in the Symbolists, while the heritage of
Goya, having first caused Delacroix to paint the Women ofAlgiers, passed
into the magisterial hands of Courbet and Daumier, the two great realists
of the age.
admiration. Delacroix could not contain himself: 'Did you ever see any-
thing like it.' he exclaimed, 'anything so powerful-and derived from no-
body? This man reall> is original, a revolutionary too. He has burst upon
us, out of nowhere, quite unknown.' Gustave Courbet had been discov-
ered, a man whose art was to prove itself close kin with those of Dela-
croix and Ingres, yet very different from both. Ingres claimed to have
found the ideal in nature, while Delacroix, who was not so favoured,
filled the deficiency w ith his imagination. Courbet,
on the other hand, had
no imagination and a different notion of the ideal. As he saw it, every-
thing in nature was beautiful, and greatness was to be sought in the stark-
est realism. What Delacroix was driven to invent, Courbet took direct
from life. Above all, he took the world as he found it, and when he showed
Baigneuses at the Salon of 1853 he drove Delacroix himself to
protest that the subject and the forms alike were vulgar. That fact alone
shows what an advance Courbet had made at a single leap. Beauty was
no longer to be thought of in relation to the subject. A new freedom had
conquered: freedom of subject and treatment. Moreover, realism
uses to be real women, intent on basing their bath: the)
lj pretexts l'or a graceful displa> o\' academic poses.
REALISM 23
Courbet stated his position several times, although he had no taste for
theory and was more a peasant than an intellectual, despite the time he
had spent studying law. 'Beauty', he said, 'is in nature and is to be found
in reality, in every sort of form. Once found, it belongs to the domain of
art, or rather it belongs to the artist who knows how to find it there. When
beauty has become real and visible it contains its own expression in art.
But the artist has no right to add to that expression. Touch it, and you
risk altering its nature - and in the end you weaken it. The beauty offered
by nature rises above all the conventions of artists.'
As is almost inevitably the case, this doctrine was rooted in the painter's
origins and character. Courbet came of a family of wine-growers in the
Franche-Comté and he never ceased to be a countryman at heart rough, :
a little simple perhaps, and direct, as was only natural. He was strongly
built, and his health was superb; in brief, he was a piece of nature her-
self. Even the long years in Paris, where he had his studio, had no effect
upon the tastes and habits of his youth; his understanding of peasants,
workmen and other humble folk he portrayed was therefore natural, and
he was in perfect communion of spirit with them. Add this to a somewhat
anarchistic temperament, and one has the key to his political views. Al-
though, by his own admission, he never tried to do any 'committed' paint-
ing, he became the symbol of Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's brand of social-
ism. He confessed that when painting the Stone-Breakers, which was
regarded in its day as a socialist manifesto, he was inspired by nothing
more than pity for the sad and hopeless lot of two workmen he had seen
one day. Yet he put so much feeling for truth and humanity into the pic-
ture that it emerged as a stinging rebuke to the bourgeoisie of the time.
The Funeral at Ornans breathes the same feeling for humanity, expressed
with a simple, natural grandeur. Sorrow pervades every corner of the
picture. Despite the overpowering atmosphere of the central drama,
every figure in it is distinctly seen as a separate character with his own
peculiarities broadly indicated in each detail of his nature and emotions.
All thisis done with a perfect reticence of intention and effect and with
course of recent centuries, and have usually made them an excuse for
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 24
that is normally reserved for history or mythology. The large canvas was
chosen as a new vehicle for his sense of reality, his reaction to the passing
scene. The figures in it represent real people as Courbet saw them. There
is the poet Baudelaire, the writer Champfleury, the collector Bruyas, and
so forth. But the scene itself, the whole conception of the picture, belongs
to the realm o\' pure imagination. This duality explains the self-contradic-
tory Label, '
Real Allegory', which he attached to the picture -when he
I
showed it. with some forty more, under the general title 'Realism: G.
Courbet' at a one-man exhibition in 1855. Among the other pictures
there was La Rencontre (The Meeting), otherwise called "Bonjour, Mon-
sieur Courbet*, which had to o\o with an actual event. In The Artist's Stu-
dio, however, the painter was inconsistent with himself, and for once he
Courbet's revolutionary role was not simply political; it was far more
important than that. It is certainly true that popular feeling crystallized
around his work and that his power of expression and his spirit gave
additional impetus to ideas of great political importance. However, what
is is that he caused a decisive revolution in the
of greater significance
painter's artby propounding objectives and conceptions, an entire aesthe-
tic ethos, whose novelty was absolute. The work of Courbet, in fact, is
one of the strongest links in the chain of reactions which was to replace
one kind of art by another in the course of less than a century.
career as draughtsman and lithographer that lasted fifty years. This was
the time when lithography was still in its early stages. Géricault, Dela-
croix and Goya had all experimented with it, but the hand of Daumier
was the one that made it an independent art. By his death he had produced
some four thousand prints, mostly of a satirical kind. When he joined the
Charivari he took up politics and harassed the Government with his
cartoons. Brushes with the law then made some caution seem advisable,
and although he went on caricaturing parliamentary deputies and office-
holders he began to enlarge his field of subjects to include the Bench, the
manners and customs of the Courts, and so on. Eventually, every type of
citizen in the city was his subject.
It was the breadth of his style as much as the warmth of his sympathies
different. He was a generous man.' Ferocity was quite alien to him, how-
ever deeply he was bent on vengeance. There was nothing negative or
destructive in his make-up; his aim was simply to present a lucid and
impartial view of things in the hope of stirring the public conscience to
reform abuses inimieal to the interests of the ordinary citizen. This is
the most revealing light in which to view his work: the ceaseless critical
campaign he waged against the bourgeois society of the time in a succes-
sion of celebrated series ranging from the Rue Transnonain to the Gens de
Justice. In the course of these attacks, he often dwelt with genuine pathos
on the sufferings of the poor, while he also invented such immortal cha-
*
racters as RatapoiV and 'Robert Macaire*.
However, drawing was not the whole of Daumier's activities. He went
in for sculpture too,having studied the sculpture of the Masters in the
Louvre. The most distinctive characteristics of his lithographs are his
wonderful gift for drawing and his amazing sense of black-and-white.
His statuettes in bronze and the bas-relief of the Emigrants also show
decisiveness, with an accuracy ofline and a spasmodic kind of movement
that make them intensely alive. It has been said in this connection that
during the tir st part of his career he saw lite with a sculptor's eye, and in
facthe was over forty before he turned to painting. Here he was influ-
enced by his Barbizon friends, especially Daubigny. Because of all the other
work that claimed his attention, he was never able to give as much time
to painting as he ver> likel> should have. Between 1X48 and 1870 he did
only about a hundred paintings, and that was all he ever produced. In
he submitted a sketch to a competition for a figure of the Republic,
but he did not compete for the commission itself. This was also the year in
he did the sketches lor La Barricade (The Riot), which was intend-
REALISM 27
point of this abrupt, allusive manner, and were shocked by what they
thought was slovenly technique, the apparent lack of interest in 'finish'
that makes all his paintings look like sketches.
It is not true, as has sometimes been alleged, that Daumier was un-
known as a painter. The truth is simply that his paintings were not as
popular as his drawings, and many of his contemporaries, with better
judgement than the crowd, regretted that his paintings were so few. Some
at least had recognized the humanity and poetry which his work dis-
played the indignation, for example, in The Rising or The Emigrants
:
(subjects he treated several times in different media), or the pity for street-
urchins, laundry-women, and strolling musicians, notably in The Circus
Parade, the last picture he ever painted. Then there were the allegorical
and mythological subjects (Oedipus and the Shepherd), scenes from fami-
ly-life (The Third-Class Carriage), scenes from the world of art, (The Print-
Collectors (fig. 28) and The Sculptor's Studio), theatrical scenes, subjects
taken from circuses and fairs (The Melodrama and The Acrobats' Parade),
and scenes from the law-courts. Lastly, there are the admirable, fantastic,
rather dizzying portraits of Don Quixote (fig. 32) where, in the Don's
generosity and adventurous self-sacrifice and in Sancho Panza's resig-
nation, the artist might have recognised some of his own features.
It is interesting to speculate on what Daumier's reputation might have
been had he given at least as much time and energy to painting as he gave
to his profession as a chronicler. Certainly he raised the status of his
trade, but it denied him the chance of total self-fulfilment. Nonetheless
his work, although incomplete and thus to some extent unfinished, had
a widespread influence, and many later artists have benefited from the
example of his genius.
later he had found his vocation; it lay within himself, in the man he was
and in the soil he could no more desert than Courbet could. He began to
take his subjects from rural life, and rendered them with a simplicity and
a tone that was entire]) new. In 1848, in the midst of the Revolution, The
Winnower brought him his first success. This was the first of a series of
rural subjects, including The Sower, I he Woman Gleaning, The Woman
Shearing Sheep, and the famous Angelas, in which he created the world
that is now associated with his name, the gently illuminated world
of the peasant, with its unalterable movements and its humble, daily
round, seen as a symbol of eternal truth.
Millet could never settle down to city life, and in 1849 he retired to
Barbizon, where he renewed his association with Rousseau. There, in rural
surroundings reminiscent of his childhood, he could really work, and
there he brought forth the best that w as m him, participating in his friends'
discussions on aesthetics but remaining faithful to his personal manner.
He disliked the ihow) elVects and violent contrasts that the earlier Ro-
mantics had favoured. On the other hand, his sense of realism led him to
seek psychological truth not only in his choice of subject but through
quiet strength in design and,above all, through a melancholy tone which
suited to perfection the vision hewanted to express. Such methods do, of
course, discard the exhilarating power of colour, but Millet was capable
o\' communicating deep emotion by these sober restricted means. His
The Sower his sense of form reveals an almost sculptural power. Taken
all together, his paintings radiate a psychological influence that was to
have an important effect on artists working later in the century, notably
van Gogh, for whom Millet was the true master of reality.
province, while the English, travelling further than anyone along that
path, had already shown the world many of the possibilities that land-
scape could offer as a subject in itself. Art had progressed a long way from
David's conception of it, although his death was still quite recent. One
concept, above all, was doomed beyond reprieve the idea of man as a
;
central, creative element in the artist's work was giving place to other
values. Its importance declined with the passing of Daumier, Delacroix,
and Courbet, grew weaker still with Manet and Monet, and, with the
Post-Impressionists at the century's end, it disappeared entirely.
By imperceptible degrees, almost surreptitiously, landscape came to
dominate painting in France. Some painters (minor ones, it is true), re-
flected the influence ofConstable and Bonington; others again drew in-
spiration from the Dutch and Flemings. Independents such as Georges
Michel, Paul Huet (1803-1869) and Eugène Isabey (1803-1886) started
down the same path without, however, suspecting where it led. These were
all isolated departures, and no general movement emerged for the time
being. When it actually did emerge, after the Revolution of 1848, it was
rather a matter of chance, for it was born in the little village of Barbizon,
in the Forest of Fontainebleau, which the painters at the court of Fran-
çois I had once made famous. The outcome was the Barbizon school,
with Théodore Rousseau its unchallenged leader, a school whose painters
never scaled the heights of the greatest Masters but who served as a ne-
cessary bridge from the Romantics to the Impressionists.
course, was there, and so were Diaz de la Pena, Jules Dupré, Constant
Troyon, and Charles-François Daubigny. At first, they were still
somewhat infected with Romanticism, but they began to cure themselves
by close observation of nature. Their admitted aim was to improve
nature, but never to idealize it. Like Courbet they wanted to represent the
truth without being bound by convention, but it was the truth about
landscape that they sought. Various as they were in temperament, they
were all straining to achieve simplicity by giving an objective account of
the scene before their eyes. Nature was not to be utilised for ulterior ends;
the artist was simply to bring out her greatness, her nobility, and the
countless ways in which her beauty changed while its essence remained
immutable.
In Rousseau, who was the most fervent advocate of the Barbizon aesthe-
tic, this feeling attained the strength of an almost religious conviction.
In a very real sense Rousseau had heard the appeal of nature, had under-
stood the message of the trees as they whispered in the wind, and had
mastered 'the language of the forests', as he liked to call it. Driven by this
conviction tie showed a tendency to glorify the scenes he painted, choos-
ing by preference those that had a touch of the majestic or theatrical.
Despite his predilection for the melodramatic, however, Rousseau was
skilful enough to temper the romantic flavour of, for example, his sun-
sets, w ith a certain rustic naturalism. He could unite the romantic and the
Pefta (fig. 33) by employing a degree of lyricism that was sometimes spoil-
ed by a touch of preciousness.
For considerable period, Rousseau's only comfort was the firmness
a
of his friendships, especially that with Daumier, who did a magnificent
portrait of him. However, a belated tribute, amounting almost to a re-
habilitation, was paid to him at the Universal Exhibition of 1855, and
this broad survey showed the true significance of his work. Man had
vanished from his pictures, and their interest was centred only on the
powerful feelings which the changing seasons, the colour of the landscape,
and the movement o\' the trees can arouse in a sensitive mind.
Not all the painters who gravitated around Rousseau were landscape-
artists. There were also some ver) Successful animal-painters at Barbizon,
although their work holds little interest today. Among the more promin-
ent were Constant [royon, who had greatly admired Paul Potter's works
in Holland, Rosa Bonheur (1S22 -1899), and the pamter-sculptor An-
the landscape-painters: barbizon and honfleur 31
when the meeting of Boudin and Jongkind took place. The latter was a
Dutchman, bohemian and valetudinarian at once, who, having visited
Paris in 1845, remained in France, drawing and painting as he drifted
around the country. In the following year, 1 859, the two of them met Cour-
bet at Le Havre, and Boudin also made the acquaintance of Baudelaire.
Although the two painters became fast friends, they were very different
types. Boudin was a simple, local man, who painted the sea with loving
care, using a somewhat precious range of colour. He was driven by an
intense desire to be accurate, and, by always trying to capture the scene
as the ever-changing light transformed it, he succeeded to a marvellous
degree. His beginnings had been influenced by Isabey, Troyon, and Co-
rot, but his association with Jongkind gave him a more personal tech-
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 32
nique and style. Using impasto and harmonies of ever paler colours, he
achieved an exceeding delicacy of tone, in which soft greys impart great
vividness to the occasional notes of pure colour. Although many of his
pictures are very small, they possess an undeniable power; this was exact-
ly what he had in mind when he used to say, 'condense things: the smal-
lest frame is enough for a great picture.'
his reputation even today. he speed with which he recorded the most
I
ment was beginning to establish itself, one of the most influential move-
ments of modern times; Honlleur ma> indeed be called the birthplace of
Impressionism.
Impressionism
academic compositions, but now he was painting the first of his Horse-
Races at Longchamps. Cézanne had arrived in Paris and ,was getting to
know Pissarro, while Monet, Renoir, Sisley and Bazille were meeting
together at the Atelier G ley re. The following year saw the historic uproar
over Manet's Déjeuner sur V Herbe in the Salon des Refusés, as well as the
death of Delacroix. Truly, a page of history was being turned, and the
marks of a new world were to appear on the next one. The door which
had been forced open at the start of the century was leading to the passage
from one epoch to another. Now, in the early 1860s, it was firmly closing
on the past.
Therein lies the whole importance of Impressionism. It represented the
final assault by which the nineteenth-century revolution in art triumphed.
This accounts for the violent reactions that greeted its appearance.
However, to ascribe this violence merely to the movement's novelty of
technique, or to what then seemed an outrage to aesthetic standards,
would be to do it less than justice. The reaction was provoked not by the
material facts alone, but also, and possibly even more significantly, by
underlying factors in the spheres of sociology and morals. The very con-
cept of a work of art, the relation of the artist to society, his significance
as revealed in the work that he creates, these things are the essential ele-
ments in what we should regard primarily as an adventure of the spirit.
The conquest of the artist's freedom which the Romantics had begun was
now complete and final. The artist, conscious of his newly-won indepen-
dence, could now at last give his audience a vivid display of his mind and
soul in full and free florescence by choosing a technique to suit his person-
al thoughts and aims, without any regard for taboos. He could devise
his means of expression purely to match the demands of his own indivi-
duality.
Liberty had now become total, both liberty of theme and of expression.
The painter was no longer held in the strait-jacket of categories and con-
ventions laid down 'once and for all' at some dim date in another age. He
could leave the ivory tower to which he had been consigned, go down into
the street, and take an active part in life. Art had brought itself up-to-
date, and made the realities of daily life its raw material. The point of the
controversy over Manet's famous painting was simply that. It was not the
first time, of course, that a naked woman had figured in a contemporary
painting. Courbet's Studio, eight years earlier, had done the same thing.
Although Courbet's realism had produced a shock, the nude model could
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 34
completed the process, and left him with an eye of extraordinary pene-
tration and a deep analytical sense. Robust in temperament, confident
in his own ideas, he let himself be guided by his powerful instincts and
his capacity for meticulous observation. He evolved the various parts of
his technique by trialand error. His disregard of local colour, his analysis
of effects ol atmosphère and light by which outlines and masses are dis-
solved, his emphasis on experiments with colour and with the reactions
IMPRESSIONISM 35
of colours upon one another, his suppression of fact for the sake of uni-
ty: all these discoveries made him the originator of a movement which
others were to develop in directions he had only partially foreseen.
Monet, although in some respects, a lesser artist than his friends,
was clearly the hero of Impressionism. His was the personal conception
that supplied the soul of the new movement, and, in spite of the greatest
difficulties, enormous toil, and living conditions that were often wretched,
Camille Pissarro, born in 1 830 in the West Indies, was the oldest of the
group, although never more than a secondary figure in it. After a short
period at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, he was painting West-Indian pictures
rather in the manner of Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps (fig. 21), when Mo-
net and his ideas took hold of him. It is clear that he did not accept the
rising Impressionist doctrines without reservations or internal struggles,
for his own convictions are apparent in his work. It is more naturalistic
Alfred Sisley was an Englishman, born in Paris in 1839. The first artists
to influence his work were Corot and Daubigny. In 1862 he was in the
Atelier Gleyre with the other members of the group, but he did not actu-
ally join the Impressionists until 1870. Like Pissarro, he was devoted to
nature, and would not wittingly sacrifice the subject to the impression.
Barbizon was therefore more his spiritual home. Moreover, he was shy
and rather self-effacing, though of great natural distinction he had neither
;
Monet's boldness nor Pissarro's taste and talent for structural composi-
tion. On the other hand, he had a lively, sensitive feeling for nature and a
refinement in the use of colour that recalls Corot. In the flicker of Impres-
sionist brush-work, he managed to preserve a kind of romantic nostalgia,
although he detestedall excess. What he loved above all was the subtle,
neiro fascinated him, and he spent the whole voyage drawing. He had a
distinguished air. and an impressive know-
a high degree o\ education,
ledge oi' the galleries, but middle-class he remained, witha strongand per-
manent longing He never got one, however, for
to be gi\en a decoration.
his strong personality was the kind that officialdom dislikes. Jean Cocteau
once said.* being original is trying to be like everyone else, and failing utter-
ly.' This remark exact l> tits the case of Manet, a revolutionary against his
will, a man who caused an uproar no one hated more than he, a dyed-
and opposition. His alliance with the Impressionists was caused by the
fact that, in 1863, his paintings were hung in the Salon des Refusés along-
side the work of Pissarro, Jongkind, Whistler, and Cézanne. Nonethe-
less the Impressionists' outlook was, and remained, very different from
his ;
painting out-of-doors, in particular, never quite got the better of his
preference for the studio. Little by little, of course, he became more skil-
ful in painting subjects from nature, and there were times, indeed, when
his touch was almost as free as that of the landscape-painters. However,
he normally respected local colour, and aimed at a more solid, less mobile
rendering of reality than they. This was a difference he would not give up,
and it is revealing that, despite the entreaties of Monet and Degas, he
refused to exhibit at the first Impressionist Salon in 874, even though the
1
official Salon had rejected two of the four paintings he sent in.
Manet's career was productive, successful, and all too short (he died at
the age of fifty-one). His work is marked by a number of masterpieces :
Lola de Valence (1862), Déjeuner sur V Herbe (1863), Olympia (1865), the
Portrait of Zola, Berthe Morisot on a Balcony (fig. 66), Le Bon Bock {The
Good Glass of Beer), which brought him his first success in 1 873, Le Linge,
work painted in the open-air, the famous Nana
his earliest (1876), refused
by the Salon of the following year, and the Bar of the Folies Bergères
(fig. 70), which he painted the year before his death. Each of these is a
milestone on his road through time and experience, and they display a
stylistic unity that renders Manet's work remarkably homogeneous. Ma-
net's great historical achievement was to remove the mystery from paint-
ing by the inclusion of so much contemporary life. He also took some
very bold steps in terms of technique; by means of juxtaposing colours
without transitions he dispensed with modelling and thereby revealed a
new conception of perspective, a novel method of creating space and of
giving colour greater independence. But apart from everything else, Ma-
net was great as a creator and profoundly original in thought.
left the Atelier Gleyre in order to paint in the open air with Bazille, Mo-
net, and Sisley. He was neither a theorist nor an intellectual, and, al-
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 38
Unlike most young painters of his day, he used to assert that the place to
learn painting was in the picture-galleries, and not face to face with na-
ture. The first lessons he learned came from studying the Venetians and
Raphael, later from Ingres and Delacroix, but the purpose of his study
was not to borrow their tricks so much as their secrets. There were critical
moments, of course, and many an inner conflict to resolve, especially the
cleavage between his own profoundly classical tastes and the realities of
painting in his day. The 'break' (as he called it) that appeared in his work
in the early iKKOs, after his visit to Italy, shows how great a cleavage it was:
he was forced to face the problem of how to reconcile the dictates of his
instinct with the data furnished by his reasoning mind. This was the stage
at which Renoir, like Cézanne, turned away from the Impressionists, and
found the answer to his problem in subordinating colour to solidity of
composition.
His work from that time onward shows the full effect of a sensuality
both powerful and refined, an artistic concept that reached the plenitude
of its evolution in the most natural way, with organic composition estab-
lishing a miraculous interaction between the various objects in a given
field. His painting reaches a zenith in that series of admirable nudes whose
skin takes the light so well': it is no exaggeration to say that, in these
paintings. Renoir rediscovered the spirit of the ancient Greeks, the spirit
that the Neo-C'lassicists had sought in vain with their cumbersome my-
thological equipment. These nudes are not the whole of Renoir's work,
of course, but like his landscapes of the Midi, his pictures of Parisian life,
his boating scenes, and his portraits, they have their share in the sense of
joy which is at the core of Renoir's great talent.
disa ered in the ballet. Degas is yet another example of the diversity that
IMPRESSIONISM 39
existed within the Impressionist movement, for each adherent gave it his
own particular cachet, according to his background, education, and out-
look. Being intelligent, cultivated, and misanthropic, Degas relied on pure
reason, and was not afraid to call himself 'an old, incorrigible reactionary'.
The crises of anxiety, disgust, and depression he went through are famous.
He was a man who worried, a complex character, a misogynist whose
work is largely taken up with women, a traditionalist frequently in con-
flict with tradition, a man who tried to use his intellect in situations which
called for feeling.
Degas' eye was unusually sharp and registered with cruel indifference
what it saw in that, perhaps, for all his over-use of preconceived ideas
;
and reason, lies the key to his greatness. He objected to his friends' dis-
solution of the lines and masses of a composition in the name of the im-
pression. However, what he would not let them do in the case of light, he
did himself in the case of movement. It was not arrested movement that
he favoured in this way (he disliked the transient and accidental), but
movement seen as part of a continuing process. For this type of represen-
tation, his gift of draughtsmanship was essential. He took less interest
than the others in colour, which is why, in his later years, he made so much
use of pastel. Other innovations can be put down to him as well the :
Rather, it is because when one considers the novelty of his style and the
range of the discoveries it revealed as time went on, one is almost forced
to say that as a painter he belongs to the twentieth century.
Cézanne is the source of almost every trend in modern art, and the in-
fluence of his work has been so great, the lessons drawn from it so var-
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 40
ious, that he looms in art history like some mysterious kind of wonder-
worker, the Master par excellence, the oracle to answer every need. When
we think we understand him, it is time to start discussing the man and the
profound significance of his artistic life afresh. No body of painting, per-
haps, has ever been analysed so often or given rise to so many varying
interpretations. 'Sensations are what I am basically concerned with,' he
k
wrote shortly before his death, so I must be impenetrable.'
His start - he was self-taught - showed little promise of what lay ahead.
His first efforts were romantic, unorganized, and clumsy; he was slow to
develop, with the slowness of a peasant who lacks confidence in anything
not planted well, solidly constructed, built to last. He was a conservative
like Manet, but once be had joined the younger men at the Académie
Suisse in 1862 he began to admire the works of Delacroix and Courbet.
Four years later, his still-lifes were praised by Manet, but Cezanne's com-
position was still baroque in st> le. It was not until 1873 that he overcame
the first o\' the obstacles in the way of He was then
his self-realization.
painting on the banks of the Oise w ith Pissarro, who was showing him the
Impressionist technique. He began to lighten his palette and look at nature
with simplicity. However, because lie could never fully accept Monet's
theories, he soon began his long and solitary meditation. Impressionism
seemed to him too superficial for his needs, and his preference for struc-
ture imposed its own solutions on him. He set about creating an idiom to
meet simultaneously his three strongest needs: powerful structure, well-
knit composition, and a means of expressing sensations wholly divorced
from the classical traditions.
Cézanne devoted himself to a careful analysis of nature, and looked at
her not as the Impressionists did. but as a Living, functional reality. He
went back to the very start and. with what one might call the innocence
o\' genius, began the gradual, persistent acquisition of the technical me-
thods that have made him famous: the 'sensations colorantes*, as he called
them: the suggestion o\' modelling by means of colour as opposed
i.e.
to light and shade: the modifying influence of vision, divorced from me-
mory, upon the objects it perceives; and the suggestion of depth, or re-
cession. b> the de\ iee of coloured planes superimposed in gradation from
the colder tones for shadow to the warmer tones for light. These, in brief,
were C e/anne's main achievements. The most important innovation was
the last for, by abolishing classical perspective based on receding lines
and objects used as markers, n created a sense of depth while keeping the
composition on a single plane. A line o( masterpieces marks the stages on
Cezanne's journey towards the painting o\' the future: the various ver-
sions o\ the Montagne Sainte-Victoire, the male and female bathers, the
Château Noir, innumerable still-lifes. the self-portraits, the Boy in
i
a Red If aistcoat (tig. WW), and that last landscape o( the Cahanon ilc Jour-
TOWARDS THE TWENTIETH CENTURY 41
From? (1897), The White Horse (1898), and the Seins aux Fleurs Rouges
(1899) are masterpieces which all hear eloquent witness to Gauguin's
painful but glorious spiritual adventure.
themselves formed a bond between them. e\en before they had met. Each
recoiled from Monet's doctrine of purely optical sensation, and each
sought a finer balance between the vessel and its content, for they regard-
ed painting as a means of expressing ideas and thoughts. They had se-
parately arrived at the same position, and the effect of their meeting was
to fortify it in each case. Thus, their points o\' departure were the same,
and in spirit, if not in their aesthetic tastes, they marched in step for a
time. Il is true that Gauguin had a certain influence upon van Gogh at
Aries, in 888, but their methods weft not the same and they led in differ-
1
ent directions Pure symbolism in Gauguin's case led to a search for calm
TOWARDS THE TWENTIETH CENTURY 43
and balance, just as it led to Redon's ethereal poetry and similarly to the
'Nabis' group of painters and their atmospheric 'Intimism'. On the other
hand, van Gogh invested it with a kind of exasperation, a violence
of colour, that reappeared in the twentieth century with the Fauves and
Expressionists - French, German, Belgian, and Norwegian alike.
Vincent van Gogh was born in 1853 in a small Dutch town near the
Belgian frontier, and he grew up in an atmosphere where religion and the
arts, especially music, were paramount. These two influences coloured
his whole life. He was excitable and psychologically unbalanced, with
high moral aspirations but no self-confidence at all. Starting at the age of
sixteen he ran through one profession after another bookseller's assist-
:
ly a phase through which he passed, but, on the whole, his two years in
Paris were spent in feeling his way. At Aries his experiments at last pro-
duced results: he found the 'language' he needed, strengthened it, and
quickly made it an instrument of precision, capable of coping, to the very
last degree, with the fierce demands of his inspiration. This, at last, was
his style - the style that made him famous. He had less than three years
left: 1888, 1889, 1890 - Arles, Saint-Rémy, and finally Auvers-sur-Oise.
to the future, could have been created in so short a time: in 1888 the Or-
chards in Blossom (fig. The Postman Roulin and the Sun-Flowers; in
1 19),
1889 the Self-Portrait with a Bandaged Ear (fig. 116), the Cypresses, the
Harvesting; in 1890 the Portrait of Dr Gachet (fig. 11 7) and Marie d'Auvers.
The upward progress never stopped, at least not while he remained at
Aries. Itwas a progress not in terms of technique alone, but also in the
passion he poured on to the surface of the picture. Although he expressed
his powerful vision in a style that leaned towards Synthetism, his method
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 44
was not, as in Gauguin's case, to use whole areas of colour. Rather, his
weapon was the vigorous, dynamic, concentrated brush-stroke, laid on
with a sort of frenzy that became a paroxysm at Saint-Rémy.
Van Gogh, the 'cultivated savage', had already studied Delacroix' ideas
on colour in his time at Nuenen, but he himself was no theoretician. The
vivid, unusual pictures he created were the logical expression of his in-
most, innate feelings and convictions. The internal processes of which
they alone could be the outcome were all part of an attitude of mind that
never altered. Although his mind, indeed, was deranged at times and al-
though it ultimately brought his life to an end, painting, for him, could
never be irrational must serve a deep and serious cause, for it existed to
; it
At the heart of van Gogh's character lay the evangelist, the preacher he
had been in his youth, the man who refused to quit life without leaving a
message for his fellow men. In his struggle to achieve this end he created
a new aesthetic concept; the truth his work proclaims is that form and
content are inseparable.
debt.
Among all its spiritual offspring, the most direct legatee was certainly
Neo-Impressionism, alias 'Divisionism' or 'Pointillism', the outcome of
a doctrine that Georges Seurat learned of from an eminent chemist. The
first anti-Impressionist stirrings were already being felt when van Gogh
was still at work in the pastor's home at Nuenen and Gauguin was a
discontented banker. In Paris, Seurat, a young man of twenty-four was
at work on his first great composition, forging the weapons for a battle
that was to cause a great artistic controversy. Two years later, in 1885,
the launching of 'Divisionism' was signalized by La Grande Jatte, a pic-
torialmanifesto that had required no less than thirty-eight painting ses-
sions and twenty-three preparatory drawings. Monet had been guided by
his own intuitions when working on the representation of light, but Seurat
decided to tackle his problems by scientific methods. Although it made
things difficult for him, Seurat rebelled against Monet, with whom, as a
person, he had little or nothing in common. Seurat was a prudent, ration-
al young man, devoted to the exact sciences and aware of no other poet-
ry but that which mathematics could supply. For relaxation, he read
treatises on physics, and found his gospel in a book by Chevreul, The Law
of Contrasts and Similarities, a scientific work on colour which provided
the basis of his method. Not only did his classical cast of mind give pri-
mary importance to the architecture of his pictures, but he refused to
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 46
use any colours but those of the spectrum. With the aim of marrying de-
sign to colour, the permanent to the transient, he first distinguished in
each picture exactly what elements combined to make its luminosity, its
colouring, and its composition, i.e. tonality, colour, and line. Then, in
each of these elements, he sought the law of contrasts and the law of simi-
larities (the simultaneous contrasts).
At the Salon des Indépendants of 1884 he was associated with Redon
and, even more, with Paul Signac and Henri-Edmond Cross who both
became his followers. Seurat was too much of a theorist to arouse emo-
tion. La Parade du Cirque and Le Chahut (fig. 14) are works that cer-
1
tainly do not lack greatness, but they are cold, somewhat artificial visions
of some extremely wooden figures. Yet the enormous labour he put be-
hind him in a very few years (he died at thirty-two) was not in vain. He
discovered some principles of very great importance, and it was the Cub-
ists who, a little later, derived the greatest profit from them.
Signac (fig. Ill) (whose career belongs largely to the twentieth century,
for he died in 1935) was a suppler man. who avoided systematization and
left us a body of work in \* hich there is much that is delicate, especially in
and intuition, and his work has a warmly lyrical character that is likely, in
a few years' time, to bring his reputation nearer the level of his genuine
deserts.
Désossé, La Goulue, and Jane Avril, have escaped the oblivion that
awaited them thanks to the magic of his brush and pencil.
Picasso once said: 'There nothing odd about the "Douanier". He repre-
is
quently been asked, and has never had an answer. His art was ingenuous
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 48
1870, but nothing is certain before 1880, which is the date of the earliest
pictures we possess. Four years later, his wife having died, he retired from
the octroi on a pension and for the last twenty-six years of his life he de-
voted himself exclusively to painting. His work was shown for the first
time at the Salon des Champs-Elysées in 1885. Signac and Maximilien
Luce both noticed his canvases Redon praised his 'naturalist genius', and
;
and gave deep thought to the problems of their structure and the inter-
action of form and colour. In short, he was an artist who took pains. He
had an outstanding gift for colour, and the harmonies he produced are
enchanting even today. Rousseau had the ability to sweep the spectator
off into the dream world that was his own favourite haunt. There was
always a certain degree o\' realism in his paintings, but it stopped short of
mere imitation even in his portraits or in the scenes he did from nature.
It was in his 'exotic' paintings that he gave free rein to his imagination.
Since one o\' the salient things about the nineteenth century was that the
international centre of gravity in art shifted from Italy to Paris, it is na-
tural that all eves should have turned towards France once she became
the crucible of artistic innovation. We have seen what wealth and vitality
were brought to light in ranee, how numerous and important were the
I
upheavals. Yet there are some minor aspects of the period, scarcely amount-
ing to any definite trend, which have been neglected here, such as the
second period of French idealism, whose leading figures, Gustave Mo-
reau (fig. 58), Pierre Puvis de Chavannes (fig. 59) and Adolphe Monticelli
(figs. 63, 64), all deserve to be mentioned.
England
In England, Turner remained a solitary light once Constable had left the
firmament, but in 1849 the need for a reaction against the academic canon
led to the formation of the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood, which sought to
bring about a return to the standards of the Primitives and found a pow-
erful ally in the celebrated critic, Ruskin. An attempt to formulate its
attitude was made by Holman Hunt (1827-1910) when he said the TRB'
had never denied that there had been much sound and elevated art since
Raphael, but that it seemed to them that Raphael's successors had too
often let their art be corrupted. He and his friends did not think soundness
and an absolute method could be found anywhere outside the work of the
older masters. The 'PRB' stemmed in part from the religious-minded
Oxford Movement, and its principal target v/as more pagan allegory than
the art of the Renaissance, which, in fact, it drew upon in no small mea-
sure. As a reaction to academic painting, indeed, its aim was not the one
the situation really called for. True, its fruit was not so trivial, but it was
no less artificial than the style it sought to supplant, as can be seen in
Hunt's religious symbolism, the legends of chivalry resurrected by Burne-
Jones (fig. 164), or Rossetti's meticulous accounts of his seraphic visions.
Germany
In the Germanic north, the idealist stream had a strongly romantic fla-
vour, with a character more literary than artistic. Caspar David Friedrich
(figs. 141, 142) exemplifies this situation. Trained in Dresden, he was a sen-
sitive and rather melancholy man who expressed his deep response to
nature with great delicacy of touch against a background of real drama.
To Hans von Marées (fig. 146) inspiration seemed to come from sixteenth-
century Italy and, as he spent long years in Rome, he had ample time to
study this period.He painted more broadly than Friedrich, often using a
muted palette, but he applied his colour with a sort of agitation that sheds
an air of mystery upon the symbolism of his compositions. After spend-
ing some successful years painting portraits at Dresden, he finally went
back to Rome. There he executed large-scale decorative work in which he
shows a great command of technique, but rather too great a leaning
towards intellectualism. Anselm Feuerbach (1829-1880), who had been
Thomas Couture's (fig. 60) pupil in Paris, is another in whom the idea was
more romantic than his rather academic style.
NINETEENTH-CENTURY PAINTING 50
Thoma had both been Courbet's pupils, and had learned their lessons
well. There was also Lovis Corinth who, after a period at the Académie
Julian in Paris, had great success in Berlin. It was he who introduced open-
air painting to Germany, joint!) with Max Liebermann (fig. 147), a paint-
er whose two long periods in Paris gave some of his work a markedly
Impressionist approach.
Switzerland
Arnold Bocklin (figs. 165, 166), the Swiss, put almost an excess of skill to
work for his fertile and sometimes morbid imagination. As an exponent
o( the Germanic nostalgia that flies for refuge to the haunted forests of
myth and legend, he was brilliant. Haunted by mythology himself and
steeped in the lore o( ancient Greece, he sought to dispel the darkness of
his inner life in the sunlit Mediterranean world. He could orchestrate
colour to produce effects of rare intensity, although the heavy atmosphere
remained unaltered. All the essentials of his moral climate can be seen in
his celebrated masterpiece, the allegory called The Isle of the Dead.
Bocklin'a mysterious gardens, tilled with poisonous flowers, held no
charm for his compatriot. erdinand Hodler(figs. 167 169). Rustic solid-
\
ity, proof against c\er> siren song, is his chief characteristic. He belonged,
it is true, to the idealist movement, and he painted some allegorical
THE NINETEENTH CENTURY IN EUROPE 51
Italy
Although it was the cradle of the Renaissance and its final stronghold too,
Italy had long been burdened by the very weight of her inheritance. She
was slow to adopt the newer trends in art, but when she did so she soon
made up for the time she had lost. As the century of Delacroix and Cé-
zanne gave way to that of Matisse and Picasso, a handful of Italians were
beginning to bring about a revival of painting there. Boldini was destined
to become the most Parisian of fashionable painters. Signorini founded
an anti-academic movement in Florence, although it never had any seri-
ous effects, and Segantini (fig. 174), a native of the Swiss Ticino whose
early work was in a lyric strain, painted numerous peasant scenes in a
realist style softened by human sympathy. Later, he turned his attention
to a sombre kind of philosophic symbolism that is said to have been in-
spired by his neighbour in the Engadine, the philosopher Friedrich Nietz-
sche.
In 1899 Cézanne, aged sixty, was working on his Grandes Baigneuses and
sent three pictures to the Salon des Indépendants. The 'Nabis' group held
a great exhibition in Paris. Claude Monet, at fifty-nine, was beginning the
series of views of London in which he pushed the disintegration of form
even further than he had done before. Renoir was fifty-eight and settling
down at Cagnes; Kandinsky was thirty-four, Klee twenty, Matisse thirty,
Picasso eighteen, and Modigliani fifteen. Sisley died with the century itself.
Nineteenth - Century Painting
Illustrations
1 Jacques-Louis David
2 François Gérard
3 Antoine-Jean Gros
k Nicolas-Toussaint Charlet
5 Georges Michel
6 Pierre-Paul Prud'hon
7 Théodore Géricault
8 Théodore Géricault
9 Théodore Géricault
10 Théodore Géricault
11 Théodore Géricault
12 Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
13 Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
14 Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
15 Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
16 Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres
17 Théodore Chassériau
18 Théodore Chasseriau
19 Théodore Chassériau
20 Théodore Chasseriau
21 Alexandre Decamps
22 Eugène Delacroix
23 Eugène Delacroix
24 Eugène Delacroix
25 Eugène Delacroix
26 Eugène Delacroix
27 Eugène Delacroix
28 Honoré Daumier
29 Honoré Daumier
30 Honoré Daumier
32 Honoré Daumier
33 Narcisse Diaz de la Pefta
K
34 Charles Daubigny
35 François Millet
36 François Millet
37 François Millet
38 Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
39 Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
40 Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
41 Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
42 Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
A3 Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot
44 Théodore Rousseau
45 Johan Barthold Jongkind
46 Johan Barthold Jongkind
T
47 Eugène Boudin
48 Eugène Boudin
49 Eugène Boudin
50 Eugène Boudin
_ >
.
* *
f m. ** ,^
*ÉLJ
1
/- J
i^. <^^^|
*
/
kF
-
IV lutij
51 Gustave Courbet
52 Gustave Courbet
53 Gustave Courbet
54 Gustave Courbet
55 Gustave Courbet
56 Gustave Courbet
57 Anne-Louis Girodet-Trioson
58 Gustave Moreau
-•'
s v- a
'I
j /\
la / \
66 Edouard Manet
67 Edouard Manet
68 Edouard Manet
69 Edouard Manet
70 Edouard Manet
71 Edgar Degas
72 Edgar Degas
73 Edgar Degas
74 Edgar Degas
75 Edgar Degas
76 Edgar Degas
77 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
78 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
79 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
80 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
V*
81 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
82 Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec
83 Eugène Carrière
84 Jean-Louis Forain
85 Ernest Meissonier
86 Berthe Morisot
87 Mary Cassait
88 Jean-Frédéric Bazille
90 Auguste Renoir
91 Auguste Renoii
V
¥
:
92 Auguste Renoir
93 Auguste Renoii
94 Auguste Renoir
95 Paul Cézanne
96 Paul Cézanne
97 Paul Cézanne
98 Paul Cézanne
99 Paul Cézanne
b^fcic^^™*' " -***'*'*
_^ M.» ÏJ--
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H'
ë t I
i^î
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S*^ s
^
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M
-7
151 J. M. W.Turner
152 Sir Thomas Lawrence
153 J. M. W. Turner
154 J. M. W. Turner
155 J. M. W. Turner
156 John Constable
157 John Constable
158 John Constable
159 Richard Parkes Bonington
160 Richard Parkes Bonington
161 Richard Parkes Bonington
162 Richard Parkes Bonington
163 Richard Parkes Bonington
164 Sir Edward Burne-Jones
*J -
in 1898. Afriend of Jongkind and of 1 906. A friend of Emile Zola and first
Poussin and Claude Lorrain. Worked ists and so came to establish his own
in Italy as well as France. Painted style, which was closely related to
mainly landscapes and figures figs. I
theirs. Well known for his pictures
38-43) of ballet-life and horse-racing (figs.
Courbet, Jean-Désiré-Gustave. French 71-76)
painter. Born at Ornans in 1819, died Delacroix, Eugène. French painter. Born
at La Tour-du-Peil/, Switzerland, in at Charenton in 1798, died in Paris in
1877. Self-taught. Had great influence 1863. Studied Rubens in particular
not only on later realists (e.g. Thoma and was influenced by Constable and
in Germany) but on Impressionists Bonington. The central figure of
such as Renoir and Manet. Painted French Romanticism. Painted his-
landscapes, figure-pieces, portraits torical pieces, portraits, animal-pic-
and still-life (figs. 51-56) tures and religious works (figs. 22-27)
Couture, Thomas. French painter. Born Diaz de Narcisse. French paint-
la Pciïa,
at Sentis in LSI 5, died at Yillicrs-lc- er. Born at Bordeaux in 1808, died in
Bel in 1879. Teacher o\~ Manet and 1876 at Menton. Landscape-painter
1 euerbach, among others, and stu- of the Barbizon school. Self-taught,
died under Gros himself. Historical but influenced by Prud'hon and De-
and portrait painter fig. 60)( lacroix (
fig. 33)
Cross, Henri-Edmond (real name: Dela- Fattori, Giovanni. Italian painter. Born
croix). French painter. Born at Douai at 1 eghorn in 1825, died in 1908 in
in 1856, died in 1910 at Saint-C lair. Florence. Painted many pictures with
Member of the Impressionists, hut military subjects, as well as some very
later came under the influence of personal portraits (fig. 176)
Seurat and Signac. Mainly a land- Forain, Jean-Louis. French painter.
scape painter, and used the Pointillist Born at Rheims in 1852, died in 1931
technique (fig. 1 10) in Paris. Best known for his water-
Daubigny, Charles- Francois. French colours, pastels and graphic work,
painter. Born in Paris in 1817 and but was a fine painter in oils as well
died there in 1878. Joined the Barbi- (fig. 84)
zon school. Painted landscapes and Friedrich, Caspar David. German paint-
nature-studies. An important fore- er. Born at Greifswald in 1774, died
runner of Impressionism (fig. 34) in 840 in Dresden. Studied in Copen
1
in 1824. Influenced first by Gros and Jongkind, Johan Barthold. Dutch paint-
then by Rubens. A
leading figure in er. Born at Ootmarsum in 1819, died
French Romanticism {figs. 7-11) in 1891 at Côte-Saint-André. Studied
Girodet-Trioson, Anne-Louis (Girodet under Eugène Isabey, among others.
de Roussy). French painter. Born at Went to France in 1846 and settled
Montargis in 1767, died in 1824 in there permanently in 1860. Influenced
Paris. Pupil of David. Influenced by by Corot and the Barbizon school,
Romanticism while in Italy. Painted and was associated with Boudin at
literary subjects {fig. 57) Honfleur. Painted landscapes and
Gleyre, Charles. Swiss painter. Born at especially views of canals and har-
Chevilly in 1 806, died in Paris in 874. 1 bours figs. 45, 46)
(
Settled in Paris after visits to Italy and Lawrence, Sir Thomas. British painter.
the East. Teacher of Monet, Renoir Born at Bristol in 1769, died in 1830
and Whistler, among others {fig. 170) in London. Like Reynolds, he was a
Gogh, Vincent van. Dutch painter. Born court painter, and painted many por-
at Groot Zundert in 1853, died in traits of the great, such as Metter-
1890 at Auvers-sur-Oise. Studied in nich,Pius VII and Charles X(fig. 152)
Antwerp and, 1886, in Paris.
after Lega, Silvestro. Italian painter. Born at
Friend of the Impressionists, of Gau- Modigliana in 1826, died in 1895 in
guin and Toulouse-Lautrec. In 1888 Florence. Belonged to the so-called
he went to Aries, where his most im- 'macchiaioli' group which resembled
portant work was done: landscapes, the school of Barbizon (fig. 175)
figures, and portraits (figs. 115-120) LeibI, Wilhelm. German painter. Born
Gros, (Baron) Antoine-Jean. French at Cologne in 1844, died at Wurzburg
painter. Born in Paris in 1771, died in in 1900. Studied first in Munich, then
1835 at Bas Meudon. Pupil of David. in Paris, where he fell under the in-
Glorified the Napoleonic period in his fluence of Courbet and realism. Spe-
portraits and battle-pieces (fig. 3) cialized in paintings of peasant men
Guigou, Paul Camille. French painter. and women in their natural surround-
Born at Villars in Provence in 1834, ings (fig. 148)
died in 1871 in Paris. Painted mainly Liebermann, Max. German painter.
landscapes in Provence. Sometimes Born in Berlin in 1847 and died there
resembles Courbet (fig. 62) in 1935. Studied in Berlin and Paris,
Guillaumin, Armand. French painter. and spent much time at Barbizon.
Born in Paris in 1841, died there in Influenced by Courbet and Millet,
1927. Painted landscapes, still-life and and later by the Impressionists. Paint-
portraits. He joined the Impression- ed portraits, street-scenes and
ists, but his personal style really be- theatre-life (fig. 147)
Manet, Edouard. French painter. Born Morisot, Berthe. French painter. Born
in Paris in 1832 and died there in at Bourges in 1841, died in 1895 in
1883. Mainly a figure-painter and Paris. Worked under Corot and was
portraitist. An influential Impressio- influenced by Manet. Member of the
nist, although he himself was influ- Impressionists (fig. 86)
enced by the Realists, especially by Pissarro, Camille. French painter. Born
Courbet (Jigs. 65-70) in St. Thomas, Danish West Indies, in
Marées, Hans von. German painter. 1830, died in 1903 in Paris. Impression-
Born at Elberfeld in 1837, died in ist landscape-painter, like Sisley and
on those who later formed the Barbi- ture, he moved on to create a dream-
zon school fig, 5) ( world of mythologica] figure-compo-
Millet, Jean-Francois. rench painter. 1 sitions and still-lifes (figs. 106-108)
Born at Gruchy in 1814, died in 1875 Renoir, Pierre-Auguste. French painter.
at Barbizon. Specialized in the pays- Horn at Limoges in 1841, died in 1919
sage intime and belonged to the Barbi- at ( agues. Pupil of Gleyre, influenced
zon school figs. 3'5-37) ( by Courbet and then by Monet who
Monet, Claude. French painter. Born in introduced him to pure Impression-
Paris in 1840, died in 1926" at Giver- ism. Specialized in figure-composi-
ny. After 1857, studied in Paris. Work- tions and portraits ( figs.89-94)
ed with Renoir, Sisley and Manet. Rousseau, Henri, the 'Douanier'. French
The most characteristic Impressionist painter. Born at Laval in 1844, died
and the chief theoretician of the move- in 1910 in Paris. Amateur painter,
ment (figs. 134 139) and a master of 'naive' art. Friend
Monticelli, Adolphe.
1 rench painter of Gauguin and Redon. Painted
Born Marseilles in 1824 and died
at landscapes and figure-compositions
there in 1886. A versatile painter o\~ i
figs. 121 ', 122)
landscapes, portraits and still-life, as Rousseau, Théodore. French painter.
well as festivals, in a range of strong Born in Pans in 1812, died in 1867 at
colour that was widely admired figs. ( Barbizon. Painted intimate land-
63, 64) scapes in the forest of Fontainebleau
Moreau, Gustave. rench painter. Born 1
and belonged to the Barbizon school.
in Paris in 1826 and died there in Influenced, like the others of the
1898. Teacher of Matisse and Kou- group. b> Constable, Bonington, and
ault, among others. Painted sym- the Dutch painters of the seventeenth
bolical works with mythologica] and century fig. 44) (
biblical subjects. Most of his work Scawtnd, Mortal >on. German painter.
is in the More. m Museum m l'ai is Porn in Vienna in 1804, died in 1871
( fig. 58) in Munich. South-German Roman-
ticist, known also for his drawings traitist who started as a popular real-
{fig.140) ist (he had known Courbet in Paris)
Segantini, Giovanni. Italian painter. but later came under the influence of
Born at Arco in 1858, died in 1899 at Bôcklin and Feuerbach. His litho-
Schafberg in the Engadine. Painted graphs are also well known (fig. 143)
Alpine landscapes and the life of the Toulouse-Lautrec, Henri de. French
mountain peasantry (fig. 174) painter. Born at Albi in 1841, died
Seurat, Georges. French painter. Born in 1901 at Malromé. Known not on-
in Paris in 1859 and died there in ly for his paintings but also for his-
1891. Began as a draughtsman, and lithographs and posters (fig. 77-
methodically evolved the 'Pointillist' 82)
system of disintegrating colour. Triibner, Wilhelm. German painter.
Friend of Signac. Painted landscapes, Born atHeidelberg in 1851, died in
architecture, and still-life (figs. 112- 1917 at Karlsruhe. Started as a realist
114) painter under Courbet's influence,
Signac, Paul. French painter. Born in then, under Feuerbach's, he began
Paris in 1863 and died there in 1935. painting in a 'literary' manner. Later
A typical Neo-Impressionist, like still, he became an impressionistic
Seurat; friend of van Gogh. Painted landscape and portrait-painter (fig.
landscapes with rivers and the sea 149)
{fig. HI) Turner, Joseph Mallord William. Brit-
Sisley, Alfred. French painter. Born in ish painter. Born in London in 1775
Paris 1839, died at Moret-sur-
in and died there in 1851. Began as a
Loing in 1899. Member of the Im- draughtsman and in 1801 started
pressionists, pupil of Gleyre, friend painting in oil. His experiments with
of Renoir and Monet. Landscape- effects of light and atmosphere make
painting influenced by the Barbizon him one of the most important fore-
school, afterwards by Monet and runners of Impressionism (figs. 150-
Pissarro (figs. 123-128) 155)
Spitzweg, Karl. German painter. Born Whistler, James Abbott McNeill. Amer-
in Munich in 1808 and died there in ican painter. Born at Lowell, Mass.,
1885. Self-taught, but later felt the in- in 1834, died in London in 1903.
fluence of the Barbizon school (fig. Worked in Paris but even more in
144) London. Pupil of Gleyre, influenced
Thoma, Hans. German painter. Born at by Courbet and the Barbizon paint-
Bernau in 1839, died at Karlsruhe in ers. Painted landscapes and por-
1924. Landscape-painter and por- traits (fig. 172)
Captions
nineteenth # CAll\
century compass
Books
painting