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"Against
the Modern: Dagnan-Bouveret and the Transformation of the Academic
Tradition"
Dahesh Museum of Art, New York
Dahesh Museum of Art, New York, temporarily in residence at
the National Academy of Design Museum, New York
12 September8 December 2002
Gabriel P. Weisberg
Against the Modern: Dagnan-Bouveret and the Transformation of
the Academic Tradition
New York: Dahesh Museum of Art
New Brunswick, New Jersey, and London: Rutgers University Press
178 pp.; 141 ills., many in color; appendix, bibliography, index;
$60.00 (hardcover), $35.00 (paperback)
ISBN 0813531551 (hardcover); 081353156X (paperback) |
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The process of re-evaluating academic
art of the nineteenth century and exploring themes important to
the era has been a long and arduous one. While much work has been
done on the principal academic painters of the mid-nineteenth century,
such as Jean-Léon Gérôme and Adolphe-William
Bouguereau, those of the last decades of the century have remained
in relative obscurity, overshadowed by the impressionists and their
avant-garde followers. The attempts of these later academic painters
to modernize academic art have largely been ignored, while public
attention frequently has been directed toward the artists linked
to the modern movement who favored abstraction. |
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Gabriel
P. Weisberg tried to accomplish something quite original in an exhibition
organized by the Dahesh Museum of Art and recently shown at the National
Academy of Design in New York City. The Museum and Weisberg have continued
the task of unearthing the achievements of late nineteenth-century
academic artists with "Against the Modern: Dagnan-Bouveret and
the Transformation of the Academic Tradition." This is the first
comprehensive exhibition (fig. 1) devoted to this talented painter
since an abbreviated show at the Art Institute of Chicago in 1901,
and the little known retrospective held at the École des Beaux-Arts
in 1930, the year after the artist's death. This recent exhibition
provided a fascinating glimpse into how an academic painter responded
to the necessity of revitalizing tradition by assimilating the innovations
of more progressive painters around him. |
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Pascal-Adolphe-Jean Dagnan-Bouveret
(1852–1929) began his studies at the École des Beaux-Arts
in 1869. He entered the atelier of Jean-Léon Gérôme
in 1870 and quickly became a favorite pupil and friend of his instructor.
Indeed, Dagnan-Bouveret would look to Gérôme for guidance
throughout much of his career. His first painting to be accepted at
the Salon was the Atalanta of 1874 (Musée Municipal,
Melun), which is included in the exhibition (fig. 2). After failing
to win the coveted Prix de Rome in 1876, 1877, and 1878, he left the
École and set out on his own. It is after this period that
the range of Dagnan-Bouveret's talent and evidence of his openness
to new trends began to emerge. From 1878 to 1900, the most successful
and creative years of his career, he worked in a variety of styles,
creating paintings that ranged from intimate portraits, still lifes,
and landscapes to monumental genre scenes and moody religious compositions.
He integrated new technology and methods, such as photography and
plein-air painting, into the traditional academic creative
process and often combined the supposedly disparate styles of naturalism
and symbolism in a single painting. The results can be seen, for example,
in his Madonna of the Rose (Metropolitan Museum of Art, New
York) and In the Forest (Musée des Beaux-Arts, Nancy)
(fig. 3). Such works were sought after by collectors around the world,
and found their way to places as far flung as the United States and
Russia. While his reputation declined after his induction into the
Académie des Beaux-Arts in 1900, Dagnan-Bouveret, with his
subtle use of innovative working methods, helped to revitalize an
ailing academic system at the same time that it was being superseded
by more modern approaches. |
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The Dahesh exhibition focused on Dagnan-Bouveret's
career from its beginning in 1875 until after 1900. It brought together
works from museums and private collections in the United States, Canada,
England, France, and Russia, some of which have been hidden from public
view for years. The works were arranged chronologicallyand thematically
where possiblein a series of three rooms, allowing the visitor
to see the artist's stylistic evolution. Extensive wall texts and
a highly readable exhibition catalogue placed each work within the
context of Dagnan-Bouveret's life and the art world in which he moved.
The wall labels, synthesizing material in the catalogue, provide an
essential context for this little-known artist. |
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In addition to bringing together paintings,
drawings, and watercolors by the artist, the exhibition went far in
raising issues regarding the training methods of the École
des Beaux-Arts and the working approaches of academic painters of
the nineteenth century. The first room, which covered Dagnan-Bouveret's
career from 1872 to 1887, included sketches of the artist's family
and compositional drawings completed for Prix de Rome competitions.
The family sketches reveal Dagnan-Bouveret's early tendency toward
a naturalist aesthetic, while the Prix de Rome drawings represent
the traditional preference for history painting that was instilled
in young art students. These latter works, of a kind that are rarely
exhibited, contribute to a better understanding of the teaching methods
of the École des Beaux-Arts, and especially of how the prescribed
themes could influence a young painter. The exhibition continued with
a number of paintings that attest to the range of Dagnan-Bouveret's
oeuvre and of the subjects open to an academic painter: history painting,
with Hamlet and the Gravediggers; illustration for contemporary
journals, with A Bird Charmer in the Tuileries Garden; portraiture,
with the sun-lit Portrait of the Artist's Fiancée, Anne-Marie
Walter; and genre, with the anecdotal Wedding at the Photographer's
and the more contemplative Blessing of the Young Couple before
Marriage: Custom of the Franche-Comté. Each of these works
also helps make the case visually that Dagnan-Bouveret often was searching
for alternative approaches as his career evolved. To make this point
about an academic artist helps humanize his artistic choices. |
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The Blessing of the Young Couple
before Marriage is a stunning example of the artist's personal
approach to painting. In it, a young couple, dressed in wedding attire,
kneel at the feet of their parents. The elderly father holds a long
candle over their heads, granting his consent. Loose rose petals are
scattered in front of the kneeling couple, where a small prayer book
also lies. A long dinner table, upon which is a still life of bread,
glasses, and wine bottles, divides the main figures from the group
of wedding guests who stand behind it. The model posing for the bride
is Dagnan-Bouveret's wife, Anne-Marie, and the family members who
give their consent are her parents. The painting is set in the Franche-Comté,
the region of France where the artist kept a home and studio and spent
much of his time away from Paris. The gauze of the bride's veil and
wrinkled faces of her parents are carefully rendered, as are the soft
light of the room, the bright sunlight shining in through a window
and the warm glow of the candle. The painting shows Dagnan-Bouveret's
preference for familiar models and modern themes, his skill as a draftsman,
and his sensitivity to lighting conditions. It exemplifies the naturalistic
approach for which he was known and the quiet, introspective mood
that tinged many of his works. |
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The second room of the exhibition
took us from the mid-1880s and the height of Dagnan-Bouveret's naturalist
style to his shift toward religious symbolism in the 1890s. The most
significant works in this part of the exhibition were the numerous
studies for Breton Women at a Pardon of 1887, a painting that,
unfortunately, could not be obtained for the exhibition. They included
a study of two Brittany women, sketched in ink, charcoal, and pastel
on fragments of tracing paper that were pasted together into a sort
of collage. This study, along with other drawings, an oil sketch,
and copies of photographs reprinted on the wall labels, reveal the
artist's painstaking method of creating suitable compositions, color
harmonies, and photographic effects. They demonstrate Dagnan-Bouveret's
innovative technique of integrating photography and collage into the
traditional practices that he learned at the École. The studies
are works of art in their own right, as beautiful as they are instructive.
Taken as a group, they provide a clear plan of how an academic artist
worked, arranging his forms in the most precise way, so that he could
achieve, in the final painting, the look of exact photographic verisimilitude
(fig. 4). |
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The largest paintings of the exhibition
hung in the final room and provided a summary of Dagnan-Bouveret's
entire career. They included the artist's first Salon canvas, the
still immature Atalanta of 1874, the more sensitive and well-drawn
Salon contribution, Orpheus's Sorrow of 1876, as well as the
huge Horses at the Watering Trough (Musée d'Art e d'Histoire,
Chambéry; fig. 5), which earned the painter the Legion of Honor
in 1885. The highlight of this room was In the Forest of 1892
(fig. 3), whose warm color and introspective mood should appeal to
modern viewers. The painting portrays a rustic fiddler in a forest
clearing. With arm outstretched, he plays a long, slow note on his
instrument. A group of peasants surround him, mesmerized by his song
as they finish a meal. Dagnan-Bouveret is at his best here, carefully
rendering the facial expressions of the figures to show their silent
focus on the music. The painting recalls the realism and introspective
tone of Gustave Courbet's After Dinner in Ornans (1848–49;
Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lille) and makes plain the urgent need
for this new examination of Dagnan-Bouveret's work. It also suggests
that Dagnan-Bouveret, during the early 1890s, was adept at modifying
his brand of naturalism by the inclusion of an intimate symbolism
based on color harmonies and mood responses. |
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The entire exhibition was housed in comfortable
rooms, the first two of which are small and intimate, which allowed
the visitor to take in all of the works at once and to get close up
to the small studies in oils or ink. Dagnan-Bouveret's intimist inclinations,
his love of precision and detail inspired by earlier miniaturists,
were well represented by the works selected. The final room, which
contained the larger paintings, reiterated the imposing nature of
the artist's public imagery. As a group, these works revealed the
opposite tendencies an academic painter had to master: intimate images
to satisfy his own tastes and those of some patrons and monumental
scenes destined for large public spaces. |
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Whether or not one sees Dagnan-Bouveret as deserving
of re-evaluation, "Against the Modern" offered a unique
opportunity to gain a more thorough understanding of the art and painting
practices of this period as viewed through the work and career of
a single artist. Through the inclusion of numerous studies and documentary
photographs, it demonstrated that Dagnan-Bouveret was aware of modern
tendencies and used them to breathe new life into the academic tradition
at a time when it was under attack by the avant-garde and threatened
with extinction. Weisberg has effectively proven that the academics
could adapt to changes in the artistic climate and attract support
in the face of aesthetic revolution. Moreover, the exhibition provided
ample evidence that looking more closely at the work of an academic
painter allows for a better understanding of an alternative tradition
in the nineteenth century. Future studies in this direction should
shed additional light on the modern era. |
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Michelle C. Montgomery
The Graduate Center
City University of New York |
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