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"Carolus-Duran
18371917"
Palais des Beaux-Arts, Lille
9 March9 June 2003
Toulouse, Musée des Augustins
27 June29 September 2003
Annie Scottez-De Wambrechies
Carolus-Duran 18371917
Lille: Éditions de la Réunion des musées nationaux
215 pp.; 58 b/w ills., 132 color ills.; bibliography, chronology;
34.50 euros (paperback) ISBN 2711845532 |
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Critical commentary in Carolus-Duran's
lifetime was not always generous: in 1903, a Belgian writer called
his work "du mauvais gout"; Emile Bernard described him
as "cet homme [qui] ne sait ni voir, ni dessiner"; Camille
Mauclair thought his work in the line of pictorial "décadence."
Because posterity considered him a superficial academic portraitist
who compromised his considerable talents for facile financial rewards,
his paintings have rarely been studied for themselves. Albert Boime's
1971 examination of the Academy contains but four brief references
to the artist, while Robert Rosenblum's and H. W. Janson's 1984
survey of nineteenth-century art, which includes dozens of neglected
artists, includes none. With the exception of 155 paintings exhibited
as an hommage in 1919 in Paristhe only retrospective of his
art to dateit was not until the audacious counter-impressionist
show, Équivoques (1973), that his paintings were shown
outside of his native Lille. That same year, Michèle le Gal
resuscitated his work in a three-volume dissertation that catalogued
virtually all of his known paintings. Le Gal's study, supported
by the descendents' collection of unpublished works and correspondence,
became the impetus that same year for a small exhibition at the
Galerie Flavian of thirty-one paintings, but that modest showing,
documented only by a checklist, went largely unheralded in the international
press. The exhibition The Second Empire (1978) included one
painting, while the The Realist Tradition (1981) included
two. Clearly, Carolus-Duran's time had not yet come, even in the
wave of revisionist nineteenth-century art history that began to
consider conservative painters as not so far apart from the more
progressive ones. |
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Despite
such dismissal from art historians, Carolus-Duran was one of the most
sought-after painters of tout Paris in the latter half of the
nineteenth century. Like Gérôme, Cabanel, Bonnat, and
Bastien-Lepage, his works were constantly in demand and, like them,
he made substantial sums in responding to the market, reason enough
for some to question the sincerity of his art. Equally important but
generally ignored until Barbara Weinberg's study of the Paris training
of American painters (1991) was his unique contribution as a teacher,
which emerged in 1872 with the establishment of his atelier. The studio
became a celebrated alternative to the common academic system, training,
among many others, eighty-one American painters, including John Singer
Sargent, James Carroll Beckwith, Will H. Low, Kenyon Cox, J. Alden
Weir, and Theodore Robinson. What attracted them was Carolus-Duran's
unorthodox method of having his élèves draw and
paint from the live model simultaneously; in effect, working directly
with color and form rather than layering the process through multiple
drawing studies as obligatory elements. Will Low did not exaggerate
when he described this method as "a radical innovation in the
teaching of painting," from which the budding American impressionists
developed their unique approach. |
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The present exhibition reunites eighty
paintings, along with the celebrated portrait of the artist by Sargent
and an equally sympathetic depiction by his friend Jean-Jacques Henner.
The exhibition covers the entire range of Carolus-Duran's career,
from his earliest portrait studies of around 1860 to one of his last
notable examples dated 1910. Produced over this fifty-year span, his
works show how he absorbed diverse contemporary trends: the early
realist paintings drawn from his admiration of Courbet and Spanish
painting, whose influence is especially evident in the Le Blessé
(often called Le Convalescent) and the Homme endormi
(186061); diverse landscapes fully in the Barbizon and pre-impressionist
modes; and still lifes reflecting his long-standing friendship with
Fantin-Latour. The well-written and thoughtfully designed catalogue
provides a full accounting, making it the best introduction to his
work and providing a complete picture of his artistic achievements.
It is carefully prepared with a full bibliography, chronology, and
every work of art, including supporting material not in the exhibition,
is reproduced in faithful color. |
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The first question any historian must
ask in contemplating an exhibition of a forgotten painter is whether
he is worth reviving. The answer lies always in the taste of the beholder
and his or her receptiveness to a balanced picture of the period as
incorporating conservative and progressive trends. Glancing even in
passing at Carolus-Duran's major works should answer the question
quickly. One need only observe the mastery and modernity of his landscapes,
lesser known than the portraits, to see that there is reason to look
at his work in fresh light. The Promenade sous boisForêt
de Fontainebleau (1861), a large canvas in Indianapolis that has
been exhibited only once before, comes as a surprise in its depiction
of a couple in which almost all of the canvas surface is given over
to the remarkable wave of foliage and filtered light. In its emphasis
on nature rather than the figure, it could easily be compared to Rousseau,
but in fact is closer to Monet and more skillful than the latter's
work of the same period. So, too, his beach scenes (1869) or his studies
of Trouville (1872 and 1875) from private collections; these canvases
can be placed solidly in the pre-impressionist camp. His evocative
Marine à la barque (1885), recently discovered and not
included in Le Gal's dissertation, is an unexpected echo of Courbet
and Whistler, rivaling both in poetic associations but standing on
its own in mood and technique. And Un soir dans l'Oise, seemingly
an ébauche but exhibited as a finished work in 1893
next to two paintings by Burne-Jones, displays, as the critic Yriarte
wrote, a remarkable sonority of color and slap-dash brush work that
might be mistaken for a work of Moreau or other avant-garde contemporaries
(p. 178). |
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While the academic, historical and
religious subjects are not successful and sit uncomfortably in his
oeuvre, the portraits show Carolus-Duran's true strengths. Many of
these are far removed from the static society images one expects to
find from consulting the earlier literature. His capacity to capture
the essence of his models is astonishing: from the unassuming portrait
of the young Astruc (1860) to the candid self-portrait for the Uffizi
(1869) and the lilting Dame au gant (1869), these works exhibit
an authority and sensitivity to pose and attitude, revealing an adroit
and inventive hand. The portrait of the Countess Rattazzi (1872),
cousin of Napoleon III and mistress of Eugène Sue, is an extraordinary
essay in luxurious paint surface and artistic design. Swathed in a
sweeping navy blue dress and adorned with lace and dark pearls, the
countess is depicted against an intense red background; this spirited
composition demonstrates the artist's innate sense of pictorial harmony.
As the exhibition demonstrates, Carolus, like Degas, was also a master
of the portrait without fanfare. The one of Étienne Haro (1873),
whose right hand beckons as if he is including the spectator in a
discourse, is an essay in instantaneous communication. The more doleful
portrait of his favorite sister (1875), whose melancholy face is accented
by wavy dabbling in washy blue paint, is a prime example of what the
critic Jules Claretie called "l'art intime." Standing in
front of the portrait of the photographer Nadar in his sixty-sixth
year (1886), the spectator can almost converse with one of the most
interesting figures of the age. It is hard to find a more candidly
improvised rendition than the one he began, but never finished, of
Manet (c. 1877), whom Carolus knew and had admired since the late
1850s; Manet, who appreciated Carolus's work, painted a reciprocal
portrait that has disappeared. |
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These portraits have a flare and originalityas
many of Sargent's best portraits havein terms of color, linear
flow, design, free brushwork, and so forth, all of which elevates
them above the facile photographic renderings of face and dress. Zola
understood this when he labeled Carolus "un élève
de la nouvelle école," even though he did not always approve
of the painter's more conservative works. But it should be no surprise
that Carolus-Duran leaned toward a modernist approach, which remained
within his artist framework during his long life. While still in his
twenties, the artist was painting en plein air at Chailly-en-Bière
well before Bazille, Renoir, or Sisley. It is equally indicative of
the painter's liberal views that he presided over the Société
Nationale des Beaux-Arts, an institution free of official canons.
(This aspect of Carolus's career is the subject of a separate but
complimentary exhibition at the Musée d'art et d'industrie
André Diligent in nearby Roubaix. The catalogues of these exhibitions
are in the process of being published by Gaïte Dignat; three
volumes covering up to 1905 have appeared, with a fourth, covering
190610, is forthcoming.) It is therefore not inconsistent with
Carolus-Duran's views that, when he traveled to New York in 1898,
he gave a master class in William Meritt Chase's studio. The portrait
he produced in an hour-long demonstration in front of 200 invited
guests remained in Chase's collection until his death, an apt reminder
that Carolus-Duran's art deserves greater attention, which this fine
exhibition and catalogue now amply provides. |
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William Hauptman
Independent Scholar
Lausanne, Switzerland |
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