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Félix Bracquemond

Félix Henri Bracquemond (22 May 1833 – 29 October 1914) was a French painter, etcher, and printmaker. He played a key role in the revival of printmaking, encouraging artists such as Édouard Manet, Edgar Degas and Camille Pissarro to use this technique.[1]

Félix Bracquemond (1865) by Nadar.
Portrait of Félix Bracquemond, by his friend Paul Adolphe Rajon, etching, 1852

Unusually for a prominent artist of this period, he also designed pottery for a number of French factories, in an innovative style that marks the beginning of Japonisme in France.

He was the husband of the Impressionist painter Marie Bracquemond.

Biography edit

Early life edit

Félix Bracquemond was born in Paris. He was trained in early youth as a trade lithographer, until Joseph Guichard, a pupil of Ingres, took him to his studio.[1] His portrait of his grandmother, painted by him at the age of nineteen, attracted Théophile Gautier's attention at the Salon.[2]

Engraver edit

His work in painting is rather limited. It includes mostly portraits (including that of Dr. Horace Montegre, and of Paul Meurice). Painting interested him less than engraving. He drew most of his technical knowledge from the Encyclopédie by Diderot and d'Alembert and he worked as a self-taught artist for a long time. In 1856, Edmond de Goncourt became close friends with Bracquemond, and they both shared a love of Japanese art, the engraver having been the first to discover an album by Hokusai.[2]

He applied himself to engraving and etching about 1853, and played a leading and brilliant part in the revival of the etcher's art in France. Altogether he produced over eight hundred plates, comprising portraits, landscapes, scenes of contemporary life, and bird-studies, besides numerous interpretations of other artist's paintings, especially those of Jean-Louis-Ernest Meissonier, Gustave Moreau and Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot.[3]

He entered the literary milieu thanks to Auguste Poulet-Malassis, publisher of Charles Baudelaire with whom Bracquemond became friends. He also befriended Théodore de Banville, Jules Barbey d'Aurevilly, Gustave Geffroy, Félix Nadar and all the elites residing in Nouvelle Athènes.[2] He also was a friend of Auguste Rodin.

 
Terrace of the Villa Brancas, etching, 1876, of his wife (right) and her sister.

In June 1862, he joined the Société des aquafortistes founded by the publisher Alfred Cadart with the help of the printer Auguste Delâtre.[4] On his advice, Jean-Baptiste Corot, Jean-François Millet, Édouard Manet, Edgar Degas and Camille Pissarro began to practice engraving. He greatly helped Manet for his etchings of Olympia and L'Homme mort.

In 1888, Auguste Lepère created with Félix Bracquemond, Daniel Vierge and Tony Beltrand, the magazine L'Estampe originale, in order to interest artists and amateurs in the new processes and trends of engraving, particularly in color, and Henri Rivière worked from this date on "The Thirty Six Views of the Eiffel Tower", from 1888 to 1902.[5] In 1891, Valloton renewed the art of engraving on wood,[6] with Gauguin or Émile Bernard while Toulouse Lautrec revolutionized the art of the poster.

Friend of the Impressionists edit

 
Colour lithograph, Landscape, after 1885

In 1874 Bracquemond participated in the first exhibition of impressionist painters in the workshops of Nadar, Boulevard des Capucines, of artists that would be called the Impressionists.[7] The inauguration took place on 15 April 1874 and enjoyed a scandalous success. He presented a portrait, a frame of etchings including the portraits of Auguste Comte, Charles Baudelaire and Théophile Gautier, but also etchings after Turner, Ingres, Manet, and original etchings: Les Saules (The Willows), Le Mur (The Wall). He exhibited again with his friends in 1879.[2]

Ceramicist edit

In 1856, Bracquemond discovered a collection of Manga engravings by the Japanese Hokusai, typical of the pictorial genre known in Japan as Kachô-ga, depicting flowers and birds with insects, crustaceans and fishes, in the workshop of his printer Auguste Delâtre, after having been used to fix a consignment of porcelain. He was seduced by this theme that made him the initiator of the vogue of Japonisme in France which seized the decorative arts during the second half of the 19th century.[8][9]

In 1860, he returned first to the workshop of the ceramist Théodore Deck, then to the earthenware merchant Eugène Rousseau [fr] in Paris. The latter commissioned him the motifs for a table service, for a project destined for the Universal Exhibition of 1867. Bracquemond then proposed a model which appropriated the themes of the Kachô-ga, drawn and engraved by himself. For the first time a European artist directly copied a Japanese artist, reproducing the animal figures of the Hokusai Manga. In 1867, Bracquemond was also one of the nine members of the "Société du Jing-lar" with Henri Fantin-Latour, Carolus Duran and the ceramist Marc-Louis Solon, who met monthly in Sèvres for a Japanese dinner, to which this service would have been destined.

 
Bracquemond's decor for the Service Rousseau in Creil-Montereau faience, introduced c1867, for the editor François-Eugène Rousseau, is credited with the first expression of japonisme in France.[10]

Eugène Rousseau was convinced and ordered two hundred pieces to be manufactured in Creil-Montereau faience. Bracquemond made the etchings and the engraved planks used by the manufacture. The proofs were cut and put on the clay to receive the decoration. In the oven, the heat made the paper disappear, leaving only the imprint of the drawing. Then it was painted over and the piece was placed in the large oven.

Presented for the first time at the Universal Exhibition of 1867, this service was a great success. It was in the third group "furniture and other objects for the home", Class 17 "porcelain, earthenware, and luxury pottery" no. 58, installed on Louis XIII shelves in old oak with velvet stands. Above the counter, the name Rousseau is enameled with fire on a plaque. The jury awarded him a bronze medal (because Rousseau was merchant and not manufacturer). The gold medal was awarded to the manufacturers Lebeuf and Milliet. The service also boasted two novelties: the first was that everyone was free to compose his service according to his tastes and personal use. Rousseau suggested "the barnyard for meat, Crustaceans for fish and flowers for dessert." The second was that the service was adapted to wider circles: "for its sumptuousness to the bourgeoisie, and for its aspect serving as a hunt for the nobility."

The service was then completed (tea cups, coffee, etc.) and the manufacture left to the Creil and Montereau factory. Barluet, Lebeuf's successor, re-edited it in the early 1880s. In 1885, Eugène Rousseau sold his business to Ernest-Baptiste Leveillé, who continued to publish the service under his own brand. Many reissues or variants followed. Among them, that of the Manufacture Jules Vieillard in Bordeaux (late 19th century), that of the Crystal Stairs (early 20th century), or even of the faience of Gien The large birds still in reissue. It can also be noted that many pieces of this service are now preserved in various French national museums (Musée d'Orsay, Musée national Adrien Dubouché, etc.).[11]

Each element of the service, inspired by Japanese prints, was decorated with a different motif. The decoration treats and associates a multitude of birds, fishes, and crustaceans, always leaving room for plants and insects. The decor is often presented as a trilogy. The butterfly meets a cock at the turn of a branch, a dragonfly meets a carp at the bend of a water lily.

Many artists of the time celebrated the poetry of this service and praised its exceptional decor. Mallarmé notably, noted a "visible decadence" since the Restoration in the French furniture, testifies to his appeal for this service. He lingered on ceramics for a special praise of Rousseau, whom he defended against his English imitators: "I had refused all allusions necessarily too briefly to this admirable and unique service, decorated by Bracquemond with Japanese motifs borrowed from the poultry yard and the fish ponds, the most beautiful crockery I have ever known. Each piece, the plates even, wants its special description. I am satisfied, one last time, to claim the priority of Parisian work, picturesque and spiritual on British plagiarism..." . Mallarmé quoted Deck, Collinot and Rousseau, who had "totally renewed French ceramics": "I should particularly mention, as a translation of the high Japanese charm made by a very French spirit, the table service asked, boldly, for the master Aquafortiste Bracquemond: where struts, enhanced with joyous colors, the ordinary hosts of the poultry yard and fish ponds." Mallarmé himself possessed pieces of the service, published during the period 1866–1875.

Félix Bracquemond also worked for the Manufacture nationale de Sèvres in 1870, giving his works a new orientation that preludes the modern style. He also accepted the position of artistic director of the Parisian studio of the firm Charles Haviland of Limoges.

Other work and later life edit

A close friend of Édouard Manet, James McNeill Whistler, and Henri Fantin-Latour, he is represented in the latter's paintings, Hommage à Delacroix, 1864, preserved in Paris at the Musée d'Orsay[12] and Toast with the Truth of 1865, destroyed by the artist.[13]

He married Marie Quivoron, a painter known as Marie Bracquemond, on 5 August 1869, in Paris.[14] Their son, Pierre, claimed that Felix was jealous and critical of Marie's work. His beratement caused Marie to cease painting.

He is also the author of a book entitled Du dessin et la couleur, published in 1886, very much appreciated by Vincent van Gogh,[15] and a study on woodcutting and lithography. His best engravings are devoted either to landscapes or to animals: Reeds and teals (1882), Les Hirondelles (1882), Les Mouettes (1888).

He was honored as an Officer of the Legion of Honor in 1889.[3]

Gabriel P. Weisberg called him the "molder of artistic taste in his time".[16] Indeed, it was he who recognised the beauty of the Hokusai woodcuts used as packing around a shipment of Japanese china, a discovery which helped change the look of late 19th-century art.[17]

He died in Sèvres.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Monneret 1987, p. 74
  2. ^ a b c d Monneret 1987, p. 75
  3. ^ a b   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bracquemond, Félix". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 369.
  4. ^ Valérie Sueur, « L’éditeur Alfred Cadart (1828-1875) et le renouveau de l’eau-forte originale », in Europeana Newspapers, avril 2013 — lire sur Gallica 2017-08-15 at the Wayback Machine.
  5. ^ "L'anti-musée par Yann André Gourvennec, " Les Trente-six vues de la Tour Eiffel " de Henri Rivière". antimuseum.online.fr (in French).
  6. ^ The Great Wave: The Influence of Japanese Woodcuts on French Prints, Colta Feller Ives, 1980, p. 18 à 20, Metropolitan Museum of Art, site books.google.fr
  7. ^ Carine, Girac-Marinier (2011). "De Monet à Turner". In Larousse (ed.). Découvrir les Impressionnistes (in French). Paris. p. 92. ISBN 978-2-03-586373-7. OCLC 866801730.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link), p. 26 (lire en ligne, accessed 4 April 2014)
  8. ^ Gallica, Gazette des beaux-arts, 1905, pp. 142 à 143, site gallica.bnf.fr
  9. ^ Bibliothèques municipales de Grenoble
  10. ^ "Musée d'Orsay, "Art, industry and japonism : the "Rousseau" set"". Retrieved May 18, 2023.
  11. ^ 68 pièces de céramique (en août 2015) sont présentées de façon détaillée dans la base Joconde.
  12. ^ Henri Fantin-Latour, Hommage à Delacroix, 1864 2018-10-21 at the Wayback Machine, Musée d'Orsay, site musée-Orsay.fr
  13. ^ Henri Fantin-Latour, Toast avec la vérité, 1865, Louvre, dessin du tableau détruit par l'artiste, site art-graphiques.Louvre.fr
  14. ^ Galerie de dessins de Marie Bracquemond Category:Marie Bracquemond
  15. ^ Monneret 1987, p. 76
  16. ^ Weisberg, Gabriel (September 1976). "Félix Bracquemond and the Molding of French Taste". ARTnews: 64–66.
  17. ^ Bouillon, Jean-Paul (1980). "Remarques sur la Japonisme de Bracquemond". Japonisme in Art, Art Symposium. Tokyo: Kodansha International: 83–108.

Works cited edit

  • Monneret, Sophie (1987). L'Impressionnisme et son époque – Noms propres A à T (in French). Vol. 2. Paris: Robert Laffont. ISBN 978-2-221-05412-3.

External links edit

  Media related to Félix Bracquemond at Wikimedia Commons

félix, bracquemond, félix, henri, bracquemond, 1833, october, 1914, french, painter, etcher, printmaker, played, role, revival, printmaking, encouraging, artists, such, Édouard, manet, edgar, degas, camille, pissarro, this, technique, 1865, nadar, portrait, fr. Felix Henri Bracquemond 22 May 1833 29 October 1914 was a French painter etcher and printmaker He played a key role in the revival of printmaking encouraging artists such as Edouard Manet Edgar Degas and Camille Pissarro to use this technique 1 Felix Bracquemond 1865 by Nadar Portrait of Felix Bracquemond by his friend Paul Adolphe Rajon etching 1852Unusually for a prominent artist of this period he also designed pottery for a number of French factories in an innovative style that marks the beginning of Japonisme in France He was the husband of the Impressionist painter Marie Bracquemond Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Engraver 1 3 Friend of the Impressionists 1 4 Ceramicist 1 5 Other work and later life 2 References 2 1 Works cited 3 External linksBiography editEarly life edit Felix Bracquemond was born in Paris He was trained in early youth as a trade lithographer until Joseph Guichard a pupil of Ingres took him to his studio 1 His portrait of his grandmother painted by him at the age of nineteen attracted Theophile Gautier s attention at the Salon 2 Engraver edit His work in painting is rather limited It includes mostly portraits including that of Dr Horace Montegre and of Paul Meurice Painting interested him less than engraving He drew most of his technical knowledge from the Encyclopedie by Diderot and d Alembert and he worked as a self taught artist for a long time In 1856 Edmond de Goncourt became close friends with Bracquemond and they both shared a love of Japanese art the engraver having been the first to discover an album by Hokusai 2 He applied himself to engraving and etching about 1853 and played a leading and brilliant part in the revival of the etcher s art in France Altogether he produced over eight hundred plates comprising portraits landscapes scenes of contemporary life and bird studies besides numerous interpretations of other artist s paintings especially those of Jean Louis Ernest Meissonier Gustave Moreau and Jean Baptiste Camille Corot 3 He entered the literary milieu thanks to Auguste Poulet Malassis publisher of Charles Baudelaire with whom Bracquemond became friends He also befriended Theodore de Banville Jules Barbey d Aurevilly Gustave Geffroy Felix Nadar and all the elites residing in Nouvelle Athenes 2 He also was a friend of Auguste Rodin nbsp Terrace of the Villa Brancas etching 1876 of his wife right and her sister In June 1862 he joined the Societe des aquafortistes founded by the publisher Alfred Cadart with the help of the printer Auguste Delatre 4 On his advice Jean Baptiste Corot Jean Francois Millet Edouard Manet Edgar Degas and Camille Pissarro began to practice engraving He greatly helped Manet for his etchings of Olympia and L Homme mort In 1888 Auguste Lepere created with Felix Bracquemond Daniel Vierge and Tony Beltrand the magazine L Estampe originale in order to interest artists and amateurs in the new processes and trends of engraving particularly in color and Henri Riviere worked from this date on The Thirty Six Views of the Eiffel Tower from 1888 to 1902 5 In 1891 Valloton renewed the art of engraving on wood 6 with Gauguin or Emile Bernard while Toulouse Lautrec revolutionized the art of the poster Friend of the Impressionists edit nbsp Colour lithograph Landscape after 1885In 1874 Bracquemond participated in the first exhibition of impressionist painters in the workshops of Nadar Boulevard des Capucines of artists that would be called the Impressionists 7 The inauguration took place on 15 April 1874 and enjoyed a scandalous success He presented a portrait a frame of etchings including the portraits of Auguste Comte Charles Baudelaire and Theophile Gautier but also etchings after Turner Ingres Manet and original etchings Les Saules The Willows Le Mur The Wall He exhibited again with his friends in 1879 2 Ceramicist edit In 1856 Bracquemond discovered a collection of Manga engravings by the Japanese Hokusai typical of the pictorial genre known in Japan as Kacho ga depicting flowers and birds with insects crustaceans and fishes in the workshop of his printer Auguste Delatre after having been used to fix a consignment of porcelain He was seduced by this theme that made him the initiator of the vogue of Japonisme in France which seized the decorative arts during the second half of the 19th century 8 9 In 1860 he returned first to the workshop of the ceramist Theodore Deck then to the earthenware merchant Eugene Rousseau fr in Paris The latter commissioned him the motifs for a table service for a project destined for the Universal Exhibition of 1867 Bracquemond then proposed a model which appropriated the themes of the Kacho ga drawn and engraved by himself For the first time a European artist directly copied a Japanese artist reproducing the animal figures of the Hokusai Manga In 1867 Bracquemond was also one of the nine members of the Societe du Jing lar with Henri Fantin Latour Carolus Duran and the ceramist Marc Louis Solon who met monthly in Sevres for a Japanese dinner to which this service would have been destined nbsp Bracquemond s decor for the Service Rousseau in Creil Montereau faience introduced c1867 for the editor Francois Eugene Rousseau is credited with the first expression of japonisme in France 10 Eugene Rousseau was convinced and ordered two hundred pieces to be manufactured in Creil Montereau faience Bracquemond made the etchings and the engraved planks used by the manufacture The proofs were cut and put on the clay to receive the decoration In the oven the heat made the paper disappear leaving only the imprint of the drawing Then it was painted over and the piece was placed in the large oven Presented for the first time at the Universal Exhibition of 1867 this service was a great success It was in the third group furniture and other objects for the home Class 17 porcelain earthenware and luxury pottery no 58 installed on Louis XIII shelves in old oak with velvet stands Above the counter the name Rousseau is enameled with fire on a plaque The jury awarded him a bronze medal because Rousseau was merchant and not manufacturer The gold medal was awarded to the manufacturers Lebeuf and Milliet The service also boasted two novelties the first was that everyone was free to compose his service according to his tastes and personal use Rousseau suggested the barnyard for meat Crustaceans for fish and flowers for dessert The second was that the service was adapted to wider circles for its sumptuousness to the bourgeoisie and for its aspect serving as a hunt for the nobility The service was then completed tea cups coffee etc and the manufacture left to the Creil and Montereau factory Barluet Lebeuf s successor re edited it in the early 1880s In 1885 Eugene Rousseau sold his business to Ernest Baptiste Leveille who continued to publish the service under his own brand Many reissues or variants followed Among them that of the Manufacture Jules Vieillard in Bordeaux late 19th century that of the Crystal Stairs early 20th century or even of the faience of Gien The large birds still in reissue It can also be noted that many pieces of this service are now preserved in various French national museums Musee d Orsay Musee national Adrien Dubouche etc 11 Each element of the service inspired by Japanese prints was decorated with a different motif The decoration treats and associates a multitude of birds fishes and crustaceans always leaving room for plants and insects The decor is often presented as a trilogy The butterfly meets a cock at the turn of a branch a dragonfly meets a carp at the bend of a water lily Many artists of the time celebrated the poetry of this service and praised its exceptional decor Mallarme notably noted a visible decadence since the Restoration in the French furniture testifies to his appeal for this service He lingered on ceramics for a special praise of Rousseau whom he defended against his English imitators I had refused all allusions necessarily too briefly to this admirable and unique service decorated by Bracquemond with Japanese motifs borrowed from the poultry yard and the fish ponds the most beautiful crockery I have ever known Each piece the plates even wants its special description I am satisfied one last time to claim the priority of Parisian work picturesque and spiritual on British plagiarism Mallarme quoted Deck Collinot and Rousseau who had totally renewed French ceramics I should particularly mention as a translation of the high Japanese charm made by a very French spirit the table service asked boldly for the master Aquafortiste Bracquemond where struts enhanced with joyous colors the ordinary hosts of the poultry yard and fish ponds Mallarme himself possessed pieces of the service published during the period 1866 1875 Felix Bracquemond also worked for the Manufacture nationale de Sevres in 1870 giving his works a new orientation that preludes the modern style He also accepted the position of artistic director of the Parisian studio of the firm Charles Haviland of Limoges Other work and later life edit A close friend of Edouard Manet James McNeill Whistler and Henri Fantin Latour he is represented in the latter s paintings Hommage a Delacroix 1864 preserved in Paris at the Musee d Orsay 12 and Toast with the Truth of 1865 destroyed by the artist 13 He married Marie Quivoron a painter known as Marie Bracquemond on 5 August 1869 in Paris 14 Their son Pierre claimed that Felix was jealous and critical of Marie s work His beratement caused Marie to cease painting He is also the author of a book entitled Du dessin et la couleur published in 1886 very much appreciated by Vincent van Gogh 15 and a study on woodcutting and lithography His best engravings are devoted either to landscapes or to animals Reeds and teals 1882 Les Hirondelles 1882 Les Mouettes 1888 He was honored as an Officer of the Legion of Honor in 1889 3 Gabriel P Weisberg called him the molder of artistic taste in his time 16 Indeed it was he who recognised the beauty of the Hokusai woodcuts used as packing around a shipment of Japanese china a discovery which helped change the look of late 19th century art 17 He died in Sevres nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 1872 80 nbsp nbsp Alfred de Curzon 1850s nbsp La Mer 1850 1914 nbsp Portrait of Ferdinand Lesseps 1850 1914 nbsp Frontispiece for Oeuvres Nouvelles de Champfleury after Courbet 1860 98 nbsp Simon Lantara after Vernet for L Artiste September 1864 nbsp Frontispiece for an Album of the Societe des Aquafortistes 1865 nbsp Frontispiece for L Illustration Nouvelle 1867 nbsp La statue de la Resistance par Falguiere 1870 nbsp Notre Dame Paris 1870 nbsp Edwin Edwards 1872 nbsp The Locomotive after Turner 1873 nbsp Death Mask ofAuguste Blanqui 1881 nbsp Les Hirondelles ca 1882 nbsp Portrait ofEdmond de Goncourt 1882 nbsp Portrait of AugustePoulet Malassis 1884 nbsp The Monkey and the Cat from the Fables of La Fontaine 1886 nbsp Charles Keene for L Artiste May 1891 nbsp The Gallic Cock Long Live the Czar 1893 nbsp Woman s Head from L Estampe Moderne 1897 99 nbsp Portrait ofLeon Cladel 1905 nbsp Portrait ofAlphonse LegrosReferences edit a b Monneret 1987 p 74 a b c d Monneret 1987 p 75 a b nbsp One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bracquemond Felix Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 4 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 369 Valerie Sueur L editeur Alfred Cadart 1828 1875 et le renouveau de l eau forte originale in Europeana Newspapers avril 2013 lire sur Gallica Archived 2017 08 15 at the Wayback Machine L anti musee par Yann Andre Gourvennec Les Trente six vues de la Tour Eiffel de Henri Riviere antimuseum online fr in French The Great Wave The Influence of Japanese Woodcuts on French Prints Colta Feller Ives 1980 p 18 a 20 Metropolitan Museum of Art site books google fr Carine Girac Marinier 2011 De Monet a Turner In Larousse ed Decouvrir les Impressionnistes in French Paris p 92 ISBN 978 2 03 586373 7 OCLC 866801730 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link p 26 lire en ligne accessed 4 April 2014 Gallica Gazette des beaux arts 1905 pp 142 a 143 site gallica bnf fr Bibliotheques municipales de Grenoble Musee d Orsay Art industry and japonism the Rousseau set Retrieved May 18 2023 68 pieces de ceramique en aout 2015 sont presentees de facon detaillee dans la base Joconde Henri Fantin Latour Hommage a Delacroix 1864 Archived 2018 10 21 at the Wayback Machine Musee d Orsay site musee Orsay fr Henri Fantin Latour Toast avec la verite 1865 Louvre dessin du tableau detruit par l artiste site art graphiques Louvre fr Galerie de dessins de Marie Bracquemond Category Marie Bracquemond Monneret 1987 p 76 Weisberg Gabriel September 1976 Felix Bracquemond and the Molding of French Taste ARTnews 64 66 Bouillon Jean Paul 1980 Remarques sur la Japonisme de Bracquemond Japonisme in Art Art Symposium Tokyo Kodansha International 83 108 Works cited edit Monneret Sophie 1987 L Impressionnisme et son epoque Noms propres A a T in French Vol 2 Paris Robert Laffont ISBN 978 2 221 05412 3 External links edit nbsp Media related to Felix Bracquemond at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Felix Bracquemond amp oldid 1180420214, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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