Art Talk: Art in Paris in the 1870s

in #arttalk5 years ago (edited)

What a time to be in Paris!

Here is a look at some of the great art that was in Paris in the 1870s. As I was reading Naked Came I by David Weiss for my recent post on Auguste Rodin I realized that a lot of my favorite artists were in Paris at the same time and knew each other.

1870

Negro Girl with Peonies, 1870, Frederic Bazille
National Gallery of Art, DC

These are two of my favorite paintings from this time period. When I go to the National Gallery of Art in DC, as I do each year, I always go and see these two paintings.

I think I am drawn to this painting because of the emotion of the woman and the emotion I feel knowing that this great artist, Fredric Bazille, was killed in the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, the same year of this painting.

Berthe Morisot showed the painting to the right in the first impressionist exhibition in 1874. She was married to Eugene Manet, the brother of Edouard Manet (whose work we will see below).

The Mother and Sister of the Artist
1869-1870, Berthe Morisot
National Gallery of Art, DC


After the Franco-Prussian War Victor Hugo returned to France as a hero.

During his time in exile (1855-1870) he wrote his most famous work Les Miserables (1862) shown on the right. This is my copy and I consider it a amazing book about love... on so many levels.

Hugo was elected to the senate in 1870 and in 1885 he died at the age of 83. His funeral was attended by over two million people and he is buried in the Pantheon. 1

Les Miserables, 1862, Victor Hugo

1872

Pont Neuf, 1872, Pierre-Auguste Renoir
National Gallery of Art, DC

Forgive the picture that is a bit crooked, when I took this picture in 2016 little did I know that I would be using it for my art blog a couple of years later.

I like this painting for it's impressionist qualities of light, color and depicting daily life.

During a tour of the National Gallery of Art in DC I hear a a great story about this painting. It is told that the artist's younger brother Edmond Renior would periodically delay passerby long enough for Pierre-August to record their appearance as he sat in the upper floor of a cafe over looking the bride. Renior even recorded Edmond twice. He is the one with walking stick and a straw boater on. 2

1873

This was one hundred years before I was born!


The Railway, 1873, Edouard Manet
National Gallery of Art, DC

Edouard Manet is one of my favorite artists during this time. He is so interesting in that he was a contemporary and friends with many of the Impressionist painters yet he never joined that movement.

The Railway is a interesting subject as at this time Paris was undergoing an urban renewal program, of which railroads were a centerpiece. 3

The model is Victorine Meurent, Manet's muse for both Olymipa and Dejeuner sur I'Herbe. 4


Another interesting thing about Manet is that his signature color is black and it can be found in just about all of his paintings.

1874

The Monet Family in Their Garden at Argenteuil,
1874, Edouard Manet
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City

From the MET's description of this painting:

In July and August 1874 Manet vacationed at his family’s house in Gennevilliers, just across the Seine from Monet at Argenteuil. The two painters saw each other often that summer, and on a number of occasions they were joined by Renoir. While Manet was painting this picture of Monet with his wife Camille and their son Jean, Monet painted Manet at his easel (location unknown). Renoir, who arrived just as Manet was beginning to work, borrowed paint, brushes, and canvas, positioned himself next to Manet, and painted Madame Monet and Her Son. 6

What a great time for these three artists to be painting together and each other!

1875

Woman with a Parasol - Madame Monet and Her Son,
1875, Claude Monet
National Gallery of Art, DC

Beautiful detail of Woman with a Parasol


Claude Monet was the founder of the French Impressionist movement and it was his painting Impression, Sunrise that gave the movement its name. He painted in "plein air" as seen in the painting above with his wife and son in the field.

1876

1780-1910 was the Romantic period for music.


Les Éolides, César Franck, 1876

Cesar was a composer, pianist, organist and music teacher. 5
Feel free to listen to this beautiful piece as you read the post.

1877

Walking man, 1877-1878, Auguste Rodin
Hirshorn Gallery Sculpture Garden, DC

After making Age of Bronze Rodin was accused of modeling from life. In response to this and to allow his work in the Paris Salon he sculpted Walking Man in front of a jury of five men. Below is an excerpt from Naked Came I on the experience of sculpting Walking Man.

"For the first time in years Auguste was improvising. He imagined Lecoq standing before him, but Lecoq was too old, Boucher moved well and easily but he wasn't dramatic, then there was that Italian, Peppino, so completely without awkwardness, with a magnificent exciting stride. He began to model now, feeling sure, seeing Peppino's walk with a clear and rational mind although years had intervened. He mounted the torso on the armature, and as the figure became real he felt in the presence of God. He made the trunk wider, stronger, more muscular, but still, at the moment, without sex.
Boucher marveled at the simplicity with which he worked, as if the structure of this figure welled up from Rodin's imagination. There was nothing abstract about this body; the concrete reality was individual. He did not use too much clay, as did most sculptors. He worked quietly, calmly, swiftly, with an ease of expression that struck Boucher as remarkable. He dominated his material. " 7

1878

Little Dancer Aged Fourteen, 1878-1881, Edgar Degas
National Gallery of Art, DC

This bronze by Degas was debuted at the Sixth Impressionist Exhibition in 1881.

It is made with pigmented beeswax, clay, metal armature, rope, paintbrushes, human hair, silk and linen ribbon, cotton faille bodice, cotton and silk tutu, linen slippers, on wooden base.

I have walked past this sculpture many times and not realized how revolutionary it is. From the National of Gallery of Art page:

"In the context of the evolution of sculpture, the Little Dancer is a groundbreaking work of art. The liberating idea that any medium or technique necessary to convey the desired effect is fair game may be traced back to this sculpture. Degas represented a working–class subject, though not an everyday one, with both realism and compassion, but without moralizing. In so doing, he captured with brilliant simplicity the difficult tension between art and life." 8

1879


Oarsmen at Chatou, 1879, Pierre-Auguste Renoir
National Gallery of Art, DC

Beautiful detail of Oarsmen at Chatou

Did you enjoy this walk through the 1870s Paris with me? It has been a wonderful journey and I look forward to introducing you to more artists and time periods in the future.

Sources: 1, 2,3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8

Art Talk Series Highlights
Art Talk: Introduction has a link to all Art Talk posts
Art Talk: Emotion In Bronze
Art Talk: Moore in America
Art Talk: Art Tells Our Story
Art Talk: Highlight tour of the MET
Art Talk: Auguste Rodin

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You are a woman after my own heart. I love the impressionists and visit them in any museum first. I've seen most of these in person too and photos never do them justice. At the MET in NYC, I barely get to anything else since they have such wealth there.

I too, love that they were a group of friends and co-workers. I think they egged each other on to greatness by being fans and critics.

I saw a sketch by Pizarro's son that showed four of them working together out in the woods somewhere. I often think how wonderful that would have been to be walking and come across such a scene.

Great job on this post. More please!

@fitinfun thanks so much for your comment. I love the MET too. Did you see my recent post of a highlight tour of the MET. It is really one of my favorite places! I have three favorite museums The National Gallery in DC, The Isabella Stewart Gardner and the MET.

I would love to see that sketch. I will have to look for it. If you could link it that would be great.

That is great that you are living in Malaysia. My first love in art was Impressionism and Italian Renaissance. I now am very interested in Asian art. There is so much to cover so more will be coming soon!

Here is a video I did about the sketch on my you tube channel. Sorry for the blur on this one. I have a lot of videos over there about Pissaro - my artistic hero.

That was from a big heavy book I used to have about the Impressionists and their interactions with each other. I'm sure I reference it on at least one of my videos, but I can't look or I will kill my minutes.

I did not see your tour. Can you please give me the link since I have bad wifi to search for it?

I like the Phillips in DC and the Freer there for Asian art. I am unlikely to get back there, so you will have to see it for me. Please keep me name and spam me up in a comment any time. I would love to visit more of your posts.

This is so great, I am excited to watch it. Here is the MET link https://steempeak.com/arttalk/@sjarvie5/art-talk-highlight-tour-of-the-met and all of my Art Talk posts are linked at the bottom of the page through the intro post.

Yes, the Freer is great. I have been many times. I haven't been to the Philips very much. I will put that on my list! Did you also live in DC?

Also, I am starting a part of my Art Talk blog with guest bloggers. Would you like to do one? I think with all the knowledge you have of Pissaro it would be a fantastic addition.

Oh my goodness. Great post on the met. I've seen most of that and you bring back wonderful memories. And the deer is crazy!

I just visited dc on my own a few times, and then worked for the us navy for 6 years. They sent me to a lot of dc conferences. So I would take my son @bxlphabet out of school and go from Friday to the next Sunday and tour around when I did not have to be working.

We actually did that all over the country. Where ever there is a navy port, I've probably been there for a conference. Pearl Harbor was a good one!

My address is [email protected] would you email me there and we can set things up.

Oh and I wanted to say that with Steempeak I can assign beneficiaries so I can make you a beneficiary of the post too.

I'm just answering here. I would love to do any collab with you. I have really limited wifi, but I will try. How would this go?

This is a great collection of paintings and sculptures and a lot of information about the artists. I like how you got inspired to write about artists that were living in Paris at the same time and knew each other. Imagine how it was almost 200 years ago. Little did they know that they will become so popular one day :)

I remember I was always mixing up Manet and Monet at school. I didn't really like the art lesson as it was a lot about reading and learning text instead of doing something and I have never paid attention to their paintings so I kept mixing them up. Nowadays I know that I was silly and that it is impossible to mix them up :)

Thank you for your article :) It's nice to learn something new.

Have a great weekend Sara!

Thanks so much Martina. It is so nice to be able to share my post and to have someone enjoy and learn from it too. I always learn so much as I am researching and putting the posts together.

I don't think it is crazy to mix up Monet and Manet, I did too. My love for art and art history didn't come till I had a really great teacher in college. Then moving to DC was amazing cause so much great art was so accessible.

I hope you have a great weekend too!

Aaahh I really like looking at your Art Talk blog. You've always presented them in an excellent format, very easy to read and also beautiful for the eyes :D.
                     
Congratulations for another curie vote, Sara ^_^.

Thank you very much. I am excited to follow you and see your great art work.

Hello there!

I seem to love this post of yours! ❤❤... well for one thing, your love for arts is truly felt. In every chosen paiting, you had briefly explained a paraggraph or two about the picture and as well as the author.

I like to look at a painting and reading afterwards the story behind it. It always amazes me knowing something new about a certain painting. It adds up more admiration from the painter.

My favoritr was the Woman with a Parasol. I seem to see it as one of the mother and child bonding walk in nearby park or something. I just can relate to it being a mother myself. I often do a few walks with my little ones too.

Thank you for you awesome gallery of wonderful paintings. Great choices by the way!

Cheers! ❤

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Your comment is so nice. Thank you. It is so nice you can feel how much I love and art history. I agree, knowing something about the art makes it so much more meaningful and makes me remember it and like it more. That is great that you are a mom. The Woman with Parasol is a beautiful painting. I am planning on doing a post on it to learn more about it and share it here.

Ypu are most welcome.. but we are more grateful for sharing your passion with us.

Yes it becomes more meaningful once you set your eyes on it and began expressing how it made you feel.

I cant wait for your post on that.. 😊

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Ahhhh what a wonderfully crafted post! I relly enjoyed this post because I am rather lazy on the 'art history' side, I don't really know when painting I love where created, I don't know in which direction art was evolving and such...And so it happens 'Woman with a Parasol' is one of my favourite painting of all time and now I have a better understanding of what was happening in the art world around the time it was created hahah :D

So thank you very much for this post, now I feel a lot more art educated! :)

Aww this makes me feel great that my research and interest can be shared by others here on Steem. I looked at your blog and you have talent. I also love Woman with Parasol, the light, the color it is great. I think I will do a special post on this painting so I can learn more about that day they were all painting together. Thanks for the inspiration for a future post!

Awww thanks for checking me out!

And your idea on the future post sounds great, can't wait to see! :)

Hello @sjarvie5, thank you for sharing this creative work! We just stopped by to say that you've been upvoted by the @creativecrypto magazine. The Creative Crypto is all about art on the blockchain and learning from creatives like you. Looking forward to crossing paths again soon. Steem on!

Thank you so much.

Wow. Aaaahhh I wish I could see those in person too! Some of my favorite artists are here. Thanks for sharing!

Thanks so much for your comment. Most of them are in DC so if you go to DC you can see these and other great pieces of art. Which artists you really like?

What a great post, Sara! I really enjoyed walk through your gallery;) It reminds me Manet´s quote "Black is not a color." :D

Thanks so much. Glad you like it.

Congratulations! Your high-quality travel content was selected by @travelfeed curator @for91days and earned you a partial upvote. We love your hard work and hope to encourage you to continue to publish strong travel-related content.
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Thanks @for91days. So glad you appreciate time travel.

One day too many :)

What does that mean?

It's for91days days and not for92days :) I'm just being silly :)

oh ok got it

Hi sjarvie5,

This post has been upvoted by the Curie community curation project and associated vote trail as exceptional content (human curated and reviewed). Have a great day :)

Visit curiesteem.com or join the Curie Discord community to learn more.

Thanks a lot.

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