fbpx
Wikipedia

Jean-Léon Gérôme

Jean-Léon Gérôme (11 May 1824 – 10 January 1904) was a French painter and sculptor in the style now known as academicism. His paintings were so widely reproduced that he was "arguably the world's most famous living artist by 1880."[1] The range of his oeuvre included historical painting, Greek mythology, Orientalism, portraits, and other subjects, bringing the academic painting tradition to an artistic climax. He is considered one of the most important painters from this academic period. He was also a teacher with a long list of students.

Jean-Léon Gérôme
Photograph by Nadar
Born(1824-05-11)11 May 1824
Died10 January 1904(1904-01-10) (aged 79)
Paris, France
EducationPaul Delaroche, Charles Gleyre
Known forPainting, sculpture, teaching
MovementAcademicism, Orientalism

Early life

 
Birthplace of Jean-Léon Gérôme in Vesoul, France

Jean-Léon Gérôme was born at Vesoul, Haute-Saône. He went to Paris in 1840 where he studied under Paul Delaroche, whom he accompanied to Italy in 1843. He visited Florence, Rome, the Vatican and Pompeii. On his return to Paris in 1844, like many students of Delaroche, he joined the atelier of Charles Gleyre and studied there for a brief time. He then attended the École des Beaux-Arts. In 1846 he tried to enter the prestigious Prix de Rome, but failed in the final stage because his figure drawing was inadequate.[2]

His painting The Cock Fight (1846) is an academic exercise depicting a nude young man and a very thinly draped young woman with two fighting cocks, with the Bay of Naples in the background. He sent this painting to the Paris Salon of 1847, where it gained him a third-class medal. This work was seen as the epitome of the Neo-Grec movement that had formed out of Gleyre's studio (including Henri-Pierre Picou and Jean-Louis Hamon), and was championed by the influential French critic Théophile Gautier, whose review made Gérôme famous and effectively launched his career.[3]

Gérôme abandoned his dream of winning the Prix de Rome and took advantage of his sudden success. His paintings The Virgin, the Infant Jesus and Saint John and Anacreon, Bacchus and Eros took a second-class medal at the Paris Salon in 1848. In 1849, he produced the paintings Michelangelo (also called In his Studio) and A Portrait of a Lady.

In 1851, he decorated a vase later offered by Emperor Napoleon III of France to Prince Albert, now part of the Royal Collection at St. James's Palace, London. He exhibited Greek Interior, Souvenir d'Italie, Bacchus and Love, Drunk in 1851; Paestum in 1852; and An Idyll in 1853.[2]

Important commissions

 
The Age of Augustus, the Birth of Christ, c. 1852–1854, Musée de Picardie

In 1852, Gérôme received a commission to paint a large mural of an allegorical subject of his choosing. The Age of Augustus, the Birth of Christ, which combined the birth of Christ with conquered nations paying homage to Augustus, may have been intended to flatter Napoleon III, whose government commissioned the mural and who was identified as a "new Augustus."[4][5] A considerable down payment enabled Gérôme to travel and research, first in 1853 to Constantinople, together with the actor Edmond Got, and in 1854 to Greece and Turkey and the shores of the Danube, where he was present at a concert of Russian conscripts making music under the threat of a lash.[6]

 
Recreation in a Russian Camp, 1855

In 1853, Gérôme moved to the Boîte à Thé, a group of studios in the Rue Notre-Dame-des-Champs, Paris. This became a meeting place for artists, writers and actors, where George Sand entertained the composers: Hector Berlioz, Johannes Brahms and Gioachino Rossini and the novelists Théophile Gautier and Ivan Turgenev.

In 1854, he completed another important commission, decorating the Chapel of St. Jerome in the church of St. Séverin in Paris. His Last Communion of St. Jerome in this chapel reflects the influence of the school of Ingres on his religious works.

To the Universal Exhibition of 1855 he contributed Pifferaro, Shepherd, and The Age of Augustus, the Birth of Christ, but it was the modest painting Recreation in a Russian Camp that garnered the most attention.[2]

Orientalism

 
Encampment near Constantinople, 1878, an example of Gérôme's plein-air oil sketches, Ger Eenens Collection, The Netherlands

In 1856, Gérôme visited Egypt for the first time. His itinerary followed the classic Grand Tour of the Near East, up the Nile to Cairo, across to Faiyum, then further up the Nile to Abu Simbel, then back to Cairo, across the Sinai Peninsula through Sinai and up the Wadi el-Araba to Jerusalem and finally Damascus.[7] This heralded the start of many Orientalist paintings depicting Arab religious practice, genre scenes and North African landscapes.

 
The Slave Market, c. 1866, Clark Art Institute. Gérôme executed a very similar painting in 1857, in an ancient Greek or Roman setting.[8]

Among these are paintings in which the Oriental setting is combined with depictions of female nudity. The Slave Market, The Large Pool of Bursa, Pool in a Harem, and similar subjects were works of imagination in which Gérôme combined accurately observed Middle Eastern architectural details with idealized nudes painted in his Paris studio.[9] (In 2019, the right wing populist German party, Alternative for Germany, used The Slave Market in a campaign poster in the 2019 European Parliament election.)[10]

In his travels, Gérôme collected artefacts and costumes for staging oriental scenes in the studio, and also made oil studies from nature for the backgrounds. In an autobiographical essay of 1878, Gérôme described how important oil sketches made on the spot were for him: "Even when worn out after long marches under the bright sun, as soon as our camping spot was reached I got down to work with concentration. But Oh! How many things were left behind of which I carried only the memory away! And I prefer three touches of color on a piece of canvas to the most vivid memory, but one had to continue on with some regret."[11]

Gérôme's reputation was greatly enhanced at the Paris Salon of 1857 by his display of Egyptian Recruits Crossing the Desert, Memnon and Sesostris, Camels Watering, and Suite d'un bal masqué (purchased by the duc d'Aumale, now in the Musée Condé in Chantilly; a copy made by Gérôme in 1859, The Duel After the Masquerade, is in the Walters Art Museum).[12]

Return to Classical subjects

In 1858, he helped to decorate the Paris house of Prince Napoléon Joseph Charles Paul Bonaparte in the Pompeian style. The prince had bought his Greek Interior (1850), a depiction of a brothel also in the Pompeian manner.

In Ave Caesar! Morituri te Salutant, shown at the Salon of 1859, Gérôme returned to the painting of Classical subjects, but the picture failed to interest the public. King Candaules (1859) and Phryne Before the Areopagus and Socrates Seeking Alcibiades in the House of Aspasia (both 1861) gave rise to some scandal by reason of the subjects selected by the painter, and inspired bitter attacks by Paul de Saint-Victor and Maxime Du Camp. Also at the 1861 Salon he exhibited Egyptian Chopping Straw and Rembrandt Biting an Etching, two very minutely finished works.

In 1863, he married Marie Goupil (1842–1912), the daughter of the international art dealer Adolphe Goupil. They had four daughters and one son. His oldest daughter was Jeanne (1863-1944) and she was followed by Suzanne (1867-1941; married to Aimé Morot), Blanche (1868-1918) and Madeleine (1875-1905). Upon his marriage he moved to a house in the Rue de Bruxelles, close to the Folies Bergère. He expanded it into a grand house with stables with a sculpture studio below and a painting studio on the top floor.[2]

Atelier at École des Beaux-Arts

 
Students and model, believed to be one of Gérome's classes at the École des Beaux-Arts

Gérôme was appointed as one of the three professors at the École des Beaux-Arts. He started with sixteen students. Between 1864 and 1904, more than 2,000 students received at least some of their art education through Gérôme's atelier at the École des Beaux-Arts. Places in Gérôme's atelier were limited, keenly sought and highly competitive. Only the best students were admitted and aspirants considered it an honour to be selected. Gérôme progressed his students through drawing from antique works, casts and followed by life study with live models generally selected on the basis of their physique, but occasionally for their facial expression in a sequence of exercises known as the academie. Students drew parts of a bust before the entire bust, then parts of the live model before preparing full figures. Only when they had mastered sketching were they permitted to work in oils. They were also taught to draw clearly and correctly before consideration of tonal qualities. In his school, the floor sloped so that students had the fullest view of the model from the rear of the room. Students sat around any model in order of seniority, with the more senior students towards the rear so that they could draw the full figure, while the more junior members sat towards the front and concentrated on the bust or other part of the anatomy.[13]: 17–21 

 
Pollice Verso, 1872, popularized the "thumbs down" gesture; Gérôme's Vestal virgins appear especially bloodthirsty. Phoenix Art Museum.

According to John Milner, who studied with Gérôme, his atelier was the most "riotous" and "lewd" of all the studios at Beaux-Arts. Students were treated to bizarre initiation rites which included slashing each other's canvases, throwing students down stairs, out of windows, and onto upturned stools, staging fencing matches on the model's dais, in the nude and with paintbrushes loaded with paint.[13]: 17-18 

Gérôme attended every Wednesday and Saturday, demanding punctilious attendance to his instructions. His reputation as a severe critic was well-known. One of his American students, Stephen Wilson Van Shaick, commented that Gérôme was "merciless in judgement" yet possessed a "singular magnetism."[13]: 18  Although Gérôme was very demanding of his students, he offered them considerable assistance outside Beaux-Arts, inviting them to his personal studio, making recommendations to the Salon on their behalf, and encouraging them to study with his colleagues.[13]: 21 

Honors and mid-career works

 
Caricature of Gérôme by Henri Oulevay, commenting on the controversy roused by The Execution of Marshal Ney

Gérôme was elected, on his fifth attempt, a member of the Institut de France in 1865. Already a knight in the Légion d'honneur, he was promoted to an officer in 1867. In 1869, he was elected an honorary member of the British Royal Academy. The King of Prussia, Wilhelm I, awarded him the Grand Order of the Red Eagle, Third Class. His influence became extensive and he was a regular guest of Empress Eugénie at the Imperial Court in Compiègne. Along with the most eminent French artists, he was invited to the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869.[2] The Société des Peintres Orientalistes Français (Society of French Orientalist Painters), founded in 1893, named Gérôme honorary president.

The Execution of Marshal Ney was exhibited at the Salon of 1868. On behalf of Ney's descendants, Gérôme was asked to withdraw the painting, but did not comply. The general reception was very split and the 1868 Salon marked the beginning of a lasting divide between Gérôme and many French art critics, who accused him of relying on literary techniques, of commercialising art, and of bringing politics into art. Henri Oulevay made a caricature where Gérôme is depicted in front of the wall with the art critics as the firing squad.[14]

In 1872 Gérôme produced Pollice Verso, a painting of bloody gladiators and blood-thirsty Vestal virgins in the Colosseum that became one of his most famous works. Alexander Turney Stewart purchased the painting from Gérôme at a price of 80,000 francs, setting a new record for the artist.[15] Gérôme's imagery of the turned thumb to signal life or death for a fallen gladiator was repeated in a multitude of movies, from the silent era up to and including the 2000 Oscar-winner Gladiator.[16][17]

Gérôme returned successfully to the Salon in 1873 with his painting L'Eminence Grise (Museum of Fine Arts, Boston), a colorful depiction of the main stair hall of the palace of Cardinal Richelieu, popularly known as the Red Cardinal (L'Eminence Rouge), who was France's de facto ruler under King Louis XIII beginning in 1624. In the painting, François Le Clerc du Trembly, a Capuchin friar dubbed L'Eminence Grise (the Gray Cardinal), descends the ceremonial staircase immersed in reading the Bible while all others either bow before him or fix their gaze on him. As Richelieu's chief adviser, L'Eminence Grise was called "the power behind the throne," which became the known definition of his title.[18]

Sculpture

 
Gérôme with model for Omphale, c. 1885, Bibliothèque Nationale de France

In his thirties, Gérôme took up sculpture. His first work was a large bronze statue of a gladiator holding his foot on his victim, based on his painting Pollice Verso (1872) and shown to the public at the Universal Exhibition of 1878. The same year he exhibited a marble statue at the Salon of 1878, based on his early painting Anacreon, Bacchus and Eros (1848).

Aware of contemporary experiments of tinting marble (such as by those by John Gibson), he produced Dancer with Three Masks combining movement with color, first exhibited in 1902 and now in the Musée des Beaux-Arts de Caen.

Among his other sculptures are Omphale (1887) and the statue of the duc d'Aumale which stands in front of the Château de Chantilly (1899).

He experimented with mixed ingredients, using for his statues tinted marble, bronze and ivory inlaid with precious stones and paste. His Dancer was exhibited in 1891. His lifesize statue Bellona, in ivory, bronze, and gemstones, attracted great attention at the 1892 exhibition in the Royal Academy of London.

Gérôme then began a series of conquerors, wrought in gold, silver and gems: Bonaparte Entering Cairo (1897), Tamerlane (1898), and Frederick the Great (1899).[2]

In 1903 Gérôme executed a two sculpture commission, Metallugical Worker and Metallurgical Science for the American millionaire Charles M. Schwab meant to glorify Steel production. Schwab sent an actual steel worker to Paris to pose for the works.[19]

Gérôme and Impressionism

 
Summer Afternoon on a Lake, c. 1895, private collection

During the last decades of his career, as his own work fell out of fashion, Gérôme was harshly critical of Impressionism. In 1894, he caused a scandal over his opposition to the Caillebotte bequest to the state which eventually became the foundation of the Musée d'Orsay collection. He organized a public demonstration in his atelier and gave interviews to reporters, including these comments published in the journal L'Éclair:

The Institut de France cannot remain still before such a scandal...How can the government dare welcome such a collection of inanities into a museum? Why, have you seen the collection? The state, the ward of such junk!... What lessons are our young artists going to receive from now on? They'll all start to do Impressionism! Ah! these people believe they are painting nature, nature so admirable in all its manifestations! What pretension! Nature is not for them! This Monet, do you remember his cathedrals? And that man used to know how to paint! Yes, I've seen good things by him, but now![3]

Similarly he objected to the Manet memorial exhibition at the École des Beaux Arts in 1884. But he did attend the opening, after which he paid Manet the backhanded compliment that the exhibition was "not so bad as I thought."[3]

Late career: the Pygmalion–Tanagra cycle

 
Tanagra, marble, 1890, photogravure Goupil c. 1892, Musée d'Orsay

Beginning in 1890, Gerome again drew inspiration from the ancient world with an interconnected, slyly self-referential series of paintings and sculptures that depicted Pygmalion and Galatea; the spirit of Tanagra; and himself.

In 1890, Gérôme made at least two paintings of the mythical Greek sculptor Pygmalion kissing his statue of Galatea at the very moment she is transformed from marble into living flesh. The most famous of these paintings titled Pygmalion and Galatea is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art; it shows the sculptor and his living statue from the rear. A variation (in private hands) shows them from the front.

 
Working in Marble, 1890, Dahesh Museum of Art; Gérôme depicts himself sculpting Tanagra, with Pygmalion and Galatea in the background.

Also in 1890, responding to widespread fascination with the ancient Tanagra figurines recently excavated in Greece, Gérôme sculpted the 5-foot-high, tinted-marble Tanagra, a female nude personifying the Tyche, or presiding spirit, of the ancient city. She holds on her upraised palm a figurine of a female Hoop Dancer (Gérôme's own invention, inspired by, but not a copy of, an actual Tanagra figurine). "Inspired by his characteristic desire for both archaeological accuracy and realism, Gérôme delicately tinted the skin, hair, lips, and nipples of his Tanagra, causing a sensation at the Salon of 1890."[20]

Gérôme subsequently created smaller, gilded bronze versions of Tanagra; several versions of the "Hoop Dancer" figurine held by Tanagra (these became "Gérôme's most popular and widely reproduced sculpture"[21]); two paintings of an imaginary ancient Tanagra workshop where copies of his own Hoop Dancer are on display; and two self-portraits of himself sculpting Tanagra from a living model in his Paris atelier, in which a Hoop Dancer and two different versions of Pygmalion and Galatea can be seen in the background. This complex self-portrait has been called "a summation of Gérôme's remarkable career as both painter and sculptor."[20]

Gérôme also sculpted a tinted-marble Pygmalion and Galatea (1891) based on his paintings.[2]

In this cycle of works, with its exploration of Classical antiquity, creative inspiration, doppelgängers, and female beauty, we see Gérôme "powerfully evoking the continuous interplay between painting and sculpture, reality and artifice, as well as highlighting the inherently theatrical nature of the artist's studio."[20]

Truth—"This is our Mona Lisa"

 
Truth Coming Out of Her Well, 1896, Musée Anne de Beaujeu [fr]

Beginning in the mid-1890s, in the last decade of his life, Gérôme made at least four paintings personifying Truth as a nude woman, either thrown into, at the bottom of, or emerging from a well. The imagery was inspired by an aphorism of the philosopher Democritus, "Of truth we know nothing, for truth is in a well."[22]

Truth Coming Out of Her Well, Armed with Her Whip to Chastise Mankind was exhibited in the Salon du Champ de Mars of 1896.[23] It has been assumed that the painting was a comment on the Dreyfus affair,[24] but art historian Bernard Tillier argues that Gérôme's images of Truth and the well were part of his ongoing diatribe against Impressionism.[25][26]

 
Jean-Léon Gérôme, portrait photogravure Goupil c. 1892

Gérôme himself invoked the metaphor of Truth and the well in a preface he wrote for Émile Bayard's Le Nu Esthétique, published in 1902, to characterize the profound and irreversible influence of photography:

La photographie est un art. La photographie force les artistes à se dépouiller de la vieille routine et à oublier les vieilles formules. Elle nous a ouvert les yeux et forcé à regarder ce qu'auparavant nous n'avions jamais vu, service considérable et inappréciable qu'elle a rendu à l'Art. C'est grâce à elle que la vérité est enfin sortie de son puits. Elle n'y rentrera plus.

Photography is an art. It forces artists to discard their old routine and forget their old formulas. It has opened our eyes and forced us to see that which previously we have not seen; a great and inexpressible service for Art. It is thanks to photography that Truth has finally come out of her well. She will never go back.[27]

In 2012, the Musée Anne de Beaujeu [fr] in Moulins, France, which now owns the painting, mounted the exhibition La vérité est au musée ("Truth is at the Museum"), which collected numerous drawings, sketches, and variants made by Gérôme, and by other artists, relating to the painting and its theme.[28] The multiple interpretations of the painting's enigmatic meaning prompted one of the museum's curators to say, "C'est notre Joconde à nous." ("This is our Mona Lisa.")[25]

Death

 
La Douleur, 1891, Musée Georges-Garret, Vesoul

By the end of his life, Gérôme felt very much a man out of his time. In 1903, recalling his first meeting with Charles Jalabert in 1840, he wrote:

At that time, Paris had nothing to do with the Paris of today: no railways, no bicycles, no cars; we were less agitated, and certain districts, among others the one we lived in and which we called the Latin Quarter, had a provincial aspect in their calm and tranquility. Now everything is changed; we no longer walk, we run like crazy; if we are not crushed during the day, we have a good chance of being murdered at night. It is charming. We have witnessed the end of a world, we are witnessing the dawn of a new one, which lacks the picturesque and above all serenity. The day is not far off when, through our customs, our ways of being, our love of the dollar (auri sacra fames), we will no longer be French, neither in spirit nor in heart. Horrible to think of! We will be Americans![29]

On 31 December 1903, Gérôme wrote to his student and former assistant Albert Aublet, "I begin to have enough of life. I've seen too much misery and misfortune in the lives of others. I still see it every day, and I'm getting eager to escape this theatre." He was to live just ten more days.[3]

On 10 January 1904, "the maid found him dead in the little room next to his atelier, slumped in front of a portrait of Rembrandt and at the foot of his own painting Truth"—but the source for this anecdote, the biographer Moreau-Vauthier, does not specify which painting of Truth.[3][30] He was 79.

At his own request, he was given a simple burial service without flowers. But the Requiem Mass given in his memory was attended by a former president of the Republic, most prominent politicians, and many painters and writers. He was buried in the Montmartre Cemetery in front of the statue La Douleur (Pain), which he had cast for his son Jean who had died in 1891.[2]

Legacy

Gérôme's legacy lived on through the works of his thousands of students from many countries, including: Odilon Redon, Mary Cassatt, Vasily Vasilyevich Vereshchagin, Stanisław Chlebowski, Ahmed Ali Bey, Henri-Camille Danger[31] and Hosui Yamamoto, and many who traveled to Paris from the United States to study under him, including Thomas Eakins, Edwin Lord Weeks,[32] and Gottardo Piazzoni.[33]

 
Gérôme Sculpting "The Gladiators": Monument to Gérôme, 1909, by his son-in-law Aimé Morot, at the Musée d'Orsay

Gérôme's prodigious energy, long career, and wide popularity resulted in an enormous body of work that now resides in museums and private collections around the world; Ackerman's revised catalogue raisonné of 2018 lists approximately 700 paintings and 70 sculptures.[34]

In the early 1870s Gérôme was known for an astonishing range of visual exotica, all realized in precise, minute detail, achieved with thin layers of paint that revealed nary a brushstroke...His works were particularly sought after by wealthy Americans...Over the course of his career, Gérôme sold to American patrons 144 paintings, nearly a quarter of his production. [A work by Gérôme in the Nob Hill mansion of Leland Stanford was destroyed in the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906.[35]] Despite his prodigious output and enormous transatlantic success, most scholarly articles of recent decades cite Gérôme's work as a noxious blend of the trite, the exploitative and the stultifying academic. However, the latest scholarship is re-evaluating Gérôme and his importance in the nineteenth century. A 2010 essay by art historian Mary G. Morton[36]…points out that, contrary to most twenty- and twenty-first century perspectives…Americans [in the 1800s] found Gérôme's paintings complex, edifying and completely modern.[37]

His well-researched and minutely detailed images of gladiator combats, chariot races, slave markets, and many other subjects from the ancient world created an indelible impression on popular culture.

 
Banner for the Haggin Museum in Stockton, California, using detail from Gérôme's The Standing Bearer, Unfolding the Holy Flag (1876)

His ethnographic imagery of Arab and Islamic culture, controversial in his own lifetime, is now even more closely scrutinized, as is his penchant for female nudity; modern critics raise issues of "cultural appropriation" and "sexual exploitation".[38] These issues of sex and race were epitomized by the use in 2019 of his painting The Slave Market in an anti-Muslim campaign poster by the right wing populist German party, Alternative for Germany, to the consternation of the American museum that owns the painting.[10]

Despite charges that the Orientalizing paintings of Gérôme (and others) exploited and indulged in stereotypes of Arab and Muslim cultures, there is now "a high level of interest in collecting Gérôme's art in the Middle East," as evinced by high prices paid at auction for his work by the Qatar Museums Authority in Doha.[39] "They want to take it back and have it for themselves," says art historian Emily M. Weeks.[40] Egyptian industrialist and art collector Shafik Gabr sees Gérôme and other Orientalist painters as "intrepid early globalists who put themselves at risk to document a new world opened by Napoleon Bonaparte’s Egyptian expedition from 1798 to 1801…'I have been inspired by these painters…These people traveled under very difficult circumstances with no knowledge of what to expect. They didn't travel to conquer or find oil. They traveled to discover and to understand.'"[40]

Gérôme's highly vocal opposition to Impressionism was a losing argument, and his work was relegated to the margins of art history by critics, historians, and museum professionals who believed that

his chosen themes corrupted the loftier purposes of art, thus leading to commercialism...they also objected to his orientalism, which they disparaged for being untrue, a perversion or concoction of the true Orient....Now, with the exhibition at the Getty Museum, and a larger version of the show opening at the Musée d'Orsay in October 2010, Gérôme is finally receiving the attention he deserves. No longer will he be lost in time, although his paintings, the way he developed them, and his relationship with many of the major issues of artistic creativity in the nineteenth century and beyond will remain controversial.[41]

As with other painters of Classical Realism and Academic art of the 19th century, Gérôme's prestige and popularity sharply declined in the 20th century; his painting The Snake Charmer, which sold for $19,500 in 1888, sold for $500 in 1942.[42] Now his works are once again sought-after in the international art market. In 2008, his painting Femme circassienne voilée or Veiled Circassian Beauty (1876) was auctioned for 2,057,250 GBP; it now belongs to the Qatar Museums Authority in Doha.[39][43] In 2019, his painting The Harem in the Kiosk (c. 1870–1875) realized 2,655,000 GBP at auction, and his painting Riders Crossing the Desert (1870) realized 3,135,000 GBP.[44]

The most wide-ranging single collection of Gérôme's work may be the several rooms dedicated to displaying his paintings and sculptures at the Musée Georges-Garret in the artist's hometown of Vesoul. Gérôme donated several works to the museum during his lifetime, and his heirs donated more works after his death.

Gallery (chronological)

Images of Gérôme

See also

References and sources

References

  1. ^ Beeny 2010, p. 42
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Chisholm, Hugh, ed. "Gérôme, Jean Léon," Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University, 1901.
  3. ^ a b c d e "The Whirling Dervish". stairsainty.com.
  4. ^ "Siècle d'Auguste : Naissance de N.S. Jésus Christ". www.musee-orsay.fr.
  5. ^ "The Age of Augustus, the Birth of Christ". getty.edu.
  6. ^ Rosenthal, Donald A. 1982. Orientalism, the Near East in French painting, 1800–1880. Rochester, N.Y.: Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester. p. 77. ISBN 0918098149
  7. ^ Gerald M. Ackerman: Jean-Léon Gérôme: Eight Oil Sketches. 5 December 2004
  8. ^ a b Lees, Sarah, ed. (2012). Nineteenth-Century European Paintings at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute (excerpt: "The Slave Market") (PDF). pp. 359–363.
  9. ^ e.g. Nochlin (1983); Toledano (1998, 4–6); Lees (2012)
  10. ^ a b Grieshaber, Kirsten (30 April 2019). "US museum condemns use of its art by German far-right party". www.apnews.com. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
  11. ^ Gérôme, Notes, "J. L. Gérôme á la montée de sa carrière, fait la balance", in: Bulletin de la société d'agriculture, lettres, sciences et arts de la Haute-Saône, 1980, pp. 1–30
  12. ^ "Musée Condé". Suite d'un bal masqué. Retrieved 8 November 2012.
  13. ^ a b c d O'Sullivan, N. Aloysius O'Kelly: Art, Nation, Empire. Field Day Publications, 2010.
  14. ^ Mitchell 2010, pp. 97–99
  15. ^ DeCourcy E. McIntosh, "Goupil and the American Triumph of Jean-Léon Gérôme," in Musée Goupil, Gérôme and Goupil: Art and Enterprise, trans. Isabel Ollivier. Paris: Réunion des musées nationaux, 2000, p. 38.
  16. ^ Spier, Christine (6 August 2010). "Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down? Looking at Gérôme's "Pollice Verso"". blogs.getty.edu/iris. Retrieved 9 June 2019.
  17. ^ Diana Landau, editor. Gladiator: The Making of the Ridley Scott Epic. New York: Newmarket, 2000, p. 26.
  18. ^ Museum of Fine Arts, Boston: L'Eminence Grise
  19. ^ "Highlights of Allentown Art Museum Works in the Community". 18 December 2010.
  20. ^ a b c "Jean-Léon Gérôme (French, 1824–1904) Working in Marble, or The Artist Sculpting Tanagra, 1890". daheshmuseum.org. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  21. ^ Susan Moore (16 May 2018). "The diminutive dancing girl who made a big impression". apollo-magazine.com. Retrieved 28 November 2019.
  22. ^ Diogenes Laertius. Lives of Eminent Philosophers. IX, 72. Perseus Project, Tufts University.
  23. ^ Ackerman, Gerald M. (1986). The life and work of Jean-Léon Gérôme: with a catalogue raisonné. Sotheby's. p. 276. ISBN 9780856673115.
  24. ^ Pouillon, François (2012). Dictionnaire des orientalistes de langue française (in French). Karthala Editions. p. 466. ISBN 9782811107901.
  25. ^ a b "Exposition autour de "La Vérité" de Jean-Léon Gérôme". lamontagne.fr. 18 January 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  26. ^ Bertrand Tillier. Gérôme et la vérité en peinture, Autour de La Vérité sortant du puits…. Regarder Gérôme, Musée d'Orsay, Dec 2010, Paris, France.
  27. ^ Bayard, Émile; preface by Jean Léon Gérôme. Le Nu Esthétique. Paris: Bernard, 1902.
  28. ^ . officiel-galeries-musees.com. 2012. Archived from the original on 2 August 2020. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
  29. ^ Gérôme (1903), p. 5.
  30. ^ Moreau-Vauthier, Charles; Gérôme, Jean Léon (1906). Gérôme: peintre et sculpteur (in French). Hachette. p. 287.
  31. ^ Benezit Dictionary of Artists 2006
  32. ^ Weinberg, H. Barbara, The American Pupils of Jean-Léon Gérôme, Fort Worth: Amon Carter Museum, 1984
  33. ^ Neff, Emily Ballew. The Modern West: American Landscapes, 1890-1950, Yale University Press, 2006, p. 108.
  34. ^ Ackerman, Gerald M. Jean-Léon Gérôme: Monographie révisée et catalogue raisonné mis à jour, France: Art Création Réalisation, 2018.
  35. ^ Osborne, Carol M. Museum Builders in the West: The Stanfords as Collectors and Patrons of Art, 1870-1906. Stanford University Museum of Art, 1986, p. 18.
  36. ^ Morton, Mary G. "Gérôme in the Gilded Age," in The Spectacular Art of Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824–1904). Getty Museum and Musée d'Orsay, 2010, pp. 183–210.
  37. ^ Garvey, Dana M. (2013). "Edwin Lord Weeks: An American Artist in North Africa and South Asia" (PDF). digital.lib.washington.edu.
  38. ^ See critiques in Nochlin (1983); Toledano (1998, 4–6); Lees (2012).
  39. ^ a b Allan 2010, pp. 5–6
  40. ^ a b Turque, Bill (21 February 2013). "Once-reviled Orientalist art inspires Egyptian magnate to improve East-West relations". www.washingtonpost.com.
  41. ^ Weisberg, Gabriel P. "Exhibition review of The Spectacular Art of Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824–1904) in Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide vol. 9, no. 2 (Autumn 2010)". Retrieved 23 December 2019.
  42. ^ Finkel, Jori (13 June 2010). "Jean-Léon Gérôme's 'The Snake Charmer': A Twisted History". Los Angeles Times.
  43. ^ "Femme circassienne voilée". christies.com. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  44. ^ "Jean-Léon Gérôme page at Sotheby's". sothebys.com. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
  45. ^ For a recent appreciation see Sebastian Smee, "A masterpiece with a complicated afterlife", Washington Post, 30 Dec. 2020.
  46. ^ Weeks, Emily M. "Catalogue Note, Lot 670: Jean-Léon Gérôme, The Story of Anacreon (Four Works)". www.sothebys.com.

Sources

  • Ackerman, Gerald (1986). The life and work of Jean-Léon Gérôme; catalogue raisonné. Sotheby's Publications. ISBN 0-85667-311-0.
  • Ackerman, Gerald (2000). Jean-Léon Gérôme. Monographie révisée, catalogie raisonné mis a jour. ACR. ISBN 2-86770-137-6.
  • Allan, Scott (2010). "Introduction". In Allan, Scott; Morton, Mary (eds.). Reconsidering Gérôme. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum. ISBN 978-1-60606-038-4.
  • Bayard, Émile; preface by Jean Léon Gérôme. Le Nu Esthétique. Paris: Bernard, 1902.
  • Beeny, Emily (2010). "Blood Spectacle: Gérôme in the Arena". In Allan, Scott; Morton, Mary (eds.). Reconsidering Gérôme. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum. ISBN 978-1-60606-038-4.
  • Benezit E. - Dictionnaire des Peintres, Sculpteurs, Dessinateurs et Graveurs - Librairie Gründ, Paris, 1976; ISBN 2-7000-0156-7 (in French)
  • Laurence des Cars, Dominque de Font-Rélaux and Édouard Papet (ed.), The Spectacular Art of Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824–1904), Getty Museum and Musée d'Orsay, 2010.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. "Gérôme, Jean Léon," Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University, 1901.
  • Garvey, Dana M. Edwin Lord Weeks: An American Artist in North Africa and South Asia, dissertation, University of Washington, 2013.
  • Gérôme, Jean-Léon (1903). Preface to Charles Jalabert: l'homme, l'artiste, d'après sa correspondance by Émile Reinaud. Paris: Hachette, 1903, pp. 5–7.
  • Hering, Fanny Field; introduction by Augustus St. Gaudens. Gérôme: The Life and Works of Jean-Léon Gérôme. New York, Cassell Publishing Company, 1892.
  • Lees, Sarah. 2012. "Jean-Léon Gérôme: Slave Market". In Nineteenth-century European Paintings at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, edited by S. Lees. 359–363. Williamstown, Mass: Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute.
  • Mitchell, Claudine (2010). "The Damaged Mirror: Gérôme's Narrative Technique and the Fractures of French History". In Allan, Scott; Morton, Mary (eds.). Reconsidering Gérôme. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum. ISBN 978-1-60606-038-4.
  • Moreau-Vauthier, Charles. Gérôme: peintre et sculpteur (in French). Hachette, 1906.
  • Nochlin, Linda. 1983. "The Imaginary Orient". Art in America 71(5): 118–31, 187–91.
  • O'Sullivan N. Aloysius O'Kelly: Art, Nation, Empire, Field Day Publications, 2010.
  • Scott C. Allan and Mary Morton (ed.), Reconsidering Gérôme, Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum, 2010, in: Art Bulletin 94 (2012), No. 2, pp. 312–316
  • Toledano, Ehud R. 1998. Slavery and Abolition in the Ottoman Middle East. Seattle/London: University of Washington Press.
  • Turner, J. – Grove Dictionary of Art – Oxford University Press, USA; new edition (January 2, 1996); ISBN 0-19-517068-7
  • Catalogue of the exhibition in the Musée de Vésoul (August 1981). Jean-Léon Gérôme : peintre, sculpteur et graveur; ses oeuvres conservées dans les collections françaises et privées. Ville de Vésoul.

External links

  Media related to Jean-Léon Gérôme at Wikimedia Commons

  • Eight portraits of Gérôme at various ages at the Bibliothèque Municipale de Besançon
  • Musée Georges-Garret de Vesoul[permanent dead link] The museum in Gérôme's hometown displays many of his paintings and sculptures
  • Jean-Léon Gérôme-Biography and Legacy at www.theartstory.org
  • Fin de partie: A Group of Self-Portraits by Jean-Léon Gérôme by Susan Waller
  • La Vérité est au musée—press kit for the 2012 exhibit at the Musée Anne-de-Beaujeu (in French)
  • Jean-Léon Gérôme/Art Renewal Center Over 350 Gerome images, list of students with examples of work, biography, and letters
  • Artencyclopedia.com page on Gérôme
  • www.jeanleongerome.org nearly 300 images by the artist
  • "Gérôme, Jean-Léon" . New International Encyclopedia. 1906.
  • "Gérôme, Jean Léon" . The American Cyclopædia. 1879.
  • in American public collections, on the French Sculpture Census website  

jean, léon, gérôme, gerome, redirects, here, other, uses, gerome, disambiguation, confused, with, jean, leon, gerome, ferris, 1824, january, 1904, french, painter, sculptor, style, known, academicism, paintings, were, widely, reproduced, that, arguably, world,. Gerome redirects here For other uses see Gerome disambiguation Not to be confused with Jean Leon Gerome Ferris Jean Leon Gerome 11 May 1824 10 January 1904 was a French painter and sculptor in the style now known as academicism His paintings were so widely reproduced that he was arguably the world s most famous living artist by 1880 1 The range of his oeuvre included historical painting Greek mythology Orientalism portraits and other subjects bringing the academic painting tradition to an artistic climax He is considered one of the most important painters from this academic period He was also a teacher with a long list of students Jean Leon GeromePhotograph by NadarBorn 1824 05 11 11 May 1824Vesoul Haute Saone FranceDied10 January 1904 1904 01 10 aged 79 Paris FranceEducationPaul Delaroche Charles GleyreKnown forPainting sculpture teachingMovementAcademicism Orientalism Contents 1 Early life 2 Important commissions 3 Orientalism 4 Return to Classical subjects 5 Atelier at Ecole des Beaux Arts 6 Honors and mid career works 7 Sculpture 8 Gerome and Impressionism 9 Late career the Pygmalion Tanagra cycle 10 Truth This is our Mona Lisa 11 Death 12 Legacy 13 Gallery chronological 14 Images of Gerome 15 See also 16 References and sources 16 1 References 16 2 Sources 17 External linksEarly life Edit Birthplace of Jean Leon Gerome in Vesoul France Jean Leon Gerome was born at Vesoul Haute Saone He went to Paris in 1840 where he studied under Paul Delaroche whom he accompanied to Italy in 1843 He visited Florence Rome the Vatican and Pompeii On his return to Paris in 1844 like many students of Delaroche he joined the atelier of Charles Gleyre and studied there for a brief time He then attended the Ecole des Beaux Arts In 1846 he tried to enter the prestigious Prix de Rome but failed in the final stage because his figure drawing was inadequate 2 The Cock Fight 1846 Musee d Orsay His painting The Cock Fight 1846 is an academic exercise depicting a nude young man and a very thinly draped young woman with two fighting cocks with the Bay of Naples in the background He sent this painting to the Paris Salon of 1847 where it gained him a third class medal This work was seen as the epitome of the Neo Grec movement that had formed out of Gleyre s studio including Henri Pierre Picou and Jean Louis Hamon and was championed by the influential French critic Theophile Gautier whose review made Gerome famous and effectively launched his career 3 Gerome abandoned his dream of winning the Prix de Rome and took advantage of his sudden success His paintings The Virgin the Infant Jesus and Saint John and Anacreon Bacchus and Eros took a second class medal at the Paris Salon in 1848 In 1849 he produced the paintings Michelangelo also called In his Studio and A Portrait of a Lady In 1851 he decorated a vase later offered by Emperor Napoleon III of France to Prince Albert now part of the Royal Collection at St James s Palace London He exhibited Greek Interior Souvenir d Italie Bacchus and Love Drunk in 1851 Paestum in 1852 and An Idyll in 1853 2 Important commissions Edit The Age of Augustus the Birth of Christ c 1852 1854 Musee de Picardie In 1852 Gerome received a commission to paint a large mural of an allegorical subject of his choosing The Age of Augustus the Birth of Christ which combined the birth of Christ with conquered nations paying homage to Augustus may have been intended to flatter Napoleon III whose government commissioned the mural and who was identified as a new Augustus 4 5 A considerable down payment enabled Gerome to travel and research first in 1853 to Constantinople together with the actor Edmond Got and in 1854 to Greece and Turkey and the shores of the Danube where he was present at a concert of Russian conscripts making music under the threat of a lash 6 Recreation in a Russian Camp 1855 In 1853 Gerome moved to the Boite a The a group of studios in the Rue Notre Dame des Champs Paris This became a meeting place for artists writers and actors where George Sand entertained the composers Hector Berlioz Johannes Brahms and Gioachino Rossini and the novelists Theophile Gautier and Ivan Turgenev In 1854 he completed another important commission decorating the Chapel of St Jerome in the church of St Severin in Paris His Last Communion of St Jerome in this chapel reflects the influence of the school of Ingres on his religious works To the Universal Exhibition of 1855 he contributed Pifferaro Shepherd and The Age of Augustus the Birth of Christ but it was the modest painting Recreation in a Russian Camp that garnered the most attention 2 Orientalism Edit Encampment near Constantinople 1878 an example of Gerome s plein air oil sketches Ger Eenens Collection The Netherlands In 1856 Gerome visited Egypt for the first time His itinerary followed the classic Grand Tour of the Near East up the Nile to Cairo across to Faiyum then further up the Nile to Abu Simbel then back to Cairo across the Sinai Peninsula through Sinai and up the Wadi el Araba to Jerusalem and finally Damascus 7 This heralded the start of many Orientalist paintings depicting Arab religious practice genre scenes and North African landscapes The Slave Market c 1866 Clark Art Institute Gerome executed a very similar painting in 1857 in an ancient Greek or Roman setting 8 Among these are paintings in which the Oriental setting is combined with depictions of female nudity The Slave Market The Large Pool of Bursa Pool in a Harem and similar subjects were works of imagination in which Gerome combined accurately observed Middle Eastern architectural details with idealized nudes painted in his Paris studio 9 In 2019 the right wing populist German party Alternative for Germany used The Slave Market in a campaign poster in the 2019 European Parliament election 10 In his travels Gerome collected artefacts and costumes for staging oriental scenes in the studio and also made oil studies from nature for the backgrounds In an autobiographical essay of 1878 Gerome described how important oil sketches made on the spot were for him Even when worn out after long marches under the bright sun as soon as our camping spot was reached I got down to work with concentration But Oh How many things were left behind of which I carried only the memory away And I prefer three touches of color on a piece of canvas to the most vivid memory but one had to continue on with some regret 11 Gerome s reputation was greatly enhanced at the Paris Salon of 1857 by his display of Egyptian Recruits Crossing the Desert Memnon and Sesostris Camels Watering and Suite d un bal masque purchased by the duc d Aumale now in the Musee Conde in Chantilly a copy made by Gerome in 1859 The Duel After the Masquerade is in the Walters Art Museum 12 Return to Classical subjects Edit Ave Caesar Morituri te Salutant 1859 Yale University Art Gallery In 1858 he helped to decorate the Paris house of Prince Napoleon Joseph Charles Paul Bonaparte in the Pompeian style The prince had bought his Greek Interior 1850 a depiction of a brothel also in the Pompeian manner In Ave Caesar Morituri te Salutant shown at the Salon of 1859 Gerome returned to the painting of Classical subjects but the picture failed to interest the public King Candaules 1859 and Phryne Before the Areopagus and Socrates Seeking Alcibiades in the House of Aspasia both 1861 gave rise to some scandal by reason of the subjects selected by the painter and inspired bitter attacks by Paul de Saint Victor and Maxime Du Camp Also at the 1861 Salon he exhibited Egyptian Chopping Straw and Rembrandt Biting an Etching two very minutely finished works In 1863 he married Marie Goupil 1842 1912 the daughter of the international art dealer Adolphe Goupil They had four daughters and one son His oldest daughter was Jeanne 1863 1944 and she was followed by Suzanne 1867 1941 married to Aime Morot Blanche 1868 1918 and Madeleine 1875 1905 Upon his marriage he moved to a house in the Rue de Bruxelles close to the Folies Bergere He expanded it into a grand house with stables with a sculpture studio below and a painting studio on the top floor 2 Atelier at Ecole des Beaux Arts Edit Students and model believed to be one of Gerome s classes at the Ecole des Beaux Arts Gerome was appointed as one of the three professors at the Ecole des Beaux Arts He started with sixteen students Between 1864 and 1904 more than 2 000 students received at least some of their art education through Gerome s atelier at the Ecole des Beaux Arts Places in Gerome s atelier were limited keenly sought and highly competitive Only the best students were admitted and aspirants considered it an honour to be selected Gerome progressed his students through drawing from antique works casts and followed by life study with live models generally selected on the basis of their physique but occasionally for their facial expression in a sequence of exercises known as the academie Students drew parts of a bust before the entire bust then parts of the live model before preparing full figures Only when they had mastered sketching were they permitted to work in oils They were also taught to draw clearly and correctly before consideration of tonal qualities In his school the floor sloped so that students had the fullest view of the model from the rear of the room Students sat around any model in order of seniority with the more senior students towards the rear so that they could draw the full figure while the more junior members sat towards the front and concentrated on the bust or other part of the anatomy 13 17 21 Pollice Verso 1872 popularized the thumbs down gesture Gerome s Vestal virgins appear especially bloodthirsty Phoenix Art Museum According to John Milner who studied with Gerome his atelier was the most riotous and lewd of all the studios at Beaux Arts Students were treated to bizarre initiation rites which included slashing each other s canvases throwing students down stairs out of windows and onto upturned stools staging fencing matches on the model s dais in the nude and with paintbrushes loaded with paint 13 17 18 Gerome attended every Wednesday and Saturday demanding punctilious attendance to his instructions His reputation as a severe critic was well known One of his American students Stephen Wilson Van Shaick commented that Gerome was merciless in judgement yet possessed a singular magnetism 13 18 Although Gerome was very demanding of his students he offered them considerable assistance outside Beaux Arts inviting them to his personal studio making recommendations to the Salon on their behalf and encouraging them to study with his colleagues 13 21 Honors and mid career works Edit Caricature of Gerome by Henri Oulevay commenting on the controversy roused by The Execution of Marshal Ney Gerome was elected on his fifth attempt a member of the Institut de France in 1865 Already a knight in the Legion d honneur he was promoted to an officer in 1867 In 1869 he was elected an honorary member of the British Royal Academy The King of Prussia Wilhelm I awarded him the Grand Order of the Red Eagle Third Class His influence became extensive and he was a regular guest of Empress Eugenie at the Imperial Court in Compiegne Along with the most eminent French artists he was invited to the opening of the Suez Canal in 1869 2 The Societe des Peintres Orientalistes Francais Society of French Orientalist Painters founded in 1893 named Gerome honorary president The Execution of Marshal Ney was exhibited at the Salon of 1868 On behalf of Ney s descendants Gerome was asked to withdraw the painting but did not comply The general reception was very split and the 1868 Salon marked the beginning of a lasting divide between Gerome and many French art critics who accused him of relying on literary techniques of commercialising art and of bringing politics into art Henri Oulevay made a caricature where Gerome is depicted in front of the wall with the art critics as the firing squad 14 L Eminence Grise 1873 Museum of Fine Arts Boston In 1872 Gerome produced Pollice Verso a painting of bloody gladiators and blood thirsty Vestal virgins in the Colosseum that became one of his most famous works Alexander Turney Stewart purchased the painting from Gerome at a price of 80 000 francs setting a new record for the artist 15 Gerome s imagery of the turned thumb to signal life or death for a fallen gladiator was repeated in a multitude of movies from the silent era up to and including the 2000 Oscar winner Gladiator 16 17 Gerome returned successfully to the Salon in 1873 with his painting L Eminence Grise Museum of Fine Arts Boston a colorful depiction of the main stair hall of the palace of Cardinal Richelieu popularly known as the Red Cardinal L Eminence Rouge who was France s de facto ruler under King Louis XIII beginning in 1624 In the painting Francois Le Clerc du Trembly a Capuchin friar dubbed L Eminence Grise the Gray Cardinal descends the ceremonial staircase immersed in reading the Bible while all others either bow before him or fix their gaze on him As Richelieu s chief adviser L Eminence Grise was called the power behind the throne which became the known definition of his title 18 Sculpture Edit Gerome with model for Omphale c 1885 Bibliotheque Nationale de France In his thirties Gerome took up sculpture His first work was a large bronze statue of a gladiator holding his foot on his victim based on his painting Pollice Verso 1872 and shown to the public at the Universal Exhibition of 1878 The same year he exhibited a marble statue at the Salon of 1878 based on his early painting Anacreon Bacchus and Eros 1848 Aware of contemporary experiments of tinting marble such as by those by John Gibson he produced Dancer with Three Masks combining movement with color first exhibited in 1902 and now in the Musee des Beaux Arts de Caen Among his other sculptures are Omphale 1887 and the statue of the duc d Aumale which stands in front of the Chateau de Chantilly 1899 He experimented with mixed ingredients using for his statues tinted marble bronze and ivory inlaid with precious stones and paste His Dancer was exhibited in 1891 His lifesize statue Bellona in ivory bronze and gemstones attracted great attention at the 1892 exhibition in the Royal Academy of London Gerome then began a series of conquerors wrought in gold silver and gems Bonaparte Entering Cairo 1897 Tamerlane 1898 and Frederick the Great 1899 2 In 1903 Gerome executed a two sculpture commission Metallugical Worker and Metallurgical Science for the American millionaire Charles M Schwab meant to glorify Steel production Schwab sent an actual steel worker to Paris to pose for the works 19 Gerome and Impressionism Edit Summer Afternoon on a Lake c 1895 private collection During the last decades of his career as his own work fell out of fashion Gerome was harshly critical of Impressionism In 1894 he caused a scandal over his opposition to the Caillebotte bequest to the state which eventually became the foundation of the Musee d Orsay collection He organized a public demonstration in his atelier and gave interviews to reporters including these comments published in the journal L Eclair The Institut de France cannot remain still before such a scandal How can the government dare welcome such a collection of inanities into a museum Why have you seen the collection The state the ward of such junk What lessons are our young artists going to receive from now on They ll all start to do Impressionism Ah these people believe they are painting nature nature so admirable in all its manifestations What pretension Nature is not for them This Monet do you remember his cathedrals And that man used to know how to paint Yes I ve seen good things by him but now 3 Similarly he objected to the Manet memorial exhibition at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in 1884 But he did attend the opening after which he paid Manet the backhanded compliment that the exhibition was not so bad as I thought 3 Late career the Pygmalion Tanagra cycle EditMain article Tanagra Gerome sculpture Main article Pygmalion and Galatea Gerome painting Tanagra marble 1890 photogravure Goupil c 1892 Musee d Orsay Beginning in 1890 Gerome again drew inspiration from the ancient world with an interconnected slyly self referential series of paintings and sculptures that depicted Pygmalion and Galatea the spirit of Tanagra and himself In 1890 Gerome made at least two paintings of the mythical Greek sculptor Pygmalion kissing his statue of Galatea at the very moment she is transformed from marble into living flesh The most famous of these paintings titled Pygmalion and Galatea is now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art it shows the sculptor and his living statue from the rear A variation in private hands shows them from the front Working in Marble 1890 Dahesh Museum of Art Gerome depicts himself sculpting Tanagra with Pygmalion and Galatea in the background Also in 1890 responding to widespread fascination with the ancient Tanagra figurines recently excavated in Greece Gerome sculpted the 5 foot high tinted marble Tanagra a female nude personifying the Tyche or presiding spirit of the ancient city She holds on her upraised palm a figurine of a female Hoop Dancer Gerome s own invention inspired by but not a copy of an actual Tanagra figurine Inspired by his characteristic desire for both archaeological accuracy and realism Gerome delicately tinted the skin hair lips and nipples of his Tanagra causing a sensation at the Salon of 1890 20 Gerome subsequently created smaller gilded bronze versions of Tanagra several versions of the Hoop Dancer figurine held by Tanagra these became Gerome s most popular and widely reproduced sculpture 21 two paintings of an imaginary ancient Tanagra workshop where copies of his own Hoop Dancer are on display and two self portraits of himself sculpting Tanagra from a living model in his Paris atelier in which a Hoop Dancer and two different versions of Pygmalion and Galatea can be seen in the background This complex self portrait has been called a summation of Gerome s remarkable career as both painter and sculptor 20 Gerome also sculpted a tinted marble Pygmalion and Galatea 1891 based on his paintings 2 In this cycle of works with its exploration of Classical antiquity creative inspiration doppelgangers and female beauty we see Gerome powerfully evoking the continuous interplay between painting and sculpture reality and artifice as well as highlighting the inherently theatrical nature of the artist s studio 20 Truth This is our Mona Lisa EditMain article Truth Coming Out of Her Well Truth Coming Out of Her Well 1896 Musee Anne de Beaujeu fr Beginning in the mid 1890s in the last decade of his life Gerome made at least four paintings personifying Truth as a nude woman either thrown into at the bottom of or emerging from a well The imagery was inspired by an aphorism of the philosopher Democritus Of truth we know nothing for truth is in a well 22 Truth Coming Out of Her Well Armed with Her Whip to Chastise Mankind was exhibited in the Salon du Champ de Mars of 1896 23 It has been assumed that the painting was a comment on the Dreyfus affair 24 but art historian Bernard Tillier argues that Gerome s images of Truth and the well were part of his ongoing diatribe against Impressionism 25 26 Jean Leon Gerome portrait photogravure Goupil c 1892Gerome himself invoked the metaphor of Truth and the well in a preface he wrote for Emile Bayard s Le Nu Esthetique published in 1902 to characterize the profound and irreversible influence of photography La photographie est un art La photographie force les artistes a se depouiller de la vieille routine et a oublier les vieilles formules Elle nous a ouvert les yeux et force a regarder ce qu auparavant nous n avions jamais vu service considerable et inappreciable qu elle a rendu a l Art C est grace a elle que la verite est enfin sortie de son puits Elle n y rentrera plus Photography is an art It forces artists to discard their old routine and forget their old formulas It has opened our eyes and forced us to see that which previously we have not seen a great and inexpressible service for Art It is thanks to photography that Truth has finally come out of her well She will never go back 27 In 2012 the Musee Anne de Beaujeu fr in Moulins France which now owns the painting mounted the exhibition La verite est au musee Truth is at the Museum which collected numerous drawings sketches and variants made by Gerome and by other artists relating to the painting and its theme 28 The multiple interpretations of the painting s enigmatic meaning prompted one of the museum s curators to say C est notre Joconde a nous This is our Mona Lisa 25 Death Edit La Douleur 1891 Musee Georges Garret VesoulBy the end of his life Gerome felt very much a man out of his time In 1903 recalling his first meeting with Charles Jalabert in 1840 he wrote At that time Paris had nothing to do with the Paris of today no railways no bicycles no cars we were less agitated and certain districts among others the one we lived in and which we called the Latin Quarter had a provincial aspect in their calm and tranquility Now everything is changed we no longer walk we run like crazy if we are not crushed during the day we have a good chance of being murdered at night It is charming We have witnessed the end of a world we are witnessing the dawn of a new one which lacks the picturesque and above all serenity The day is not far off when through our customs our ways of being our love of the dollar auri sacra fames we will no longer be French neither in spirit nor in heart Horrible to think of We will be Americans 29 On 31 December 1903 Gerome wrote to his student and former assistant Albert Aublet I begin to have enough of life I ve seen too much misery and misfortune in the lives of others I still see it every day and I m getting eager to escape this theatre He was to live just ten more days 3 On 10 January 1904 the maid found him dead in the little room next to his atelier slumped in front of a portrait of Rembrandt and at the foot of his own painting Truth but the source for this anecdote the biographer Moreau Vauthier does not specify which painting of Truth 3 30 He was 79 At his own request he was given a simple burial service without flowers But the Requiem Mass given in his memory was attended by a former president of the Republic most prominent politicians and many painters and writers He was buried in the Montmartre Cemetery in front of the statue La Douleur Pain which he had cast for his son Jean who had died in 1891 2 Legacy EditGerome s legacy lived on through the works of his thousands of students from many countries including Odilon Redon Mary Cassatt Vasily Vasilyevich Vereshchagin Stanislaw Chlebowski Ahmed Ali Bey Henri Camille Danger 31 and Hosui Yamamoto and many who traveled to Paris from the United States to study under him including Thomas Eakins Edwin Lord Weeks 32 and Gottardo Piazzoni 33 Gerome Sculpting The Gladiators Monument to Gerome 1909 by his son in law Aime Morot at the Musee d Orsay Gerome s prodigious energy long career and wide popularity resulted in an enormous body of work that now resides in museums and private collections around the world Ackerman s revised catalogue raisonne of 2018 lists approximately 700 paintings and 70 sculptures 34 In the early 1870s Gerome was known for an astonishing range of visual exotica all realized in precise minute detail achieved with thin layers of paint that revealed nary a brushstroke His works were particularly sought after by wealthy Americans Over the course of his career Gerome sold to American patrons 144 paintings nearly a quarter of his production A work by Gerome in the Nob Hill mansion of Leland Stanford was destroyed in the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906 35 Despite his prodigious output and enormous transatlantic success most scholarly articles of recent decades cite Gerome s work as a noxious blend of the trite the exploitative and the stultifying academic However the latest scholarship is re evaluating Gerome and his importance in the nineteenth century A 2010 essay by art historian Mary G Morton 36 points out that contrary to most twenty and twenty first century perspectives Americans in the 1800s found Gerome s paintings complex edifying and completely modern 37 His well researched and minutely detailed images of gladiator combats chariot races slave markets and many other subjects from the ancient world created an indelible impression on popular culture Banner for the Haggin Museum in Stockton California using detail from Gerome s The Standing Bearer Unfolding the Holy Flag 1876 His ethnographic imagery of Arab and Islamic culture controversial in his own lifetime is now even more closely scrutinized as is his penchant for female nudity modern critics raise issues of cultural appropriation and sexual exploitation 38 These issues of sex and race were epitomized by the use in 2019 of his painting The Slave Market in an anti Muslim campaign poster by the right wing populist German party Alternative for Germany to the consternation of the American museum that owns the painting 10 Despite charges that the Orientalizing paintings of Gerome and others exploited and indulged in stereotypes of Arab and Muslim cultures there is now a high level of interest in collecting Gerome s art in the Middle East as evinced by high prices paid at auction for his work by the Qatar Museums Authority in Doha 39 They want to take it back and have it for themselves says art historian Emily M Weeks 40 Egyptian industrialist and art collector Shafik Gabr sees Gerome and other Orientalist painters as intrepid early globalists who put themselves at risk to document a new world opened by Napoleon Bonaparte s Egyptian expedition from 1798 to 1801 I have been inspired by these painters These people traveled under very difficult circumstances with no knowledge of what to expect They didn t travel to conquer or find oil They traveled to discover and to understand 40 Gerome s highly vocal opposition to Impressionism was a losing argument and his work was relegated to the margins of art history by critics historians and museum professionals who believed thathis chosen themes corrupted the loftier purposes of art thus leading to commercialism they also objected to his orientalism which they disparaged for being untrue a perversion or concoction of the true Orient Now with the exhibition at the Getty Museum and a larger version of the show opening at the Musee d Orsay in October 2010 Gerome is finally receiving the attention he deserves No longer will he be lost in time although his paintings the way he developed them and his relationship with many of the major issues of artistic creativity in the nineteenth century and beyond will remain controversial 41 As with other painters of Classical Realism and Academic art of the 19th century Gerome s prestige and popularity sharply declined in the 20th century his painting The Snake Charmer which sold for 19 500 in 1888 sold for 500 in 1942 42 Now his works are once again sought after in the international art market In 2008 his painting Femme circassienne voilee or Veiled Circassian Beauty 1876 was auctioned for 2 057 250 GBP it now belongs to the Qatar Museums Authority in Doha 39 43 In 2019 his painting The Harem in the Kiosk c 1870 1875 realized 2 655 000 GBP at auction and his painting Riders Crossing the Desert 1870 realized 3 135 000 GBP 44 The most wide ranging single collection of Gerome s work may be the several rooms dedicated to displaying his paintings and sculptures at the Musee Georges Garret in the artist s hometown of Vesoul Gerome donated several works to the museum during his lifetime and his heirs donated more works after his death Gallery chronological Edit Phryne Before the Areopagus detail 1861 Kunsthalle Hamburg The Tryst exterior after 1840 Saint Louis Art Museum The Tryst interior after 1840 Saint Louis Art Museum Saint Vincent de Paul 1847 Musee Georges Garret Vesoul Portrait of Claude Armand Gerome brother of the artist 1848 The National Gallery London Portrait of Claude Armand Gerome brother of the artist c 1848 Fitzwilliam Museum The Virgin the Infant Jesus and Saint John 1848 private collection Anacreon Bacchus and Eros 1848 Musee des Augustins Portrait of a Woman 1848 Art Institute of Chicago La Republique 1848 1849 Petit Palais Paris Portrait of a Lady 1849 Musee Ingres Michelangelo Being Shown the Belvedere Torso 1849 Dahesh Museum of Art Greek Interior 1850 A Soul Carried Away by an Angel 1853 Musee Georges Garret Vesoul An Idyll Daphnis and Chloe 1858 Musee Massey Buying a Slave 1857 provenance discussed by Sarah Lees 8 Egyptian Recruits Crossing the Desert 1857 The Duel After the Masquerade version of 1859 Walters Art Museum King Candaules 1859 Museo de Arte de Ponce Diogenes 1860 Walters Art Museum Socrates Seeking Alcibiades in the House of Aspasia 1861 The Christian Martyrs Last Prayer 1863 Walters Art Museum Napoleon in Egypt c 1863 Princeton University Art Museum Young Greeks at the Mosque 1865 Minneapolis Institute of Art Arnaut Smoking 1865 Prayer in Cairo 1865 Heads of the Rebel Beys at the Mosque of El Hasanein Cairo 1866 The Muezzin 1866 Joslyn Art Museum Cleopatra and Caesar 1866 private collection On the Desert before 1867 Walters Art Museum Golgotha It is Finished aka Jerusalem 1867 Musee d Orsay The Horse Market 1867 Haggin Museum The Death of Caesar 1867 Walters Art Museum The Execution of Marshal Ney 1868 Graves Art Gallery Bashi Bazouk 1868 1869 Metropolitan Museum of Art Bashi Bazouk 1869 Metropolitan Museum of Art 45 Riders Crossing the Desert 1870 private collection The Harem in the Kiosk c 1870 1875 private collection Prayer in the Mosque 1871 Metropolitan Museum of Art The Slave Market 1871 Cincinnati Art Museum Pool in a Harem 1876 Hermitage Museum Femme circassienne voilee 1876 Qatar Museums Authority The Standing Bearer Unfolding the Holy Flag 1876 Haggin Museum Chariot Race 1876 Art Institute of Chicago Reception of Le Grand Conde at Versailles 1878 Musee d Orsay The Gladiators bronze 1878 photogravure Goupil c 1892 The Snake Charmer c 1879 Clark Art Institute The Wailing Wall 1880 Israel Museum Cave Canem 1881 Musee Georges Garret Arnaut Blowing Smoke in His Dog s Nose 1882 private collection The Tulip Folly 1882 Walters Art Museum The Grief of the Pasha 1882 Joslyn Art Museum The Saddle Bazaar Cairo 1883 Haggin Museum The Two Majesties 1883 Milwaukee Art Museum Slave Market in Ancient Rome c 1884 Hermitage Museum A Roman Slave Market c 1884 Walters Art Museum The Bath 1880 1885 Legion of Honor San Francisco The Large Pool of Bursa 1885 private collection Bonaparte Before the Sphinx aka Œdipe 1886 Hearst Castle La fin de seance The End of the Session 1886 private collection The Carpet Merchant c 1887 Minneapolis Institute of Art Tiger on the Watch c 1888 Museum of Fine Arts Houston The Birth of Venus 1890 private collection tLa Danse Pyrrhique c 1890 private collection Pygmalion and Galatea 1890 Metropolitan Museum of Art Pygmalion and Galatea c 1890 The Antique Pottery Painter Sculpturae vitam insufflat pictura painting breathes life into sculpture 1893 Art Gallery of Ontario Tanagra Workshop 1893 private collection Hoop Dancer c 1890 Haggin Museum seen in his painting The Artist and His Model The Artist and His Model 1895 Haggin Museum Gerome depicts himself sculpting Tanagra Sarah Bernhardt marble c 1895 Musee d Orsay Leda and the Swan 1895 Mendacibus et histrionibus occisa in puteo jacet alma Veritas 1895 location unknown Truth at the Bottom of a Well study for a painting of 1895 Musee Georges Garret Vesoul Truth Is at the Bottom of the Well 1895 Musee des beaux arts de Lyon Bonaparte Entering Cairo 1897 Entry of the Christ at Jerusalem 1897 Musee Georges Garret Vesoul The Story of Anacreon 1 Cupid at the Door in a Rainstorm c 1899 private collection 46 The Story of Anacreon 2 Young Love s Shivering Limbs the Embers Warm c 1899 private collection The Story of Anacreon 3 Cupid Runs out the Door c 1899 private collection The Story of Anacreon 4 The Poet Dreams of Cupid by the Fire c 1899 private collection Souvenir of Acheres 1903 Columbus Museum of ArtImages of Gerome Edit Jean Leon Gerome self portrait c 1844 Eskenazi Museum of Art at Indiana University Eugene Giraud caricature of Gerome between 1858 and 1870 Robert Jefferson Bingham portrait of Gerome between 1860 and 1875 Jean Baptiste Carpeaux Bust of Jean Leon Gerome after 1871 Ny Carlsberg Glyptotek Copenhagen Jules Clement Chaplain Jean Leon Gerome medal 1885 Metropolitan Museum of Art Self portrait 1886 Aberdeen Art Gallery Fernand Cormon The Sculptor at Work 1891 Musee Georges Garret Vesoul Leopold Bernhard Bernstamm Gerome painting a hoop dancer 1897 Musee Georges Garret Vesoul Self portrait painting The Ball Player 1902 Musee Georges Garret Vesoul Aime Morot bronze head of Jean Leon Gerome 1909 Musee Georges Garret VesoulSee also EditList of Orientalist artists List of pupils of Jean Leon Gerome Societe des Peintres Orientalistes Francais Society of French Orientalist Painters List of paintings by Jean Leon GeromeReferences and sources EditReferences Edit Beeny 2010 p 42 a b c d e f g h Chisholm Hugh ed Gerome Jean Leon Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University 1901 a b c d e The Whirling Dervish stairsainty com Siecle d Auguste Naissance de N S Jesus Christ www musee orsay fr The Age of Augustus the Birth of Christ getty edu Rosenthal Donald A 1982 Orientalism the Near East in French painting 1800 1880 Rochester N Y Memorial Art Gallery of the University of Rochester p 77 ISBN 0918098149 Gerald M Ackerman Jean Leon Gerome Eight Oil Sketches 5 December 2004 a b Lees Sarah ed 2012 Nineteenth Century European Paintings at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute excerpt The Slave Market PDF pp 359 363 e g Nochlin 1983 Toledano 1998 4 6 Lees 2012 a b Grieshaber Kirsten 30 April 2019 US museum condemns use of its art by German far right party www apnews com Retrieved 16 August 2019 Gerome Notes J L Gerome a la montee de sa carriere fait la balance in Bulletin de la societe d agriculture lettres sciences et arts de la Haute Saone 1980 pp 1 30 Musee Conde Suite d un bal masque Retrieved 8 November 2012 a b c d O Sullivan N Aloysius O Kelly Art Nation Empire Field Day Publications 2010 Mitchell 2010 pp 97 99 DeCourcy E McIntosh Goupil and the American Triumph of Jean Leon Gerome in Musee Goupil Gerome and Goupil Art and Enterprise trans Isabel Ollivier Paris Reunion des musees nationaux 2000 p 38 Spier Christine 6 August 2010 Thumbs Up or Thumbs Down Looking at Gerome s Pollice Verso blogs getty edu iris Retrieved 9 June 2019 Diana Landau editor Gladiator The Making of the Ridley Scott Epic New York Newmarket 2000 p 26 Museum of Fine Arts Boston L Eminence Grise Highlights of Allentown Art Museum Works in the Community 18 December 2010 a b c Jean Leon Gerome French 1824 1904 Working in Marble or The Artist Sculpting Tanagra 1890 daheshmuseum org Retrieved 28 November 2019 Susan Moore 16 May 2018 The diminutive dancing girl who made a big impression apollo magazine com Retrieved 28 November 2019 Diogenes Laertius Lives of Eminent Philosophers IX 72 Perseus Project Tufts University Ackerman Gerald M 1986 The life and work of Jean Leon Gerome with a catalogue raisonne Sotheby s p 276 ISBN 9780856673115 Pouillon Francois 2012 Dictionnaire des orientalistes de langue francaise in French Karthala Editions p 466 ISBN 9782811107901 a b Exposition autour de La Verite de Jean Leon Gerome lamontagne fr 18 January 2012 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Bertrand Tillier Gerome et la verite en peinture Autour de La Verite sortant du puits Regarder Gerome Musee d Orsay Dec 2010 Paris France Bayard Emile preface by Jean Leon Gerome Le Nu Esthetique Paris Bernard 1902 La verite est au musee officiel galeries musees com 2012 Archived from the original on 2 August 2020 Retrieved 26 November 2019 Gerome 1903 p 5 Moreau Vauthier Charles Gerome Jean Leon 1906 Gerome peintre et sculpteur in French Hachette p 287 Benezit Dictionary of Artists 2006 Weinberg H Barbara The American Pupils of Jean Leon Gerome Fort Worth Amon Carter Museum 1984 Neff Emily Ballew The Modern West American Landscapes 1890 1950 Yale University Press 2006 p 108 Ackerman Gerald M Jean Leon Gerome Monographie revisee et catalogue raisonne mis a jour France Art Creation Realisation 2018 Osborne Carol M Museum Builders in the West The Stanfords as Collectors and Patrons of Art 1870 1906 Stanford University Museum of Art 1986 p 18 Morton Mary G Gerome in the Gilded Age in The Spectacular Art of Jean Leon Gerome 1824 1904 Getty Museum and Musee d Orsay 2010 pp 183 210 Garvey Dana M 2013 Edwin Lord Weeks An American Artist in North Africa and South Asia PDF digital lib washington edu See critiques in Nochlin 1983 Toledano 1998 4 6 Lees 2012 a b Allan 2010 pp 5 6 a b Turque Bill 21 February 2013 Once reviled Orientalist art inspires Egyptian magnate to improve East West relations www washingtonpost com Weisberg Gabriel P Exhibition review of The Spectacular Art of Jean Leon Gerome 1824 1904 in Nineteenth Century Art Worldwide vol 9 no 2 Autumn 2010 Retrieved 23 December 2019 Finkel Jori 13 June 2010 Jean Leon Gerome s The Snake Charmer A Twisted History Los Angeles Times Femme circassienne voilee christies com Retrieved 1 March 2020 Jean Leon Gerome page at Sotheby s sothebys com Retrieved 9 December 2019 For a recent appreciation see Sebastian Smee A masterpiece with a complicated afterlife Washington Post 30 Dec 2020 Weeks Emily M Catalogue Note Lot 670 Jean Leon Gerome The Story of Anacreon Four Works www sothebys com Sources Edit Ackerman Gerald 1986 The life and work of Jean Leon Gerome catalogue raisonne Sotheby s Publications ISBN 0 85667 311 0 Ackerman Gerald 2000 Jean Leon Gerome Monographie revisee catalogie raisonne mis a jour ACR ISBN 2 86770 137 6 Allan Scott 2010 Introduction In Allan Scott Morton Mary eds Reconsidering Gerome Los Angeles J Paul Getty Museum ISBN 978 1 60606 038 4 Bayard Emile preface by Jean Leon Gerome Le Nu Esthetique Paris Bernard 1902 Beeny Emily 2010 Blood Spectacle Gerome in the Arena In Allan Scott Morton Mary eds Reconsidering Gerome Los Angeles J Paul Getty Museum ISBN 978 1 60606 038 4 Benezit E Dictionnaire des Peintres Sculpteurs Dessinateurs et Graveurs Librairie Grund Paris 1976 ISBN 2 7000 0156 7 in French Laurence des Cars Dominque de Font Relaux and Edouard Papet ed The Spectacular Art of Jean Leon Gerome 1824 1904 Getty Museum and Musee d Orsay 2010 Chisholm Hugh ed Gerome Jean Leon Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University 1901 Garvey Dana M Edwin Lord Weeks An American Artist in North Africa and South Asia dissertation University of Washington 2013 Gerome Jean Leon 1903 Preface to Charles Jalabert l homme l artiste d apres sa correspondance by Emile Reinaud Paris Hachette 1903 pp 5 7 Hering Fanny Field introduction by Augustus St Gaudens Gerome The Life and Works of Jean Leon Gerome New York Cassell Publishing Company 1892 Lees Sarah 2012 Jean Leon Gerome Slave Market In Nineteenth century European Paintings at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute edited by S Lees 359 363 Williamstown Mass Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute Mitchell Claudine 2010 The Damaged Mirror Gerome s Narrative Technique and the Fractures of French History In Allan Scott Morton Mary eds Reconsidering Gerome Los Angeles J Paul Getty Museum ISBN 978 1 60606 038 4 Moreau Vauthier Charles Gerome peintre et sculpteur in French Hachette 1906 Nochlin Linda 1983 The Imaginary Orient Art in America 71 5 118 31 187 91 O Sullivan N Aloysius O Kelly Art Nation Empire Field Day Publications 2010 Scott C Allan and Mary Morton ed Reconsidering Gerome Los Angeles J Paul Getty Museum 2010 in Art Bulletin 94 2012 No 2 pp 312 316 Toledano Ehud R 1998 Slavery and Abolition in the Ottoman Middle East Seattle London University of Washington Press Turner J Grove Dictionary of Art Oxford University Press USA new edition January 2 1996 ISBN 0 19 517068 7 Catalogue of the exhibition in the Musee de Vesoul August 1981 Jean Leon Gerome peintre sculpteur et graveur ses oeuvres conservees dans les collections francaises et privees Ville de Vesoul External links Edit Media related to Jean Leon Gerome at Wikimedia Commons Eight portraits of Gerome at various ages at the Bibliotheque Municipale de Besancon Musee Georges Garret de Vesoul permanent dead link The museum in Gerome s hometown displays many of his paintings and sculptures Jean Leon Gerome Biography and Legacy at www theartstory org Fin de partie A Group of Self Portraits by Jean Leon Gerome by Susan Waller La Verite est au musee press kit for the 2012 exhibit at the Musee Anne de Beaujeu in French Jean Leon Gerome Art Renewal Center Over 350 Gerome images list of students with examples of work biography and letters Artencyclopedia com page on Gerome www jeanleongerome org nearly 300 images by the artist Gerome Jean Leon New International Encyclopedia 1906 Gerome Jean Leon The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Jean Leon Gerome in American public collections on the French Sculpture Census website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Leon Gerome amp oldid 1143012478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.