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Lost
and Found: S. Bing's Merchandising of Japonisme and Art Nouveau
by Gabriel P. Weisberg |
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From the moment of S. Bing's death,
in September 1905, a curtain of obscurity fell on what was known until
a renewed interest in art nouveau in the nineteen sixties brought
the name Bing back into prominence. Well-known as a progressive dealer,
Bing (fig. 1) always kept the personal side of his existence hidden
and out of reach from the public record. Those few individuals who
got to know him at alloften colleagues from the art world in
Germany such as Justus Brinckmann (1843-1915), the Director of the
Kunst und Gewerbe Museum in Hamburgmet with the dealer in the
secure confines of his private apartment on the rue Vézelay,
near the Musée Camondo in Paris. Here, in a world filled with
innumerable Japanese objects, Bing entertained his guests. Whether
they were fashionable, creative artists such as Henry van de Velde
(1863-1957), Henri Vever (1854-1942), and others, or his German museum
colleagues, Bing's superb collection of Japanese objects (among many
other pieces), and a huge number of prints, never failed to amaze
them. Raymond Koechlin (1860-1931)professor at the École
des Sciences Politiquesforty years after the fact in 1930, recalled
how he became a convert to Japanese art and how Bing cultivated his
and others' passion for Japanese prints. Koechlin wrote that Bing
opened his home "with the most amicable good will. A small group
gathered around him that he invited for dinner parties in the privacy
of his home. Gaston Migeon was part of the group,…also Alphonse
Isaac, the engraver,…Hugues Krafft, who had come back from the
Far East; and always Vever and Gillot; I never missed one of these
evenings, to which Bing's son, the young Marcel Bing who was still
in college was admitted, and whose intelligence and charm we already
knew how to appreciate."1 His collection added to
his reputation as a person of exquisite taste. He was recognized as
a great aesthete whose demeanor reflected elegance, erudition, and
an ability to convey the importance of passion for collecting what
was beautiful; in this, he was definitively a person of the "old
school" whose pursuit of beauty remained uppermost in his mind.
Julius Meier-Graefe (1867-1935), who was to become one of Bing's closest
friends, commented in 1933, "Everyone thought of the dainty figure
(Bing) with the intellectual head as a Parisian. He spoke and wrote
a classic French, avoided all flowery phrases of the boulevard, had
the polite manner of a marquis of the old days who spent his leisure
chasing bon mots and who liked to spend time in his library.
One would hardly have credited him with the exceptional energy of
a researcher, least of all that of a dealer. Bing was both. A substantial
part of the beginning of the intellectual conquest of Japan is due
to him."2 Bing could mesmerize collectors; he was
a suave and persuasive businessman, who recognized that in order to
function successfully during the crisis precipitated by the Dreyfus
affair, it was necessary to remove himself from the public eye as
much as possible. Always discreet, Bing was quite obsessive about
his decision to conceal his identity; only a few people knew of his
private collections, and even fewer knew anything about his personal
life. To him it was the artwork that he championed whether Japanese
or, later, his version of an art nouveauthat was foremost; his
own ego, and life, had to be sublimated, even eliminated. |
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There is
no doubt now that Bing will always remain somewhat of a mystery; even
after forty years of pursuing leads about his life, we know very little
about his daily existence. Little has been found that would shed light
on his family life. While a few details have been located on his business
practices and dealings, there are no definitive archives dedicated
to his trade negotiations; only scant letters housed in the archives
of the various museums Bing dealt with speak about his art dealing.
Were the times he lived in responsible for such secrecy? Were the
ensuing French and world events after Bing's death what led to a purging
of the record of his life and business? Or, more significantly, even
after all these years of in-depth research, have we simply not looked
in all the right places, examined all the appropriate business and
museum archives, that would provide a clearer picture of what Bing
did and how he was able to do it? While there is no blue-print available
that would allow us to get a firmer grip on Bing's life, clues leading
to a more complex picture of the man, and the ways in which he promoted
his ideas and activities during his life, do appearoften in
the most unusual locations. We must examine some of them today, in
order to find what has been lost, and recover Bing's life as one of
the primary art patrons of the nineteenth century. In the process
we might gain a clearer picture of the ways in which he marketed art
and became the primary figure in the art nouveau movement. It will
appear that Bing was a brilliant tactician who knew how to be a successful
businessman by anticipating market fluctuationsthe rise and
fall of fashionin order to survive in his chosen areas of emphasis.
It is also clear that by knowing so many people in the art world,
and by sustaining these ties for decades, Bing was able to set up
a detailed network of personal associations, thus allowing him to
expand his business more easily. |
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| Fig.
2 Guests at a yearly dinner of the London Japan Society, 1900.
Photograph. London, Courtesy the Japan Society |
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| Fig.
3 Hugues Krafft, Midori-no-sato, 1885. Photograph. Reims, Musée
Le Vergeur, Société des Amis du Vieux Reims, Archives
Hugues Krafft |
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| Fig.
4 Hugues Krafft, Midori-no-sato, 1885. Photograph. Reims, Musée
Le Vergeur, Société des Amis du Vieux Reims, Archives
Hugues Krafft |
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| Fig.
5 Invitation card announcing a lecture by S. Bing to the Japan
Society of London, London, Courtesy the Japan Society |
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MARKETING JAPAN AND JAPONISME
While the ways in which Bing promoted the taste for Japanese artboth
on the most popular level and on the highest levels of tasteare
charted in the exhibition that prompted the symposium leading to this
publication, the most recent investigations have looked into uncharted
aspects of Bing's working methods. We know of Bing's involvement in
the sale of Japanese art throughout the European continent and in
the United States during the 1880s. However, new information has come
to light that illuminates how Bing's ties with England were extensively
enlarged by March, 1892.3 In that month, Bing became a
member of the Japan Society in London, a group dedicated to the popularization
of Japonisme (fig. 2) and the study of Japanese art on the highest
levels. Bing was elected in the company of two of his closest colleagues
at the time: Charles Gillot (1853-1903), who had worked with Bing
in the production of his revolutionary magazine Artistic Japan,
and Hugues Krafft (1853-1935), a photographer and traveler to Japan
(1882-83), whose home outside ParisMidori-no-satooften
served as a convenient meeting place for a circle of erudite collectors
of Japanese art, including Bing (figs. 3, 4).4 Membership
in this elite group is significant; it underlines Bing's role in the
sponsorship of Japan in England and reiterates his importance as a
dealer and power-broker who worked to sponsor other individuals as
members in the special society. As a member of the group Bing, had
two obligations to fulfill. First, it was necessary for any new member
to give a lecture of his own choosing on Japanese art to the membership
of the organization (fig. 5) and, second, to recruit new members thereby
adding to the group's prestige internationally. It is to both these
aspects that we must now turn. |
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As a friend and colleague of many
of the primary Japonistes in France, and a member by December 20,
1892, Bing proposed a large number of individuals as Corresponding
Members.5 These included Alexis Rouart (1839-1911), the
younger brother of Henri Rouartthe collector of the Impressionists
and especially Degasand an individual who had become a fervent
connoisseur of Japanese art, especially ukiyo-e prints, and Henri
Vever, a leading jeweler and another significant collector of Japanese
art, especially ukiyo-e prints. Over time, Vever amassed a superb
collection of Japanese prints, some of which were of the highest aesthetic
quality. The fact that Bing supported both of these men for membership
attests to his close relationship with them and his knowledge of what
their personal collections contained, much of which could have been
secured with his assistance.6 Ever mindful of the importance
of getting the message out about the diversity of Japanese art through
elegant publications, Bing also supported the membership of Maurice
Joyant (18641930) of Boussod, Valadon & Co., and Michel
Manzi (18491915), an engraver who became technical director
of the engraving atelier at Boussod, Valadon & Co. and who, in
1897 with Jean Boussod (1865-1891) and Joyant, took charge of the
publishing division of the company, which then became known as Jean
Boussod, Manzi, Joyant & Co. Manzi's collection of surimonos
(limited edited prints) and Japanese prints was well known.7
By having these members accepted, Bing saw to it that the ranks of
the Japan Society were augmented with key figures from France, especially
those individuals, similar to himself, who had been amassing collections
of Japanese art of significant value. Since all of these men knew
one another, and were becoming increasingly familiar with Japonistes
in London, this was a very effective way for contacts and ties between
collectors to be strengthened and explicitly enlarged. But Bing did
not stop with this initial group of nominees. |
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By March 1893, Bing saw other individuals
he had proposed for membership elected into the Japan Society. These
included Luigi Chialiva (1842-1914), a Swiss painter who worked in
the Barbizon landscape style, and Edmond Michotte (18301913),
a musical composer and an occasional art dealer from Brussels.8 |
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Bing's relationship with Michotte
is also worthy of further discussion. Apparently Bing and Michotte
formed an extremely close business relationship, which lead Michotte
to secure most of his Japanese art objects through Bing. Acting sometimes
as Bing's agent in Brussels, and as someone who actively promoted
Japanese art in Belgium, Michotte formed a collection of thousands
of Japanese objects of all types. Many of these, which he later sold
to the Belgian government, served as the basis for the Musée
Michotte; at the time an oft-maligned collection that actually contained
many objectsespecially Japanese printsof exceptional quality.9
Although it would take us too far afield to write a detailed history
of the ties between Bing and Michotte, the existence of letters from
Michotte to the curatorial staff of Belgian museums gives us an idea
of the extent of the relationship between Bing and Michotte.10 |
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Bing proposed for membership two
other figures who were closely linked with him. The first was Edmond
de Goncourt, (fig. 6) who, by the early 1890s, was a famous novelist
who saw himself as the primary proponent of Japonisme in France.11
While Bing would later have an angry debate with Goncourt over the
publication of a book on Hokusai,12 in 1893 both men, in
spite of their differences, must have recognized the other's importance
to the Japonisme movement. From the beginning of Bing's activities
as a dealer, Goncourt had been a regular visitor to his shops, and
an avid buyer of Japanese objects and promoter of Japonisme. It is
because he recognized Goncourt's fame as a writer with a long-standing
commitment to Japonisme that Bing thought he would be a good inductee
for the Society.13 More significantly for an understanding
of the ways in which the taste for things Japanese influenced the
emergence of Art Nouveau, Bing also proposed P. A. Isaac-Dathis for
the Japan Society.14 Isaac, at the moment of his nomination,
was not only involved in collecting Japanese art, but he was taking
the lead in seeing that Japanese design elements were included in
his own studies for the decorative arts, especially textiles. By 1895,
when Bing shifted his activities toward the exhibition and making
of craft objects for the home, Isaac, whom Bing called a friend became
increasingly important to Bing's venture into art nouveau.15
He contributed floral-motif hanging textiles to Bing's shop (fig.
7), arranged in a manner suggestive of an appreciation of Japanese
modelseither prints or screens. Isaac was, therefore, in the
forefront of those designers whom Bing encouraged to study Japanese
art, with the hope that they would apply Far Eastern motifs and design
principles to their own work. |
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Bing's other obligation toward
the Japan Society was to deliver a public lecture to the group,
in English, and in London. Given Bing's extensive travel commitments
to the United States in 1894, and his opening of the Salons of Art
Nouveau in 1895-96, Bing postponed his lecture until March 23, 1898.16
By this time, Bing's reputation as a learned Japoniste had spread.
The lecture he prepared on "The Thirty-Six Views of the Fuji-Yama"
by Hokusai, then one of the most esteemed of the ukiyo-e printmakers,
seemed quite appropriate. His selection of a very popular print
series, one well known not only to the members, demonstrated that
Bing was interested in appealing to the broadest public audience.
There was only one problem: Bing, ever true to his practice of remaining
in the shadows, or perhaps because he couldn't speak English well
enough or, more importantly, was too involved with the creation
of his art nouveau ateliers, did not come to London to present the
paper. Charles Holme, the Secretary of the Japan Society, read the
lecture on Bing's behalf. That no photographs of S. Bing, as of
yet, have been found in the Society Archivesalthough members
were obligated to provide this type of personal documentationsuggests
that Bing wanted no publicity for himself at all, and preferred
remaining in the background while still working to further the goals
of the Society. Indeed, a section in the Japan Society minutes reports
that Bing was given the responsibility of collecting annual dues
from foreign members of the group; presumably an important task
in helping the organization to grow. With Bing's connections throughout
Europe this also reflected a wise decision by The Japan Society.17 |
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| Figs.
8 Hugues Krafft, Basket Merchant (Marchand de paniers), 1883.
Photograph. Paris, Bibliothèque des Arts Décoratifs,
Albums Maciet |
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| Fig.
9 Hugues Krafft, Horse Loaded with Merchandise (Cheval chargé
de marchandises), 1883. Photograph. Bibliothèque des
Arts Décoratifs, Albums Maciet |
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| Fig.
10 Hugues Krafft, Portrait of a Geisha (Portrait d'une Geisha),
1883. Photograph. Paris, Bibliothèque des Arts Décoratifs,
Albums Maciet |
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| Fig.
11 Exposition des arbres nains du Japon, Galeries de l'Art Nouveau,
1902. Postcard. Paris, Bibliothèque des Arts décoratifs,
Albums Maciet |
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| Fig.
12 Hugues Krafft, From the left: Siegfried Bing, Louis Gonse,
Mme Roujon, Emmanuel Gonse and Mme Gonse at Midori-no-sato,
1899. Photograph. Reims, Musée Le Vergeur, Société
des Amis du Vieux Reims, Archives Hugues Krafft |
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Bing's ability to carefully network
with the most significant Japonistes, some of whom were to become
not only Bing's clients but sponsors of art nouveau, also led him
to establish ties with Hugues Krafft. As an inveterate traveler
throughout the world, Krafft had gone to Japan in the early 1880s.
While there, he not only collected artifacts and made many watercolors
of his trip, but he took extraordinary photographs of Japanese sites
and buildings, and of the common people going about their daily
activities (figs. 8, 9, 10). These photographic studies, rare for
the period, expanded an awareness of Japan among French Japonistes.18
In addition to objects brought back from Japan, Krafft further developed
his collection with those he secured from Bing's shop. Krafft also
did much more than collect objects. He purchased an actual Japanese
home and had Japanese craftsmen, whom he brought back from Japan,
install it just outside Paris, where he could live and dress in
the Japanese style. Midori-no-sato, as it was called, was situated
amidst a carefully designed garden, in the Japanese style, replete
with bonsai trees that Krafft purchased from an exhibition that
had been held at Bing's shop (fig. 11) in 1903.19 Krafft's
home became a place of exquisite refuge; it was here that he escaped
from the pressures of the materialistic world around him. It was
also here that Krafft held elaborate dinner parties, often for officials
from the Japanese Legation in France, or, eventually, members of
the French version of the Japan Society in London.20
It was here, as well, that S. Bing came in 1899 to one of the Krafft
gatherings. He is photographed, which was extremely unusual for
him, in the company of other Japonistes including his friend, the
author and collector, Louis Gonse and his wife and Madame Roujon,
the wife of Henri Roujon, then Director des Beaux-Arts. All the
participants to the gathering, including Bing, are wearing kimonos,
attesting to the seriousness of their dedication to Japanese culture
(fig. 12). This photograph is the only one found until now that
records how Bing looked at the moment when he was readying the Art
Nouveau Pavilion for the 1900 Paris World's Fair. Since the Société
Franco-Japonaise was officially formed in 1900, one wonders whether
the meetings at Midori-no-sato were not held to formalize the French
Society itself, a group that helped promote Japonisme and Japanese
art into the twentieth century.21 Bing's ties with Krafft
suggests many new areas for further investigation; this friendship
demonstrates the complexity of his liaisons with private individuals
and his ability, even during the late 1890s when he had become the
chief patron of art nouveau, to maintain his ties and interests
in Japanese art. It was simply good business to do so; it was also
one way in which he could reiterate just how significant Japanese
art continued to be for art nouveau and the advancement of designs
for interiors by 1900. The relationships that Bing had developed
also became the foundation for many of his business associations
under the new banner of art nouveau. In fact, many of the men who
were fervent Japonistes became devotees of Bing's new passionthat
of revealing how Japanese art could effectively influence and shape
French design. Even Henri Roujon, the Director des Beaux-Arts, was
a member of the circle of Japonistes who met at Midori-no-sato;
it was he who had asked Bing to travel to the United States, and
to report to him on the condition of the applied arts in that country.22 |
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MARKETING ART NOUVEAU
At the same time that he was advocating Japonisme, Bing, under the
advice of close colleagues such as the writer and theoretician Julius
Meier-Graefe, Justus Brinkmann from Hamburg, and the designer Henry
van de Velde, decided to fulfill a dream: to modernize the interior
of the contemporary home in order to make it both practical and aesthetically
pleasing. Inspired by what he had absorbed from Japanese art, and
determined to see that creative work was produced for home interiors,
Bing used all the advertising and marketing devices at his disposal,
including those he had applied to his Japanese art business, in order
to reach a wide public thus primed to understand and, he hoped, buy
the latest designed objects for sale in his gallery. What is significant
about Bing's new endeavor is the role played by Meier-Graefe, as artistic
advisor. This collaboration between the dealer and art patron Bing,
and the writer-theoretician Meier-Graefe has not been sufficiently
examined and needs further study. As one of Bing's close contacts
in the contemporary art world, albeit a figure from a younger generation,
Meier-Graefe's ideas about modern design helped Bing define his own
vision of the modern home. Thus, Bing's trip to Brussels in 1893,
to meet with van de Velde in the company of Meier-Graefe, becomes
increasingly valuable to our understanding of the inception of Bing's
Art Nouveau gallery. One must ask, however, why has this meeting not
received more attention than it has.23 Once Meier-Graefe
moved to Paris, after being dismissed as editor of the German magazine
Pan in the mid1890s,24 it was possible for the Hungarian-born
critic to be on the scene and become a witness to what we now call
"design reform." As a critic, and as a witness, Meier-Graefe
acted as an interpreter of new art; for the first Salon of Art Nouveau,
in 1896, he published no less than three articles in the magazine
Das Atelier on what he saw in Bing's gallery.25
These are the most insightful, first person witness reviews written
on what Bing attempted. We shall examine them within the context of
the discussion that follows, especially since they demonstrate how
Bing's closest colleagues further influenced his ideas. |
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There is little doubt that Meier-Graefe's
presence in Paris, from the opening of the first Salon of Art Nouveau,
and probably earlier, helped Bing crystallize his ideas on what might
be successful, and probably prompted Bing to move more heavily into
certain promotional areas. While it is unclear whether Meier-Graefe
helped Bing select the artists he showed in 1895, the fact that he
had Bing's attention was significant. As he had in promoting Japonisme,
Bing now took out advertisements in both daily publications and the
more elite art journals, and in the fall of 1895, by means of these
advertisements, Bing called on artists throughout Europe to submit
works to his gallery for his first Salon of art nouveau. He asked
the Belgian artist Georges Lemmen to create a print for which Bing
provided a text that clarified what his aesthetic goals were. The
text read as follows: "L'Art Nouveau will strive to eliminate
what is ugly and pretentious in all things that presently surround
us in order to bring perfect taste, charm, and natural beauty to the
least important utilitarian objects."26 |
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Bing's interest in internationalism
meshed with that of Meier-Graefe. For his Salon opening Bing had Lemmen
design his invitations utilizing the most modern lettering and he
saw to it that his stationary was modified along the same innovative
lines, incorporating a shop logoa modern concept that Bing championedas
a means by which his emporium could be quickly identified by anyone
receiving a letter, an invitation, or a bill. His awareness of the
innovations in the print world, especially changes in color lithography,
also led him to commission a poster from the Swiss artist Félix
Vallotton, which Bing hoped would function as an emblem for his gallery,
although we don't know how many posters were printed, or how widely
it was visible throughout Paris. Vallotton's poster, while referencing
an all encompassing interest in nature, especially plant forms, as
the backbone of art nouveau imagery, was not as visually challenging
as one might have expected in an era when women as icons of seduction
were already used to advertise all kinds of products. |
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Bing, in 1895-96, did not yet understand that
women would become the primary supporters of new design for the home,
and thus had Vallotton utilize nature, the more traditional influence,
with Japanese art, on art nouveau. Alongside the poster, Vallotton
designed a more effective advertising toola business cardwhich
on one side employed the same visual device of moving grass (along
with the name of art nouveau), while on the back of the card were
itemized all types of objects sold in Bing's shop (fig. 13). The designs
of the poster and of the card suggest that Bing, as had been the case
with his promotion of Japanese art, wanted to do things subtly; only
in this way could he continue to maintain the highest aesthetic goals
appropriate to his business enterprise and to his well-established
reputation.27 |
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These modifications were also extended
to the exterior and interior of his shop; he left nothing to chance
in giving his building, and his firm, a makeover. However, since
time and costs were important considerations he economized by not
using the designs proposed by the already well-known Belgian architect,
Victor Horta, for the façaderelying instead on cheaper
and more practical means to achieve a similar goal.28 |
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Meier-Graefe who wrote on the
first Salon in Das Atelier, commented on the various innovations
of the installation, especially the importance of the room interiors.
He moved away from individual art objects to focus on the types
of room interiors that Bing had commissioned from Belgian designers.
His interest in van de Velde's efforts led Meier-Graefe to underscore
the impact of the dining room and the smaller rooms positioned at
either side. To the critic, the "smoking room has much more
daring; here the eye is supposed to be stimulated after the meal,
therefore bolder designs are used." He went on to note, "van
de Velde and his co-worker Lemmen have shown that they can also
deploy refined luxury without hurting the basic principle... However,
MeierGraefe believed that the effect was not comforting and
criticized the furniture for being "too heavy." In this
very perceptive analysis, both sincere and informed, Meier-Graefe
noted that he "missed a natural harmony that should exist between
the furniture and the room." To him, the best room was that
of the cabinet of a collector. "Here everything is light and
fresh. The wallpaper is done by van de Velde, a pattern of distinguished
taste, on a faintly yellow background where there are very discreet
flower designs of the same color…With the furniture of this
room van de Velde has created a masterpiece…the material of
the furniture is stained light pinewood, the forms could not be
simpler, and yet it is distinguished by a really overwhelming gracefulness."29
While this room was sensitively discussed (fig. 14), and achieved
the effect of perfect harmonywhat Meier-Graefe was looking
forphotographs of this small room, and almost all the pieces
of furniture (except for one piece) have not been located. Thus,
we must rely on Meier-Graefe's commentary to demonstrate why this
room was significant. |
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Despite the fact that Bing was attacked
in numerous reviews in 1895, he did not take the bait and counterattack
in the press. He remained true to his nature; humility was appropriate
to his character. He also continued to devise new ways to get his
messages out: that all the arts were equal, that France had to look
at international artists for inspiration, and that Japan was an all
encompassing influence for all types of art work. In the case of the
latter, he also found that he had a fervent champion in Meier-Graefe,
who reiterated that Japan had strongly influenced all the crafts,
not the least being ceramics.30 |
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In the first Salon of Art Nouveau, Bing also gave
considerable place to the glass of Louis Comfort Tiffany. When Meier-Graefe
reviewed the show, he wrote that Tiffany's works had surpassed the
Japanese: "Here, Japan is for the first time defeated, all of
its potteries do not have in the slightest way this wonderful,
clear magic of color…here color comes forth purely and with
the greatest boldness."31 With this commentary Meier-Graefe
demonstrated that he was clearly aware of fundamental issues relating
to the decorative arts. He helped elevate American glass to a high
position and strengthened Bing's role as a discerning patron of the
arts. He also continued to draw parallels between western design and
the ways in which these objects were compared with Japan. |
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By early 1898, Bing was seriously considering
the formation of his own design ateliers or studios.32
The studios of Louis Comfort Tiffany, or those of others working in
Europe, inspired Bing to use his own designers to achieve his goals.
Bing wanted to move away from the role of dealer and promoter of works
created by artists from various countries, and various artistic persuasions,
in order to arrive at a unified vision that would conform to his own
ideas about modern design for the home. Discussions with Meier-Graefewho
was also moving toward establishing his own workshops for designersand
van de Velde, undoubtedly helped Bing crystallize this point of view.
He launched his own ateliers late in 1898. At first he supervised
the creation of small objectsessentially pieces that could be
worn or which would provide accents in existing room interiors.33
By 1899, at the time of the Grafton Galleries exhibition in London,
Bing not only demonstrated a willingness to show all types of paintings
and sculpture, but he was eager to promote the glass of Louis Comfort
Tiffany and jewelry produced in his own design studios.34
Because his name was already well-known in artistic circles in London
through his marketing of Japanese art, Bing was obviously hopeful
that there would be a carry-over effect into his new efforts on behalf
of modern design. However, this was not to be the case. The Grafton
show was attacked in the press; Bing was mortified to learn that England
was unwilling to accept art nouveau and remained as closed-minded
as the French had been against any strong outside influencesother
than the art of Japan. In this regard, England's artistic circles'
chauvinist reaction was similar to that of certain French artistic
pundits at the opening of the first Salon of Art Nouveau in 1895.
Accordingly, Bing retreated and never exhibited again in England.
He now entered into the most prolonged phase of his development as
an art nouveau patron in preparation for the Exposition Universelle
of 1900. And it is to this well-examined phase that we must turn to
see how art nouveau was effectively promoted. |
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ART NOUVEAU BING: THE CULMINATION OF EXQUISITE
CONSUMPTION
With his design studios organized, and with ties to leading firms
producing fabrics, textiles and ceramics, well established by late
1899, Bing, along with Meier-Graefe, realized that the moment was
at hand for their control of the design reform market. It is apparent
that both men decided at almost the same moment to try their hand
at art and interior design control. Meier Graefe's shop, La Maison
Moderne (fig. 15), also in Paris, opened in September, 1899; it was
seemingly designed to cater to a younger clientele than was Bing'
s shop, L'Art Nouveau. While Bing's store has received concerted attention,
why has Meier Graefe's competing and similar venture received so little?
This seems a logical area to examine in order to bring Meier-Graefe
out of the background. Specific young designers were under Bing's
direct aegis; they were going to produce works that were, Bing hoped,
linked to past quality achievements in French design, yet reflected
the new tastes of the period. But Meier-Graefe had similar goals,
and none other than Henry van de Velde assisted him in his venture.
How do we reconcile the two ventures or outline how they differed
at this exact moment in time? It is obvious that Bing, motivated by
his desire to reach a new consumer, wanted his presence at the Exposition
Universelle to be effective and challenging..But something had decidedly
changed between 1895 and 1900, when Bing had first begun to move in
this direction. |
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One of the areas to carefully examine is the critical
literature that had been appearing in the specialized art press since
December 1895. As we examine these reviews it becomes clear that as
early as 1896, Meier-Graefe was providing crucial theoretical ideas
for the burgeoning interest in redesigning home interiors. Bing and
his designers, in concert with Meier-Graefe, undoubtedly discussed
these theories, which existed in published form. They are now worth
considering in some detail, as they provide a clearer idea of what
the two men had in mind. |
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Meier-Graefe was against the presence of traditional
interiors filled with what he called "bric-à-brac."
He noted that, "modern taste hates everything that looks like
bric-à-brac, it suffocates in this interminable bric-a-brac
that characterized Parisian homes during the Second Empire…It
looks first of all at the space; it prefers light, air and, color."35
In defining what should be the modern look for the home, Meier-Graefe
also stressed the role of color in the overall design; it was essential
to choose the right colors for the walls. Color became the determining
factor in the creation of a sense of unity in interior decoration.
He also noted that the, "purpose of houses was to live in them,
not to write a catalogue about them; they had to convey the quality
of artistic presence: every object had to be made by the hand of an
artist."36 Following this advice, Bing recognized
that the interiors he hoped to produce had to be guided by a new principle:
unity. The objects in the homeeither useful or decorativealso
had to be from the hand of an artist, not the machine. Both Meier-Graefe
and Bing hoped to reproduce what had been achieved in Japan, where
the most innocuous object, used in the home, exhibited artistic qualities. |
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In the promotion of their respective emporiums,
the two entrepreneurs again saw eye to eye, and again the younger
man played an important role in envisioning the principle behind their
promotion of modern design. If he was not guiding, at least he was
reinforcing Bing's instinctive talent for promotion. Meier-Graefe's
two compelling posters, created by Manuel Orazi (1860-1934) and Maurice
Biais (1872-1926) in 1900, used seductive beauty personified by two
of the leading young women of the era to advertise his shop and the
objects for sale within. In Orazi's poster of Cléo de Mérodeconsidered
the most striking beauty of the erathe young woman (fig. 16)
is seen in profile seated in the confines of La Maison Moderne. Objects
for sale in the gallery are visible in a vitrine behind the young
woman who is wearing jewelry manufactured in the design studios of
Meier-Graefe. Biais's poster of Jane Avril, the popular entertainer
active in Montmartre cabarets (fig. 17), shows her as a visitor to
La Maison Moderne. Meier-Graefe's artists created seminal icons. These
personifications of the new, liberated, woman were seen dressed in
the modern style while they visited a gallery where modernity was
the key guiding concept. The fact that these women were consumers
and purveyors of the new products, and that they were used in a widely
visible poster, was not lost on the 1900 public. In marketing terms,
Meier-Graefe had found a brilliant conceit. It certainly was influential
on the way in which Bing promoted the exterior of his pavilion at
the Exposition Universelle on the Esplanade des Invalides. The time
had come for Bing to launch a more vigorous appeal to market mentality
so that his House of design would not be overlooked. He had to demonstrate
visually that he understood that women, especially women of fashion,
were the ones who would have the means to fill their homes with the
furniture, the art objects and sculptures, and the paintings, he sold
in his gallery. Nature and Japan, those aspects that Bing had used
in previous publicity campaigns, were combined in these images with
the new woman who had become the icon of the age of the Belle Epoque. |
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While the interior of Bing's pavilion in 1900
has been well examined, the theory behind what he had done, combined
with the extensive symbolic details visible in the panels outside,
provide considerable new room for discussion. Even though most of
Georges de Feure's panels have been lost, it is possible, by studying
the old photographs, to reconstruct the theme of each of the panels.
We have thus ample evidence for what amounts to a specific didactic
program told in visually compelling, even propagandistic, terms. For
the most part, the elegantly dressed women can be seen as muses dedicated
to various arts such as ceramics, glass, and furniture. What is most
apparent is that the women were meant to be provocative; examples
of the modern woman whose demeanor and slinky garments spoke of female
emancipation and seduction used as a tool to lure people to this site
and eventually into the interior (fig. 18). Since the building was
advertised with a logo over the central entrancewayL'Art Nouveau
BingBing and Georges de Feure were giving pride of place to
the new home, presided over by icons of the modern woman at home in
the art palace that symbolized the new era. Could we not now say that
Bing fully sided with Meier-Graefe in providing visual evidence for
the fact that women were patrons of the arts and decided how the modern
home had to look? While not referencing specific individuals, as Orazi
or Biais had done in their posters, de Feurewith Bing's blessingwas
effectively demonstrating through a series of large and well-positioned
paintings that elegance and sensuality had to be combined if the new
style was to have a lasting effect. It was through these painted panels
(fig. 19) that visitors first learned about what they would see in
the interior of Bing's pavilion. It was a modern use of exterior design;
a subtle statement of what was presented inside. |
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In following this discussion into an area not
fully examined earlierthe ways in which Bing networked with
colleagues and friends in the design field to market art nouveau,
as he had done with Japonismewe see ample evidence of his working
methods. The fact that Meier-Graefe was both a contemporary critic
and a purveyor of the new style through his own shop, sets Bing's
efforts in far clearer perspective. When this is combined with the
fact that Meier-Graefe was also actively promoting design change while
remaining sensitive to the taste for Japanese art, it goes far toward
seeing how both Bing and Meier-Graefe had joined forces to achieve
their goals. Both idea and personality were united, revealing how
Bing's personal ties were always essential for the promotion of his
business and marketing strategies. |
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| Fig.
20 Manuel Orazi, La Maison Moderne, 82, rue des Petits Champs,
Paris, ca. 1900. Postcard. Paris, Bibliothèque des Arts
décoratifs, Albums Maciet |
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| Fig. 21 Jules Adeline, Japanese
Doll (Mikika), 1890. Etching. Paris, Bibliothèque des
Arts décoratifs, Albums Maciet |
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IN RETROSPECT
Meier-Graefe believed that the home interior was where the moderne
style was appearing. He says as much in his forgotten series of articles
in Das Atelier. What is also germane to our study, is that
Meier-Graefe, much as was the case with many other of Bing's friends
and colleagues in Japonisme, was a vital force who spurred Bing along
while remaining in the background with regard to Bing's shop. He was
also a pioneer in the area of marketing strategies. For his own shop,
Meier-Graefe seized on the iconic symbol of Cléode Mérode
(fig. 20) and used her throughout his marketing campaign, as here
in this advertisement, to suggest that his audience, like Cléo,
was young and vibrant. Bing, of course, modified his marketing strategies
accordingly, as we have demonstrated, on his 1900 pavilion. But he
was also content to be seen as a wily samurai, much as the doll Mikika
portrayed him, a defender of Japan for the west (fig. 21). |
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By having this remarkable network of colleagues,
both young and old, French and German, Bing was able to maximize his
interests, to move toward an internationalism that was at the core
of his vision of art nouveau. And it is only by continuing to reexamine
the numerous friends that played a role in Bing's achievementsfriends
that were both Japonistes and committed to design reform ideologythat
it will it be possible to arrive at a fuller contextualization of
his theories, to more clearly understand how he worked and how he
remained so influential for such a long period of time. Even after
forty years of research, and thought, there is still much to be uncovered.
Further information has only been located in the weeks preceding the
exhibition that led to the symposium published in this issue of Nineteenth-Century
Art Worldwide. Bing's work clearly influenced the changes and
advances in home interiors throughout the twentieth century; his interest
in simplification, in eliminating clutter, can even be found today
with certain popular interiors advanced by such firms as IKEA. But
these are thoughts for another paper. |
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What is certain is that new issues have to be
considered and understood so that the clarity of Bing's achievements
can stand out, freed from his reluctance to speak for himself other
than through the works of art or the interiors, now destroyed, that
he so fervently advocated. So much of what Bing accomplished was achieved
through personal discussion and networking with colleagues, that it
is very difficult to retrace the steps and methods that he employed
without continuing to discover and dissect the relationships he had
with his contemporaries. |
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In the preparation for this article it is essential to thank a
number of individuals who have contributed to the location of new
material. First, the assistance of Annette Beaulieu is to be remembered
in locating the Archives of The Japan Society. The kindness of the
members of the Japan Society in London must also be acknowledged
and specifically Robert Guy, Chief Officer, Sebastian Dobson, Archivist
and Clare Barclay. In Brussels, at the Museum of Art and History,
Chantal Kozyreff assured that we would be able to work with the
documents pertinent to Edmond Michotte; she also assisted in our
having access to a broad range of Japanese prints. The financial
support of the Department of Art History, at the University of Minnesota,
especially the aid of Frederick Asher, Chair, is also appreciated
in the realization of the final manuscript. Colleagues at the Van
Gogh Museum, especially Chris Stolwijk and Edwin Becker provided
very valuable suggestions helping to strengthen the arguments in
the final paper.
All translations from German or French are by the author.
1. Raymond Koechlin, Souvenirs d'un vieil amateur d'art de l'Extrême
Orient (Chalon–sur-Saône: Imprimerie française
et orientale E. Bertrand, 1930), 22-23.
2. Julius Meier-Graefe, Geschiten, Neben Der Kunst (Berlin:
S. Fischer Verlag, 1933), 95.
3. The Archives of the Japan Society, London, contain references,
albeit not complete, to how Bing became a member of this group.
For the first reference to Bing's involvement see,Draft Minutes
of The Japan Society, London (hereafter cited as Unpublished Draft
Minutes), 1891-92: 12, under "Election of corresponding members…Siegfried
Bing."
4. The importance of Hugues Krafft in the dissemination of the
taste for things Japanese and in stimulating meetings of japanophiles
at his house, Midori-no-Sato, is being studied by Annette Beaulieu.
The availability of material on Krafft, housed in the Musée
Hôtel Le Vergeur, Société des Amis du Vieux
Reims, Reims, will assist in the documentation of Krafft as one
of the most careful students of Japanese culture and the one member
in the French group who systematically photographed many sites and
different social types in Japan itself. For further reference to
Hugues Krafft see Suzanne Esmein, "Hugues Krafft (1853-1935),
voyageur, photographe et collectionneur," L'Ethnographie
86, no. 2 (1990): 151-180, and Suzanne Esmein, Hugues Krafft
au Japon: photographies d'un voyage, 1882-1883 (Paris: Hermann,
Éditeurs des sciences et des arts, 2003). Krafft was also
elected as a member of The Japan Society, London on March 31, 1892.
Unpublished Draft Minutes, March 31, 1892: 72.
5. The Japan Society, Draft Minutes (London: The Japan Society,
1892-93), 17.
6. As corresponding members of The Japan Society, Alexis Rouart
gave his profession as that of an engineer and Henri Vever, also
nominated by S. Bing, simply provided his address in Paris as 19,
rue de la Paix. He made no specific mention of his role as a jeweler.
See The Japan Society, Draft Minutes as cited in note5. The
search of The Japan Society archives has not yielded specific dossiers
on both of these members and their activities within the group.
For further reference to a section of the Vever collection see Sotheby
and Company, Catalogue of Highly Important Japanese Prints, Illustrated
Books, Drawings and Fan Paintings from the Henri Vever Collection.
Part 2 (New York: Sotheby and Company, 1975).
7. Unpublished Draft Minutes, 1891-92: 17. Joyant listed himself
as an art publisher, active in Paris. Manzi listed himself as an
artist and engineer. Further specific information on the membership
of both these men in The Japan Society has not come to light. See
also Brigitte Koyama-Richard, Correspondance addressée
à Hayashi Tadamasa (Tokyo: Kokushokankôkai, 2001),
597.
8. Unpublished Draft Minutes, The Sixth Meeting of the Second Council,
March 10, 1893: 47. See also Koyama-Richard, Correspondance addressée
à Hayashi Tadamasa, 597-98
9. On Michotte see J. Bommer, "La Collection Michotte,"
Bulletin des musées royaux des arts décoratifs,
et industriels, no. 10 (July 1907), n.p. Michotte carefully
annotated many objects in his collection in a series of handwritten
catalogues. For further reference to these see Japon, Collections
Michotte (Brussels: Musée d'Art et d'Histoire), manuscripts.
For a discussion of the supposed weaknesses of the Michotte collection
see J. Petrucci, "L'Art japonais au Musée du Cinquantenaire,"
L'Indépendence belge, (November 13, 1911).
10. For reference to this correspondence see Brussels. Musées
Royaux d'Art et d'Histoire. Achat Michotte. File 1098. Most of the
letters from Michotte were addressed to the Conservateur en Chef,
Musées Royaux des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels.
The curator in question was Mr. Overloop and the letters date from
1904 to as late as 1912.
11. Bing proposed Goncourt for membership in The Japan Society
on March 10, 1893. The relationship between Bing and Goncourt was
often strained, as Edmond de Goncourt believed that he held a priority
position in the support of Japanese art in France. See Edmond de
Goncourt, Journal des Goncourt, Mémoires de la vie littéraire
(Paris: G. Charpentier and E. Fasquelle, 1887-1896), entry for October
29, 1868.
12. Gabriel P. Weisberg, Art Nouveau Bing: Paris Style 1900
(New York and Washington: Harry N. Abrams and the Smithsonian Institution
Traveling Exhibition Service, 1986), 37.
13. Weisberg, Art Nouveau Bing: Paris Style 1900, 34, 36.
14. The Japan Society, Draft Minutes, 47. P.A. Isaac-Dathis
was listed in the minutes as an artist, living in Paris.
15. Gabriel P. Weisberg, Edwin Becker, and Évelyne Possémé,
eds., The Origins of L'Art Nouveau, The Bing Empire. Exh.
cat. (Amsterdam: Van Gogh Museum; Paris: Musée des Arts Décoratifs;
Antwerp: Mercatorfonds, 2004).
16. Bing's lecture was announced to the membership via a posted
announcement which specified that the lecture, held in the Hall
at 20 Hanover Square West, was to be illustrated by a complete collection
of the colored Japanese prints which formed the series "under
discussion." For reference to this card announcing the lecture
see London. The Japan Society. Cuttings, Scraps, etc., 1893-1909.
17. Unpublished Draft Minutes, 1893-94: 29. As part of the recommendations
of "The First Meeting of the Finance Committee of the Council,
held on Friday 2 February, 1894, at the Hotel Metropole," Bing
was given authority to "receive subscriptions" from members
in France and Belgium on account for the Japan Society.
18. Esmein, "Hugues Krafft," 151-180. A number of photographs
that Krafft took on a daily basis of his quarters in Yokohama also
exist and can be readily compared with descriptions in the Journal
that he kept during his Japanese trip in 1882-83. Some of the Krafft
photographs were given to the Musée des Arts Décoratifs,
Paris and are found, today, pasted into the scrapbooks that make
up the Maciet Collection in the Library of the Musée des
Arts Décoratifs.
19. There can be little doubt that Krafft purchased objects from
Bing's shop in addition to the Bonsai trees secured in 1903 for
his gardens. The location of documents further linking Krafft and
Bing will undoubtedly surface as Krafft was an inveterate keeper
of personal documentation.
20. While The Japan Society in London was organized in the early
1890s, a similar group, in France, was not organized until September
16, 1900. Known as the Société Franco-Japonaise de
Paris, it had a number of key members including Krafft and S. Bing.
The group published an Annuaire that listed their activities, provided
reference on their membership, and noted gifts to the library of
the organization. For further reference see Annuaire de la Société
Franco-Japonaise, (Paris: Société Franco-Japonaise,
1902)
21. Ibid. The location of the records of this organization has
not been found; they might have been housed in the Musée
d'Ennery, now closed, and under the supervision of the Musée
Guimet, but the author could not obtain any information from the
latter museum.
22. The relationship between Henri Roujon and Hugues Krafft needs
more attention. Krafft photographed Roujon, at Midori-no-Sato, on
a number of occasions. These documents suggest a close friendship.
Since Krafft also became a sponsor of the Musée des Arts
Décoratifs the ties between them, and their interest in design
issues, awaits clarification. The photographs of Roujon, taken by
Krafft, are in the Archives of the Musée Hôtel Le Vergeur,
Reims.
23. For reference see Philippe Thiébaut, "ALa
'ligne belge' et la création française" in Paris-Bruxelles/Bruxelles-Paris,
Les relations artistiques entre la France et la Belgique, 1848-
1914 (Paris: Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1997),
390-96.
24. Julius Meier-Graefe, Kunst ist nicht für Kunstgeschichte
da. Brief und Dokumente, ed. Catherine Krahmer with Ingrid Grüninger
(Gottingen: Wallstein Verlag, 2001), and Catherine Krahmer, "Meier-Greafe
et les arts décoratifs. Un rédacteur à deux
têtes," in Distanz und Aneignung. Kunstbeziehungen
zwischen Deutschland und Frankreich. Relations artistiques entre
la France et l'Allemagne (Berlin: Akademie Verlag GmbH, 2004),
231-254
25. For the three articles, see Julius Meier-Graefe, "L'Art
Nouveau, Das Prinzip," Das Atelier 6, no. 5 (1896):
2-4; "L'Art Nouveau, Die Salons," Das Atelier 6,
no. 6 (1896): 2-4; "L'Art Nouveau, Die übrigen Kunst und
kunstgewerblichen Zweige," Das Atelier, 6, no. 7 (1896):
2-4.
26. Edwin Becker, "Les salons de L'Art Nouveau: Perfect Harmony
and Unpretentious Beauty," in Weisberg, Becker, and Possémé,
The Origins of L'Art Nouveau, 15.
27. The business card for Bing is not found in the published catalogue
raisonné of Vallotton's graphic work. See Maxime Vallotton
and Charles Georg, Félix Vallotton, Catalogue raisonné
de l'oeuvre gravé et lithographié (Geneva: Ed.
de Bonvent, 1972).
28. Martin Eidelberg and Suzanne Henrion-Giel, "Horta and
Bing: An Unwritten Episode of l'Art Nouveau," Burlington
Magazine 119, no. 896
(November, 1977): 747-752.
29. Meier-Graefe, "L'Art Nouveau, Die Salons," 3.
30. Meier-Graefe, "L'Art Nouveau, Das Prinzip," 3.
31. Meier-Graefe, "L'Art Nouveau, Die übrigen Kunst und
kunstgewerblichen Zweige," 3.
32. Bing was being influenced by other designers, including Clement
Heaton, who were forming or had organized their own workshops. See
Gabriel P. Weisberg, "Clement Heaton, Siegfried Bing, and Art
Nouveau, Paris, 1895-1902" in Clement Heaton, 1861-1940,
Londres-Neuchâtel-New-York (Hauterive, Switzerland: Editions
Gilles Attinger, 1996), 184-193.
33. Meier-Graefe, "L'Art Nouveau, Die Salons," 3.
34. Grafton Galleries, Exhibition of L'Art Nouveau: S. Bing,
Paris. Exh. cat. (London: Grafton Galleries ; London and Edinburgh
: Ballantyne Press, 1899).
35. Meier-Graefe, "L'Art Nouveau, Das Prinzip," 4.
36. Ibid.
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