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Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard Grandville

Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard was a prolific 19th century French illustrator and caricaturist who published under the pseudonym of Grandville. He has been called "the first star of French caricature's great age",[1] and Grandville's book illustrations described as featuring "elements of the symbolic, dreamlike, and incongruous, and they retain a sense of social commentary."[2] "His perverse vision sought the monster in everyone and took delight in the strangest and most pernicious transfigurement of the human shape ever produced by the Romantic imagination."[3] The anthropomorphic vegetables and zoomorphic figures that populated his cartoons anticipated and influenced the work of generations of cartoonists and illustrators from John Tenniel, to Gustave Doré, to Félicien Rops, and Walt Disney. He has also been called a "proto-surrealist"[2] and was greatly admired by André Breton and others in the movement.

Jean-Ignace-Isidore Gerard
Portrait by Émile Lassalle (1840)
Born(1803-09-13)13 September 1803
Nancy, France
Died17 March 1847(1847-03-17) (aged 43)
Vanves, Paris, France
Resting placeCimetière Nord de Saint-Mandé, Paris
Known forIllustrator, caricaturist, artist, printmaker
Notable workLa Fontaine's Fables, Un Autre Monde, Les Fleurs Animées
Other namesGrandville, Granville

Grandville was born in 1803, in Nancy, France into a family of artist and actors and received his earliest instruction in drawing from his father. He moved to Paris about 1823-1825 and began designing illustrations. His reputation was established in 1829 when he published a set of 70 lithographs titled Les Métamorphoses du jour. During the July Revolution of 1830 and the turbulent years that followed, he worked with Honoré Daumier and others producing provocative political cartoons for periodicals that were highly critical of the new monarchy of Louis Philippe I. After strict censorship laws were passed and threats from the police in 1835, Grandville turned to book illustration. He illustrated several classics such as La Fontaine's Fables, Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, Swift's Gulliver's Travels, and Cervantes's Don Quixote. In later years his books where increasingly centered around his illustrations, with the text written for his images e.g. Un autre monde (1844), Cent proverbes: têxte par trois Tetes dans un bonnet (1845), and Les fleurs animées (1846). Grandville typically made drawings for publishers that were later copied into lithographs and woodcuts by others, and only occasionally did he make his own prints.

He married his cousin Marguerite Henriette Fischer in 1833 and they had three sons, but tragically Marguerite and all three sons died on separate occasions before him. He remarried in 1843 to Catherine Marceline “Céline” Lhuillier and they had one son, Armand in 1845. Traditional accounts say that he went mad and died in an insane asylum, however recent authors say that although the hospital where he died in Paris, Maison de Santé in Vanves, did treat the mentally ill among other illnesses, he was not "mad" and likely died of a throat infection, possibly diphtheria.

Life edit

Early life: 1803 – 1830 edit

 
Grandville, Self-portrait (ca. 1820–22), pen-and-ink

Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard, "Grandville", was born on September 15, 1803, in Nancy, Meurthe-et-Moselle, in northeastern France. His parents called him Adolphe, a name that originated from an older brother who had died three months before Grandville was born, and a name that followed him through the rest of his life. His father, Jean-Baptiste Gérard, was a noted painter of miniatures. He inherited his father's talent and exhibited an aptitude for drawing at an early age. He received his earliest education in art from his father and several authors have noted his father's influence on his draftsmanship and dense compositions, even in his mature work. Another painter of miniatures and lithographer, Léon-André Larue, called Mansion, was a relative who encouraged Grandville to go to Paris and learn lithography. Lithography had only recently been invented in Germany in the 1790s and was rapidly gaining popularity in Paris as a fast and cheep alternative to engraving and etching, for mass-producing prints and illustrated publications. In a period of social and political turmoil, inexpensive illustrated newspapers were coming into vogue, and opportunities for draftsmen and illustrators were also on the rise among the publishers and lithography studios in Paris at that time. Grandville was drawn to and influenced by the satirical prints, caricatures, and illustrations (often political) that were growing in popularity in France. Sources differ on the exact year and age, but after completing school, ca. 1923[4]-1825,[5] Grandville moved to Paris and began pursuing a career in illustration and lithography. One account states his first lithograph titled La Marchande de cerises (The Cherry Seller), was published in Nancy 1824 or 1825.[5][6][7]

Grandville's parents had friends and family in Paris working in the theater who provided work and connections early on, including a relative, Frédéric Lemétheyer, who was a stage manager in the Opéra-Comique. He began using his pseudonym, "Grandville" in Paris. It was derived from “Gérard de Grandville”, his paternal grandparents stage name when they were actors and worked in the court of Lorraine. The pseudonym Grandville appeared in several variations throughout his career, including Jean Ignace Isidore Grandville, Jean-Jacques Granville, Jean de Granville, J. J. Grandville, J. I. I. Grandville, and Grandville. He designed illustrations for decks of playing cards and worked with Hippolyte Lecomte, a painter and ballet set designer in Paris, for whom he produced a set of color lithographs Costumes De Théãter in 1826. That set was followed by additional series including 12 lithographs created for the printer Langlumé titled Les Dimanches d’un bourgeois de Paris ou Les tribulations de la petite propriété (Sundays of a Paris Bourgeois or The Tribulations of Small Property), in 1826. Subsequent collections included 53 prints in La Sibylle des salons (The Sibyl of the Salons) in 1827 and 12 prints in Titres pour morceaux de musique (Titles for Musical Pieces) in 1828.[5][6][7]

 
Voyage pour L'éternite, No. 6: Would you like to go up to my place, my little sir, You will not be disappointed! (1830), hand-colored lithograph, alluding to syphilis.

Grandville lived a bohemian life in the late 1820s and early 1830s, renting in a small room on the upper floor of a building which is said to have been crowded with pens and papers where he drew incessantly. It became a gathering place for artist, writers, singers, lithographers and others. The painter Paul Delaroche was a neighbor during this period. Alexandre Dumas was among the milieu and later wrote of the time, "If we had money, we had beer. If not, we were happy just to smoke, joke and argue." Grandville was described as a thin, somewhat quite, and at times melancholy man, although Dumas noted he also had a sharp wit and a competitive side to him. It was in this period that he met the charismatic 28 year old Charles Philipon, an editor and lithographer with the newspaper La Silhouette.[1]

Grandville's first real success was Les Métamorphoses du jour (The Metamorphoses of the Day), a set of 70 color lithographs published in 1829. In this series, figures with human bodies but the heads of various animals, from fish to elephants, are depicted acting out a human comedy, perceptively satirizing the bourgeois of Paris and human nature in general. It established his reputation with the public and he was thereafter sought after as an illustrator by publishers and periodicals.[6][7] In 1830 he published Voyage pour l'éternité (Voyage to Eternity), a series of nine lithographs in which death, in the form of a variously dressed skeleton, pays visits to a variety of Parisians, and is finally seen triumphantly leading a parade of young soldiers to their fate. Printing was stopped after only few copies were made due to the dark theme, which was possibly inspired by Thomas Rowlandson's Dance of Death. However, it did succeed in gaining him more notoriety and the admiration of a few such as Champfleury and Honoré de Balzac.[5]

Les Métamorphoses du jour (1829), color lithographs

The French Revolution of 1830: 1830 – 1835 edit

 
Balzac and the Characters of the Human Comedy. Pen drawing for a fan project (Maison de Balzac, Paris).

In the French Revolution of 1830, the "Three Glorious Days" (July 27–29) saw the liberal, republican, working class of Paris fighting in the streets to bring down the Bourbon monarch Charles X, who was replaced by his more liberally minded cousin Louis Philippe I. These same republican workers were rapidly marginalized as the bourgeoisie appropriated the social, economic, and political gains of the revolution to their own ends. Alexandre Dumas is known to have fought with the workers and it is possible that Grandville and others in his circle participated in the fighting as well. Several satirical republican periodicals begin to emerge in Paris at this time, including La Silhouette, Tribune, La Caricature, L'Artiste, Le Charivari, Corsaire, Réformateur, Bon Sens, Populaire, and others. These papers were often political, provocative, and pressed the issue that the workers had been pivotal in bringing Louis Philippe to power, but were now dismissed by the new monarchy. [8]

The success of Grandville's previous lithographic series led to invitations to design cartoons for these papers. The first of these was the satirical paper La Silhouette where his friend Charles Philipon was working as an editor. Grandville's lithograph Let's Put Out the Light and Rekindle the Fire! ("the light" of the Enlightenment and "the fire" of book-burning), criticizing censorship of the press, was published in June 1830 and quickly proscribed by the government.[9] La Silhouette had a short run (Dec. 1829 – Jan. 1831), folding after the administration's fines and pressure.[8] It was only one in a succession of papers of similar content, many of which buckled under government pressure, and in some cases the same editors, writers, and illustrators moved from one paper to the next.[1]

 
Oh!! These nasty flies!! (c. 1835): Grandville produced this picture of himself in response to threats from the police regarding his cartoons.

Before La Silhouette closed, Charles Philipon and Auguste Audibert founded La Caricature in 1830, with Honoré de Balzac as a literary editor and Grandville, Achille Devéria, Honoré Daumier, Edme Jean Pigal, Auguste Raffet, and Charles-Joseph Traviès de Villers as cartoonist and lithographers.[8] As one author put it "From 1830 to 1835 Philipon and La Caricature waged all-out war against Louis-Philippe."[1] As part of this "war" Grandville designed numerous prints, including multi-part lithographs published over a period of weeks that collectors could piece together into one, e.g. the seven part Grande Croisade contre la Liberté (The Great Crusade Against Liberty) and La Chasse à la Liberté (The Hunters in Pursuit of Liberty). These attacks on monarchy were taken seriously and were not without consequences. Louis Philippe's regime seized papers, levied fines, and sent editors, writes, and illustrators to prison. Daumier was fined 500 francs and spent six months in prison in 1832. Charles Philipon received even greater fines and longer prison terms as did other publishers. Grandville endured persistent harassment from the police, including searches, and one incident described as a mugging in his own building by thuggish policemen, foiled by a neighbor who confronted them with pistols. He is said to have been deeply distressed by these events. Grandville filed criminal charges asserting the police had entered his residence by force, and he later published a lithograph Oh!! Les vilaines mouches!! Philipon organized L'Association Mensuelle lithographique which offered fine prints to its members in the early 1830s. Grandville produced over half the prints, with the profits going to pay the paper's fines.[1][5]

 
New-Year's Gifts for the People (1833), pen and ink

As La Caricature was collapsing, Philipon launched yet another review, Le Charivari in 1832, in which political attacks were more subtle, oblique, and veiled and the cartoons often addressed broader, less political, social satire.[5] Grandville, Philipon, and Daumier, achieved a level of celebrity status among factions of the public, as much for their defiant opposition as their cartoons. His political cartoons enjoyed great popularity with the public and were held in high regard by many.[7] Publishers and editors such as Edouard Charton of Le magasin pittoresque, as gave Grandville the freedom to choose his own subjects and create his images.[9]

The business of caricaturing was financially tenuous. The papers typically paid cartoonist by the print and artist considered themselves lucky to receive a contract for drawing on a regular basis. Grandville had made his earlier lithographs himself, but after he started producing cartoons for the periodicals about 1831, and his later book illustrations, he typically turned his original drawings over to publishers who had lithographers and woodcut engravers copy his images for printing. Color was added in colorist studios, almost always women, who applied watercolor or gouache by hand, following notes supplied by the artists.[1][9]

The "Fieschi attentat", an unsuccessful assassination attempt on King Louis Philippe occurred on July 28, 1835, the fifth anniversary of the July Revolution. The September Laws soon followed, with censorship of the press and significantly longer prison sentences for publishing criticisms of the king and his administration. Caricatures required approval from the government before they were published and the press was forbidden to report on trials involving the press.[1][10]

Political lithographs (1830-1835)

Later Career: 1836 – 1847 edit

 
Water lily (1846), from Les fleurs animées (Animated Flowers or Flowers Personified)

At the outbreak of the July Revolution of 1830, Grandville was a 26 year old bachelor living a bohemian life. By the time the September Laws were passed in 1835, he was a 31 year old husband, and a father. He quit producing political cartoons after the September Laws and turned to illustrating books. It has been postulated that he was relieved and even happy to leave the politics and police harassment behind at this point in his life. In July 1833 he married a cousin from Nancy, Marguerite Henriette Fischer and the couple maintained an apartment close to his studio, and rented a house near the outskirts of town.[1][11] In 1834 their first son Ferdinand was born. A second son, Henri, was born in fall of 1838, but tragedy soon struck the family. Marguerite's health is said to have declined with each birth and Ferdinand died of meningitis about the time Henri was born. In 1841 Henri chocked to death on a piece of bread while his parents helplessly watched. A third son, Georges, was born in July 1842 but, Marguerite died of peritonitis later that month. Grandville remarried in October 1843 to Catherine Marceline Lhuillier (1819-1888) who was the mother of his fourth son Armand, born in 1845. One source states that from her deathbed, his first wife Marguerite, had a hand in selecting Catherine as a second wife and stepmother for her husband and son.[1][5][6]

The first major undertaking in book illustration that Grandville undertook was a volume of song lyrics by the popular French songwriter Pierre-Jean de Béranger, first published with 38 wood engravings in 1835, and an expanded edition with 100 engravings in 1837.[5] This was followed by several volumes of classic literature, including as La Fontaine's Fables, Defoe's Robinson Crusoe, Swift's Gulliver's Travels, Boccaccio's The Decameron, and Cervantes's Don Quixote. While his illustrations for classic prose include some fine, if conventional illustrations, they did not provide him with the opportunity to give free range to his imagination.[9] He had a greater affinity for children's literature, that shows in his illustration for La Fontaine Fables, and later the Fables of Lavalette and Florian, collectively ranking among his finest work. He made a series of drawings for Perrault's Little Red Riding Hood but these were not published.[11] Grandville adapted and refined his style in switching from cartoons to book illustrations, which coincided with the evolving printing technology and a shift from lithography to wood engraving. Previously, illustrations were typically printed on separate pages that were inserted into the text. With end-cut wood engravings, fine detail could be achieved on the hard end grain of wooden blocks, that could then be placed with the typographical blocks and printed on the same page with the text, lowering cost, and increasing the speed and quality of illustrated texts.[1][8]

Book illustrations (after 1836) wood engravings

By the early 1840s, Grandville was increasingly illustrating books that were centered around his images. Working in collaboration with publishers and contemporary Parisian writers, he was at times given free regain of his imagination and the images. He produced about one book a year, his name often appearing before the authors on the title page, in which his illustrations were equally as important as the text, if not the main focus of the book.[8] Not surprisingly some of his finest work and that for which he is best remembered today appeared in this period. Most of the authors he worked with had some past connections or background with the radical press of the early 1830s. The first was Scènes de la vie privée et publique des animaux (Scenes of the Private and Public Life of Animals), a satirical compilation of articles and short stories, first published in serial form over a couple of years, then in a two volume set in 1842, with 320 wood engravings by Grandville. Multiple authors contributed to the books including Honoré de Balzac, Louis-François L'Héritier, Alfred de Musset, Paul de Musset, Charles Nodier, and Louis Viardot.[1]

 
A posthumous portrait of Grandville by Pierre-Gustave Staal (ca. 1850), engraving, 28.4 x 19 cm.

This was followed by Petites misères de la vie humaine (Little Miseries of Human Life) in 1843, with text by Paul-Émile Daurand-Forgues, a contributor to Le Charivari who sometimes published under the pseudonym "Old Nick". Old Nick also coauthored Cent proverbes: têxte par trois Tetes dans un bonnet (One Hundred Proverbs: Text by Three Heads in a Bonnet) with Taxile Delord and Louis Amédée Achard in 1845. Taxile Delord provided the text for Un autre monde (Another World) in 1844, regarded by many as Grandville's masterpiece and ironically the least successful volume in his lifetime.[9] Delord, a writer and critic who was editor-in-chief of Le Charivari and later entered French politics, also wrote Les fleurs animées (Animated Flowers or Flowers Personified), completed in 1846 and published posthumously.[6] Jérôme Paturot à la recherche d’une position sociale (Jérôme Paturot in Search of a Social Position), a social satire by Marie Roch Louis Reybaud published in 1846 and a great success, was the last book completed and published in his lifetime.[1][5]

A romanticized myth emerged around Grandville's death that persisted for 150 years or more. Traditional accounts asserted Grandville's bizarre imagery was symptomatic of a disturbed mind, and the death of his family left him gray-haired and hunchbacked by the time he was forty, ultimately sending him over the edge into madness, and he died in an insane asylum.[3][6] However, recent scholarship does not support this tale. In the days and weeks before his death Grandville was still producing some of his finest drawings, such as Crime and Expiation, and his correspondence with publishers reflect a clear and rational mind anticipating future projects.[1] By all accounts the sudden illness and death of his third son George affected him deeply, some saying this occurred "around late 1846 or early 1847",[5] others place it only three days before his own death.[6] On March 1, 1847, Grandville begin suffering from a sore throat and his condition progressively deteriorated over the following weeks. It has been speculated he had diphtheria. He was eventually taken to a private clinic, 8 Maison de Santé in Vanves, where Felix Voisin and Jean-Pierre Falret, two innovative psychiatrists worked. He died there on March 17, 1847 and was buried in the Cimetière Nord of Saint-Mandé of Paris next to his first wife and three sons. The artist wrote his own epitaph, translations vary: "Here lies Grandville; he loved everything, made everything live, speak, and walk, but he could not make a way for himself."[5] or "Here lies J. J. Grandville. He could bring anything to life and, like God, he made it live, talk and walk. Only one thing eluded him: how to live a life of his own."[1][7]

Later work (1840s), wood engravings

Art edit

 
Preliminary drawing for Combat of Two Refined: for Another World (1843), watercolor, graphite, pen & ink)

Though the designs of Grandville are occasionally unnatural and absurd, they usually display keen analysis of character and marvellous inventive ingenuity, and his humour is always tempered and refined by delicacy of sentiment and a vein of sober thoughtfulness.

Grandville's ability for political provocation made his work much in demand. He worked in a wide variety of formats, from his first job illustrating the parlor game Old Maid, to illustrated newspaper strips of which he was a master. His illustrations for Le Diable à Paris ("The Devil In Paris"; 1844–46) were used by Walter Benjamin for his study of that city as an urban organism. One of Grandville's supreme achievements, at a time when French printing technology was ascendant, was Les Fleurs Animées, a series of images that are both poetic and satirical.

Perhaps his most original contribution to the illustrated book form was Un Autre Monde,[12] which approaches the status of pure surrealism, despite being conceived in a pre-Freudian age. The full title of the book is, Un autre monde: Transformations, visions, incarnations, ascensions, locomotions, explorations, pérégrinations, excursions, stations, cosmogonies, fantasmagories, rêveries, folâtreries, facéties, lubies, métamorphoses, zoomorphoses, lithomorphoses, métempsycoses, apothéoses et autres choses (Another world: Transformations, visions, incarnations, ascents, locomotions, explorations, peregrinations, excursions, stations, cosmogonies, phantasmagoria, reveries, frolics, pranks, fads, metamorphoses, zoomorphoses, lithomorphoses, metempsychoses, apotheoses and other things).

Original drawings

Legacy edit

 
The Relics (c. 1835), pen and ink with gouache 11.8 x 9.4 cm., Cleveland Museum of Art

Alexandre Dumas wrote in his memoirs: "Grandville had a delicate and sarcastic smile, eyes that sparkled with intelligence, a satirical mouth, short figure, large heart and a delightful tincture of melancholy perceptible everywhere — that is your portrait, dear Grandville!”[6] Interest in Grandville's art remained relatively high for a few of decades after his death. His final works were published posthumously and several of his books were reissued in later editions and translated into other languages. Rue Grandville (48.83919°N, 2.42015°E), in the Saint-Mandé commune of Paris, is named in his honor. A monument with a bust of Grandville by Ernest Bussière was erected in the Parc de la Pépinière in Nancy, France in 1893.

Théophile Gautier's Portraits contemporains includes a short chapter on Grandville.[7] Over 25 years after Grandville's death, Gautier wrote that Grandville still enjoyed "a popular reputation and whose drawings, caricatures, and illustrations are known to everyone". Although Gautier judged Grandville less a colorist than Daumier and less a poet than Tony Johannot, he stated "His original pen-and-ink drawings are exquisite in finesse, liveliness, and well rendered, and will gain in value year after year. We can ape Grandville, but will not equal it again."[13]

Honoré de Balzac expressed ambivalent views of Grandville. He was an enthusiastic supporter and collector of Grandville's early print series, and the two worked together at La Caricature in the early 1830s, where Balzac worked as an editor, and caricatures were an integral part of the newspaper. However in the 1840s, when publishers begin including illustrations in books, Balzac became more critical. He believed illustrations competed with the written word, distorted and diluted the text, and were undermining the market for novels, perhaps with some justification. Balzac contributed chapters to Grandville's Scènes de la vie privée et publique des animaux (1842) which was one of the bestsellers of the 1840s, selling 25,000 copies, while Balzac's first edition novels of the period were only selling 1,200 - 3,000 copies.[1][5][14]

Charles Baudelaire, friend and champion of Honoré Daumier, was not a fan of Grandville. It seems odd that the author of Les Fleurs du mal (The Flowers of Evil), with poems such as Spleen, and the great admirer and translator of Edgar Allan Poe, felt frightened by the images of Grandville. Today his criticisms read like an underhanded complement.[10][9]

There are superficial people whom Grandville amuses, but as for me, he frightens me. When I enter into Grandville's work, I feel a certain discomfort, like in an apartment where disorder is systematically organized, where bizarre cornices rest on the floor, where paintings seem distorted by an optic lens, where objects are deformed by being shoved together at odd angles, where furniture has its feet in the air, and where drawers push in instead of pulling out. Charles Baudelaire (1857)[15]

His style and humour had a marked influence on John Tenniel and various other Punch-cartoonists.[8]

 
Crime and Expiation (1847), wood engraving. The original drawing was made 12 days before he died.

The art historian H. W. Janson noted Grandville's imagery anticipated various aspects of dada, surrealism, and pop art. Janson speculated if Marcel Duchamp's Tu m' (1918) could have been inspired by Grandville's View of the Paris Salon, from Un autre monde, both of which involve subjects from the two dimensional surface of a painting emerging from the canvas into the real three dimensional space of the viewer. Janson asserted that Grandville's illustration The Finger of God, also from Un autre monde, must have been familiar to pop artists producing large scale sculptures such as César Baldaccini's Le pouce (The Thumb) in 1966.[16] Grandville's affinity with surrealism has been recognized since the 1930s. His work was included in the Museum of Modern Art's landmark exhibition Fantastic Art, Dada, and Sureealism in 1936.[17] However, the art historian William Rubin pointed out the absence of any reference or recognition of Grandville by André Breton in his two manifestos of surrealism, or the other surrealists in the formative years of the movement in the 1920s.[18] After a period of relative obscurity in the early 20th century, Grandville's work became widely reproduced in the 1930s.[16] Renewed interest in his work coincided with the rise of surrealism as a mainstream movement. It was apparently only in hindsight that André Breton, Georges Bataille, Max Ernst and others came to recognize Grandville as a significant precursor to the movement (but not an influence).[18] Max Ernst was particularly enthusiastic about Grandville's work and included him in a montage of 40 names, titled Max Ernst's favorite poets and painters, originally published in View, 1941, alongside Bosch, Vinci, Shakespeare, Blake, Poe, Van Gogh, Chirico, and others.[19] Ernst later made the frontispiece for a 1963 facsimile edition of Un autre monde with a caption reading “A new world is born. All praise to Grandville.”[9]

British rock band Queen used part of his artwork for their 1991 album Innuendo and alternate pieces for most of the subsequent single releases: the album's title track, "I'm Going Slightly Mad", "These Are the Days of Our Lives" and "The Show Must Go On". The single "I'm Going Slightly Mad" also featured one of Grandville's characters on the back of the sleeve and as the basis for a picture disc release.

American grunge band Alice in Chains used part of Grandville's artwork for their self-titled 1995 album.

The graphic novel Grandville by Bryan Talbot was greatly inspired by Grandville's illustrations.

Grandville's art is used extensively in the video game Aviary Attorney,[20] which is set during a fictionalized version of the French Revolution of 1848.

Gallery edit

La Fontaine 's Fables (1838-1840) wood engravings

Un autre monde (1843-44), preliminary drawings: graphite, pen & ink, some with watercolor

Un autre monde (1844), wood engravings

Jérôme Paturot à la recherche d'une position sociale (1846), wood engravings

Selected works edit

  • Les Métamorphoses du jour (Metamorphoses of the Day), 73 lithographs, Aubert, Paris, 1829
  • Voyage pour l’éternité (Voyage to Eternity), 9 lithographs, Aubert, Paris, 1830
  • La Silhouette (The Silhouette), 9 lithographs, periodical illustrations, 1829-1831
  • La Caricature (The Caricature), 120 lithographs, periodical illustrations, 1830-1835
  • Le Charivari (Le Charivari), 106 lithographs, periodical illustrations, 1832-1835
  • L'Association Mensuelle lithographique (The Association of Monthly Lithographs), 16 lithographs, 1 etching, 1 engraving, periodical illustrations, 1832-1834
  • Le Magasin pittoresque (The Picturesque Store), 67 woodcuts, periodical illustrations, 1833-1857
  • 24 breuvages de l’homme (24 Beverages of Man), 8 lithographs, Bulla, Paris, 1835
  • Oeuvres complétes de P. de Beranger (Complete works of P. de Béranger), 38 wood engravings, Fournier et Perrotin, Paris, 1835 (100 wood engravings in 1837 edition)
  • Fables de La Fontaine (La Fontaine 's Fables), 258 wood engravings, Fournier et Perrotin, Paris, 1838-1840
  • Voyages de Gulliver (Gulliver's Travels), by Jonathan Swift, 346 wood engravings, Fournier et Furne, Paris, 1838
  • Les Aventures de Robinson Crusoe (The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe), by Daniel Defoe, 206 wood engravings, Fournier, Paris, 1840
  • Les Français peints par eux-mêmes (The French Painted by Themselves), periodical illustrations, 18 wood engravings, 1840
  • Fables de Lavalette (Fables of Lavalette), 21 etchings, Paulin et Hetzel, Paris, 1841 (33 etchings in 1847 ed.)
  • Fables de Florian (Fables of Florian), 95 wood engravings, Dubochet, Paris, 1842
  • Scènes de la vie privée et publique des animaux (Scenes of the Private and Public Life of Animals), 320 wood engravings, Hetzel et Paulin, Paris, 1842
  • Petites misères de la vie humaine (Little Miseries of Human Life), by Old Nick & Grandville, 222 wood engravings, Fournier, Paris, 1843
  • L’Illustration (The Illustration), 17 wood engravings, periodical illustrations, 1843-1845
  • Un autre monde (Another World), text by Taxile Delord, 185 wood engravings, Fournier, Paris, 1844.
  • Cent proverbes: par trois Tetes dans un bonnet (One Hundred Proverbs: by Three Heads in a Bonnet), by Old Nick, Taxile Delord, & Amédée Achard, 105 wood engravings, Fournier, Paris, 1845
  • Jérôme Paturot à la recherche d’une position sociale (Jérôme Paturot in Search of a Social Position), by Louis Reybaud, 186 wood engravings, Dubochet, Paris, 1846
  • Les fleurs animées (Animated Flowers or Flowers Personified), text by Taxile Delord, 2 wood engravings, 50 engravings, Gabriel de Gonet, Paris 1846
  • L’Ingénieux hidalgo Don Quichotte de La Mancha (The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha), by Cervantes, 18 wood engravings, 8 engravings, Ad Mame et Cie, Tours,1848

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Rose, Cynthia. 2020. J. J. Grandvill: A Matter of Line and Death. The Comics Journal. (accessed 6 July 2022)
  2. ^ a b Hansen, Kelli. 2014. Weird and Wonderful Images from Artist J.J. Grandville. University of Missouri Library, Special Collections. (accessed 6 July 2022)
  3. ^ a b Claudon, Francis. 1980. The Concise Encyclopedia of Romanticism. Chartwell Books, Inc. Secaucus, N. J.304 pp. (pages 87-88) ISBN 0-89009-707-0
  4. ^ Passeron, René. 1975. The Concise Encyclopedia of Surrealism. Chartwell Books, Inc. Secaucus, N. J.288 pp. (page 99) ISBN 0-89009-664-3
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Melot, Michel. 2007. Grandvelli, J. J. encyclopedia.com. (accessed July 2, 2022)
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Manty, Kris. 2020. The Wonderfully Odd World of French Artist J. J. Grandville. antiquetrader.com (accessed July 2, 2022)
  7. ^ a b c d e f "Gérard, Jean Ignace Isidore" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). 1911. p. 765.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Melot, Michel. 1984. The Art of Illustration. Edition d'Art Albert Skira/Rizzoli International Publishing. New York, N. Y. 269 pp. (pages 148–158) ISBN 0-8478-0558-1
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Mainardi, Patricia 2018. Grandville, Visions, and Dreams. The Public Domain Review (accessed 2022)
  10. ^ a b Rey, Robert. 1965. Daumier, The Library of Great Painters. Harry N. Abrams, Inc., New York, 160 pp. [pages 18–19, 28, & 40]
  11. ^ a b Paulson, Noelle C. 2011. Book Review: Clive F. Getty. The Diary of J. J. Grandville and the Missouri Album: The Life of an Opposition Caricaturist and Romantic Book Illustrator in Paris under the July Monarchy. Madison, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2010 ISBN 9780838642009. College Art Association.
  12. ^ J.J. Grandville (1844). Un autre monde. H. Fournier, Paris.
  13. ^ Gautier, Théophile. 1874. Portraits Contemporains. Charpentier et cie. Paris. 464 pp. (pages 231-233).
  14. ^ Berg, Keri Ann. 2003. Fighting for the page: Balzac, Grandville and the power of images, 1830–1848. Texas Scholar Works, University of Texas at Austin. (accessed July 28, 2022).
  15. ^ Baudelaire, Charles. 1857. Écrits sur l’art, Quelque caricaturistes françaises. Présent, October 1. (Yves Florence editor. 1971. Paris Gallimard. Vol. I, page 349.)
  16. ^ a b Janson, H. W. 1977. History of Art: A Survey of the Major Visual Arts from the Dawn of History to the Present Day. 2nd. edition. Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers. New York. 767 pp. [pages 662 & 687] ISBN 0-8109-1052-7
  17. ^ Barr, Alfred H. Jr. 1936. Fantastic Art, Dada and Surrealism. The Museum of Modern Art. New York. 248 pp. (page 209-210)
  18. ^ a b Rubin, William S. 1968. Dada and Surrealist Art. Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers. New York. 525 pp. [page 122]
  19. ^ Hofmann, Werner, Wieland Schmied, Werner Spies. 1973. Max Ernst: Inside the Sight. Institute for the Arts, Rice University. Houston, Texas. 159 pp. [page 9] ISBN 978-0-914412-06-9
  20. ^ "Aviary Attorney review". Eurogamer. 21 January 2016.
  • Appelbaum, Stanley (1987) [1974]. Bizarreries & fantasies of Grandville. Dover (reprint). ISBN 0-486-22991-2. 266 illustrations from Un autre mode and Les animaux.

External links edit

  • "J. J. Grandville". gutenberg.org. (free, available files : html, epub, kindle, text.)
  • Works by or about Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard Grandville at Internet Archive
  • J. J. Grandville at Library of Congress, with 96 library catalogue records
  • Mainardi, Patricia. "Grandville, Visions, and Dreams". Public Domain Review. Retrieved 28 September 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Michele Hannoosh. 1994. The allegorical artist and the cries of history: Benjamin, Grandville, Baudelaire. Word & Image. 10(1); 38-54.
  • Getty, Clive F. 2010. The Diary of J. J. Grandville and the Missouri Album: The Life of an Opposition Caricaturist and Romantic Book Illustrator in Paris under the July Monarchy. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. Madison, New Jersey. 354 pp. ISBN 9780838642009


jean, ignace, isidore, gérard, grandville, jean, ignace, isidore, gerard, prolific, 19th, century, french, illustrator, caricaturist, published, under, pseudonym, grandville, been, called, first, star, french, caricature, great, grandville, book, illustrations. Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard was a prolific 19th century French illustrator and caricaturist who published under the pseudonym of Grandville He has been called the first star of French caricature s great age 1 and Grandville s book illustrations described as featuring elements of the symbolic dreamlike and incongruous and they retain a sense of social commentary 2 His perverse vision sought the monster in everyone and took delight in the strangest and most pernicious transfigurement of the human shape ever produced by the Romantic imagination 3 The anthropomorphic vegetables and zoomorphic figures that populated his cartoons anticipated and influenced the work of generations of cartoonists and illustrators from John Tenniel to Gustave Dore to Felicien Rops and Walt Disney He has also been called a proto surrealist 2 and was greatly admired by Andre Breton and others in the movement Jean Ignace Isidore GerardPortrait by Emile Lassalle 1840 Born 1803 09 13 13 September 1803Nancy FranceDied17 March 1847 1847 03 17 aged 43 Vanves Paris FranceResting placeCimetiere Nord de Saint Mande ParisKnown forIllustrator caricaturist artist printmakerNotable workLa Fontaine s Fables Un Autre Monde Les Fleurs AnimeesOther namesGrandville GranvilleGrandville was born in 1803 in Nancy France into a family of artist and actors and received his earliest instruction in drawing from his father He moved to Paris about 1823 1825 and began designing illustrations His reputation was established in 1829 when he published a set of 70 lithographs titled Les Metamorphoses du jour During the July Revolution of 1830 and the turbulent years that followed he worked with Honore Daumier and others producing provocative political cartoons for periodicals that were highly critical of the new monarchy of Louis Philippe I After strict censorship laws were passed and threats from the police in 1835 Grandville turned to book illustration He illustrated several classics such as La Fontaine s Fables Defoe s Robinson Crusoe Swift s Gulliver s Travels and Cervantes s Don Quixote In later years his books where increasingly centered around his illustrations with the text written for his images e g Un autre monde 1844 Cent proverbes texte par trois Tetes dans un bonnet 1845 and Les fleurs animees 1846 Grandville typically made drawings for publishers that were later copied into lithographs and woodcuts by others and only occasionally did he make his own prints He married his cousin Marguerite Henriette Fischer in 1833 and they had three sons but tragically Marguerite and all three sons died on separate occasions before him He remarried in 1843 to Catherine Marceline Celine Lhuillier and they had one son Armand in 1845 Traditional accounts say that he went mad and died in an insane asylum however recent authors say that although the hospital where he died in Paris Maison de Sante in Vanves did treat the mentally ill among other illnesses he was not mad and likely died of a throat infection possibly diphtheria Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early life 1803 1830 1 2 The French Revolution of 1830 1830 1835 1 3 Later Career 1836 1847 2 Art 3 Legacy 4 Gallery 5 Selected works 6 References 7 External links 8 Further readingLife editEarly life 1803 1830 edit nbsp Grandville Self portrait ca 1820 22 pen and inkJean Ignace Isidore Gerard Grandville was born on September 15 1803 in Nancy Meurthe et Moselle in northeastern France His parents called him Adolphe a name that originated from an older brother who had died three months before Grandville was born and a name that followed him through the rest of his life His father Jean Baptiste Gerard was a noted painter of miniatures He inherited his father s talent and exhibited an aptitude for drawing at an early age He received his earliest education in art from his father and several authors have noted his father s influence on his draftsmanship and dense compositions even in his mature work Another painter of miniatures and lithographer Leon Andre Larue called Mansion was a relative who encouraged Grandville to go to Paris and learn lithography Lithography had only recently been invented in Germany in the 1790s and was rapidly gaining popularity in Paris as a fast and cheep alternative to engraving and etching for mass producing prints and illustrated publications In a period of social and political turmoil inexpensive illustrated newspapers were coming into vogue and opportunities for draftsmen and illustrators were also on the rise among the publishers and lithography studios in Paris at that time Grandville was drawn to and influenced by the satirical prints caricatures and illustrations often political that were growing in popularity in France Sources differ on the exact year and age but after completing school ca 1923 4 1825 5 Grandville moved to Paris and began pursuing a career in illustration and lithography One account states his first lithograph titled La Marchande de cerises The Cherry Seller was published in Nancy 1824 or 1825 5 6 7 Grandville s parents had friends and family in Paris working in the theater who provided work and connections early on including a relative Frederic Lemetheyer who was a stage manager in the Opera Comique He began using his pseudonym Grandville in Paris It was derived from Gerard de Grandville his paternal grandparents stage name when they were actors and worked in the court of Lorraine The pseudonym Grandville appeared in several variations throughout his career including Jean Ignace Isidore Grandville Jean Jacques Granville Jean de Granville J J Grandville J I I Grandville and Grandville He designed illustrations for decks of playing cards and worked with Hippolyte Lecomte a painter and ballet set designer in Paris for whom he produced a set of color lithographs Costumes De Theater in 1826 That set was followed by additional series including 12 lithographs created for the printer Langlume titled Les Dimanches d un bourgeois de Paris ou Les tribulations de la petite propriete Sundays of a Paris Bourgeois or The Tribulations of Small Property in 1826 Subsequent collections included 53 prints in La Sibylle des salons The Sibyl of the Salons in 1827 and 12 prints in Titres pour morceaux de musique Titles for Musical Pieces in 1828 5 6 7 nbsp Voyage pour L eternite No 6 Would you like to go up to my place my little sir You will not be disappointed 1830 hand colored lithograph alluding to syphilis Grandville lived a bohemian life in the late 1820s and early 1830s renting in a small room on the upper floor of a building which is said to have been crowded with pens and papers where he drew incessantly It became a gathering place for artist writers singers lithographers and others The painter Paul Delaroche was a neighbor during this period Alexandre Dumas was among the milieu and later wrote of the time If we had money we had beer If not we were happy just to smoke joke and argue Grandville was described as a thin somewhat quite and at times melancholy man although Dumas noted he also had a sharp wit and a competitive side to him It was in this period that he met the charismatic 28 year old Charles Philipon an editor and lithographer with the newspaper La Silhouette 1 Grandville s first real success was Les Metamorphoses du jour The Metamorphoses of the Day a set of 70 color lithographs published in 1829 In this series figures with human bodies but the heads of various animals from fish to elephants are depicted acting out a human comedy perceptively satirizing the bourgeois of Paris and human nature in general It established his reputation with the public and he was thereafter sought after as an illustrator by publishers and periodicals 6 7 In 1830 he published Voyage pour l eternite Voyage to Eternity a series of nine lithographs in which death in the form of a variously dressed skeleton pays visits to a variety of Parisians and is finally seen triumphantly leading a parade of young soldiers to their fate Printing was stopped after only few copies were made due to the dark theme which was possibly inspired by Thomas Rowlandson s Dance of Death However it did succeed in gaining him more notoriety and the admiration of a few such as Champfleury and Honore de Balzac 5 Les Metamorphoses du jour 1829 color lithographs nbsp No 2 Attends Attends petit matou Wait wait little cat nbsp No 23 L attente d un convive Waiting for a guest nbsp No 43 Voulez vous dejeuner avec nous la mere Pilon Would you like to have lunch with us mother Pilon nbsp No 46 Une vilaine commission An Ugly Delegation nbsp No 52 Temps de canicule A Heatwave The French Revolution of 1830 1830 1835 edit nbsp Balzac and the Characters of the Human Comedy Pen drawing for a fan project Maison de Balzac Paris In the French Revolution of 1830 the Three Glorious Days July 27 29 saw the liberal republican working class of Paris fighting in the streets to bring down the Bourbon monarch Charles X who was replaced by his more liberally minded cousin Louis Philippe I These same republican workers were rapidly marginalized as the bourgeoisie appropriated the social economic and political gains of the revolution to their own ends Alexandre Dumas is known to have fought with the workers and it is possible that Grandville and others in his circle participated in the fighting as well Several satirical republican periodicals begin to emerge in Paris at this time including La Silhouette Tribune La Caricature L Artiste Le Charivari Corsaire Reformateur Bon Sens Populaire and others These papers were often political provocative and pressed the issue that the workers had been pivotal in bringing Louis Philippe to power but were now dismissed by the new monarchy 8 The success of Grandville s previous lithographic series led to invitations to design cartoons for these papers The first of these was the satirical paper La Silhouette where his friend Charles Philipon was working as an editor Grandville s lithograph Let s Put Out the Light and Rekindle the Fire the light of the Enlightenment and the fire of book burning criticizing censorship of the press was published in June 1830 and quickly proscribed by the government 9 La Silhouette had a short run Dec 1829 Jan 1831 folding after the administration s fines and pressure 8 It was only one in a succession of papers of similar content many of which buckled under government pressure and in some cases the same editors writers and illustrators moved from one paper to the next 1 nbsp Oh These nasty flies c 1835 Grandville produced this picture of himself in response to threats from the police regarding his cartoons Before La Silhouette closed Charles Philipon and Auguste Audibert founded La Caricature in 1830 with Honore de Balzac as a literary editor and Grandville Achille Deveria Honore Daumier Edme Jean Pigal Auguste Raffet and Charles Joseph Travies de Villers as cartoonist and lithographers 8 As one author put it From 1830 to 1835 Philipon and La Caricature waged all out war against Louis Philippe 1 As part of this war Grandville designed numerous prints including multi part lithographs published over a period of weeks that collectors could piece together into one e g the seven part Grande Croisade contre la Liberte The Great Crusade Against Liberty and La Chasse a la Liberte The Hunters in Pursuit of Liberty These attacks on monarchy were taken seriously and were not without consequences Louis Philippe s regime seized papers levied fines and sent editors writes and illustrators to prison Daumier was fined 500 francs and spent six months in prison in 1832 Charles Philipon received even greater fines and longer prison terms as did other publishers Grandville endured persistent harassment from the police including searches and one incident described as a mugging in his own building by thuggish policemen foiled by a neighbor who confronted them with pistols He is said to have been deeply distressed by these events Grandville filed criminal charges asserting the police had entered his residence by force and he later published a lithograph Oh Les vilaines mouches Philipon organized L Association Mensuelle lithographique which offered fine prints to its members in the early 1830s Grandville produced over half the prints with the profits going to pay the paper s fines 1 5 nbsp New Year s Gifts for the People 1833 pen and inkAs La Caricature was collapsing Philipon launched yet another review Le Charivari in 1832 in which political attacks were more subtle oblique and veiled and the cartoons often addressed broader less political social satire 5 Grandville Philipon and Daumier achieved a level of celebrity status among factions of the public as much for their defiant opposition as their cartoons His political cartoons enjoyed great popularity with the public and were held in high regard by many 7 Publishers and editors such as Edouard Charton of Le magasin pittoresque as gave Grandville the freedom to choose his own subjects and create his images 9 The business of caricaturing was financially tenuous The papers typically paid cartoonist by the print and artist considered themselves lucky to receive a contract for drawing on a regular basis Grandville had made his earlier lithographs himself but after he started producing cartoons for the periodicals about 1831 and his later book illustrations he typically turned his original drawings over to publishers who had lithographers and woodcut engravers copy his images for printing Color was added in colorist studios almost always women who applied watercolor or gouache by hand following notes supplied by the artists 1 9 The Fieschi attentat an unsuccessful assassination attempt on King Louis Philippe occurred on July 28 1835 the fifth anniversary of the July Revolution The September Laws soon followed with censorship of the press and significantly longer prison sentences for publishing criticisms of the king and his administration Caricatures required approval from the government before they were published and the press was forbidden to report on trials involving the press 1 10 Political lithographs 1830 1835 nbsp Resurrection of Censorship 1832 La Caricature No 62 21 7 x 26 5 cm nbsp Digestion of the Budget Administrative Political Moral and above all Economic Work 1832 La Caricature No 82 16 7 x 31 cm nbsp The People Delivered to the Vampire Taxes 1833 L Association Mensuelle No 10 23 4 x 33 7 cm nbsp French Government Attack on the Freedom of the Printing Press 1833 La Caricature 35 4 x 53 3 cm nbsp Gifts to the People 1833 La Caricature No 113 23 4 x 20 4 Later Career 1836 1847 edit nbsp Water lily 1846 from Les fleurs animees Animated Flowers or Flowers Personified At the outbreak of the July Revolution of 1830 Grandville was a 26 year old bachelor living a bohemian life By the time the September Laws were passed in 1835 he was a 31 year old husband and a father He quit producing political cartoons after the September Laws and turned to illustrating books It has been postulated that he was relieved and even happy to leave the politics and police harassment behind at this point in his life In July 1833 he married a cousin from Nancy Marguerite Henriette Fischer and the couple maintained an apartment close to his studio and rented a house near the outskirts of town 1 11 In 1834 their first son Ferdinand was born A second son Henri was born in fall of 1838 but tragedy soon struck the family Marguerite s health is said to have declined with each birth and Ferdinand died of meningitis about the time Henri was born In 1841 Henri chocked to death on a piece of bread while his parents helplessly watched A third son Georges was born in July 1842 but Marguerite died of peritonitis later that month Grandville remarried in October 1843 to Catherine Marceline Lhuillier 1819 1888 who was the mother of his fourth son Armand born in 1845 One source states that from her deathbed his first wife Marguerite had a hand in selecting Catherine as a second wife and stepmother for her husband and son 1 5 6 The first major undertaking in book illustration that Grandville undertook was a volume of song lyrics by the popular French songwriter Pierre Jean de Beranger first published with 38 wood engravings in 1835 and an expanded edition with 100 engravings in 1837 5 This was followed by several volumes of classic literature including as La Fontaine s Fables Defoe s Robinson Crusoe Swift s Gulliver s Travels Boccaccio s The Decameron and Cervantes s Don Quixote While his illustrations for classic prose include some fine if conventional illustrations they did not provide him with the opportunity to give free range to his imagination 9 He had a greater affinity for children s literature that shows in his illustration for La Fontaine Fables and later the Fables of Lavalette and Florian collectively ranking among his finest work He made a series of drawings for Perrault s Little Red Riding Hood but these were not published 11 Grandville adapted and refined his style in switching from cartoons to book illustrations which coincided with the evolving printing technology and a shift from lithography to wood engraving Previously illustrations were typically printed on separate pages that were inserted into the text With end cut wood engravings fine detail could be achieved on the hard end grain of wooden blocks that could then be placed with the typographical blocks and printed on the same page with the text lowering cost and increasing the speed and quality of illustrated texts 1 8 Book illustrations after 1836 wood engravings nbsp The Good Pope Complete Works of Beranger 1836 nbsp The Good God Complete Works of Beranger 1836 nbsp Giants look at Gulliver Gulliver s Travels 1838 nbsp Gulliver pulling the fleet Gulliver s Travels 1838 nbsp My journey began Robinson Crusoe 1840 nbsp At the foot of the hill Robinson Crusoe 1840 nbsp The Carp and the Carpillons Fables de Florian 1842 nbsp The Viper and the Leech Fables de Florian 1842 nbsp Don Quixote s fight with the red wine skins 1847 By the early 1840s Grandville was increasingly illustrating books that were centered around his images Working in collaboration with publishers and contemporary Parisian writers he was at times given free regain of his imagination and the images He produced about one book a year his name often appearing before the authors on the title page in which his illustrations were equally as important as the text if not the main focus of the book 8 Not surprisingly some of his finest work and that for which he is best remembered today appeared in this period Most of the authors he worked with had some past connections or background with the radical press of the early 1830s The first was Scenes de la vie privee et publique des animaux Scenes of the Private and Public Life of Animals a satirical compilation of articles and short stories first published in serial form over a couple of years then in a two volume set in 1842 with 320 wood engravings by Grandville Multiple authors contributed to the books including Honore de Balzac Louis Francois L Heritier Alfred de Musset Paul de Musset Charles Nodier and Louis Viardot 1 nbsp A posthumous portrait of Grandville by Pierre Gustave Staal ca 1850 engraving 28 4 x 19 cm This was followed by Petites miseres de la vie humaine Little Miseries of Human Life in 1843 with text by Paul Emile Daurand Forgues a contributor to Le Charivari who sometimes published under the pseudonym Old Nick Old Nick also coauthored Cent proverbes texte par trois Tetes dans un bonnet One Hundred Proverbs Text by Three Heads in a Bonnet with Taxile Delord and Louis Amedee Achard in 1845 Taxile Delord provided the text for Un autre monde Another World in 1844 regarded by many as Grandville s masterpiece and ironically the least successful volume in his lifetime 9 Delord a writer and critic who was editor in chief of Le Charivari and later entered French politics also wrote Les fleurs animees Animated Flowers or Flowers Personified completed in 1846 and published posthumously 6 Jerome Paturot a la recherche d une position sociale Jerome Paturot in Search of a Social Position a social satire by Marie Roch Louis Reybaud published in 1846 and a great success was the last book completed and published in his lifetime 1 5 A romanticized myth emerged around Grandville s death that persisted for 150 years or more Traditional accounts asserted Grandville s bizarre imagery was symptomatic of a disturbed mind and the death of his family left him gray haired and hunchbacked by the time he was forty ultimately sending him over the edge into madness and he died in an insane asylum 3 6 However recent scholarship does not support this tale In the days and weeks before his death Grandville was still producing some of his finest drawings such as Crime and Expiation and his correspondence with publishers reflect a clear and rational mind anticipating future projects 1 By all accounts the sudden illness and death of his third son George affected him deeply some saying this occurred around late 1846 or early 1847 5 others place it only three days before his own death 6 On March 1 1847 Grandville begin suffering from a sore throat and his condition progressively deteriorated over the following weeks It has been speculated he had diphtheria He was eventually taken to a private clinic 8 Maison de Sante in Vanves where Felix Voisin and Jean Pierre Falret two innovative psychiatrists worked He died there on March 17 1847 and was buried in the Cimetiere Nord of Saint Mande of Paris next to his first wife and three sons The artist wrote his own epitaph translations vary Here lies Grandville he loved everything made everything live speak and walk but he could not make a way for himself 5 or Here lies J J Grandville He could bring anything to life and like God he made it live talk and walk Only one thing eluded him how to live a life of his own 1 7 Later work 1840s wood engravings nbsp The Garden of Beast from Scenes de la vie des animaux 1842 nbsp He spins his cocoon and buries in a book Scenes de la vie des animaux nbsp Follow me said a voice my bad side no doubt Scenes de la vie des animaux nbsp Frontispiece from Petites miseres de la vie humaine 1843 nbsp Gallery of Horrors from Petites miseres de la vie humaine nbsp The Nightmare from Petites miseres de la vie humaine nbsp Fools invent fashions and the wise follow from Cent Proverbes 1845 nbsp For the money the dogs dance from Cent Proverbes nbsp All that glitters is not gold from Cent ProverbesArt edit nbsp Preliminary drawing for Combat of Two Refined for Another World 1843 watercolor graphite pen amp ink Though the designs of Grandville are occasionally unnatural and absurd they usually display keen analysis of character and marvellous inventive ingenuity and his humour is always tempered and refined by delicacy of sentiment and a vein of sober thoughtfulness Grandville s ability for political provocation made his work much in demand He worked in a wide variety of formats from his first job illustrating the parlor game Old Maid to illustrated newspaper strips of which he was a master His illustrations for Le Diable a Paris The Devil In Paris 1844 46 were used by Walter Benjamin for his study of that city as an urban organism One of Grandville s supreme achievements at a time when French printing technology was ascendant was Les Fleurs Animees a series of images that are both poetic and satirical Perhaps his most original contribution to the illustrated book form was Un Autre Monde 12 which approaches the status of pure surrealism despite being conceived in a pre Freudian age The full title of the book is Un autre monde Transformations visions incarnations ascensions locomotions explorations peregrinations excursions stations cosmogonies fantasmagories reveries folatreries faceties lubies metamorphoses zoomorphoses lithomorphoses metempsycoses apotheoses et autres choses Another world Transformations visions incarnations ascents locomotions explorations peregrinations excursions stations cosmogonies phantasmagoria reveries frolics pranks fads metamorphoses zoomorphoses lithomorphoses metempsychoses apotheoses and other things Original drawings nbsp Bird s Eye View of a Man and Woman Conversing c 1830 graphite 18 3 x 17 8 cm National Gallery of Art nbsp Le cabinet particulier The Private Office undated pen amp ink watercolor 18 2 x 25 6 cm Louvre nbsp A Bulldog Butcher with a Rabbit on his Knee undated pen amp ink 9 9 x 11 7 cm Morgan Library amp Museum nbsp An Insect Ball 1835 pen ink amp watercolor 12 5 x 21 3 cm Cleveland Museum of Art nbsp The Visiting of the Piggy Banks from Another World 1843 pen ink amp wash Musee des Beaux Arts de Rouen nbsp Jerome Paturot 1846 pen amp ink 20 4 x 14 cm Metropolitan Museum of ArtLegacy edit nbsp The Relics c 1835 pen and ink with gouache 11 8 x 9 4 cm Cleveland Museum of ArtAlexandre Dumas wrote in his memoirs Grandville had a delicate and sarcastic smile eyes that sparkled with intelligence a satirical mouth short figure large heart and a delightful tincture of melancholy perceptible everywhere that is your portrait dear Grandville 6 Interest in Grandville s art remained relatively high for a few of decades after his death His final works were published posthumously and several of his books were reissued in later editions and translated into other languages Rue Grandville 48 83919 N 2 42015 E in the Saint Mande commune of Paris is named in his honor A monument with a bust of Grandville by Ernest Bussiere was erected in the Parc de la Pepiniere in Nancy France in 1893 Theophile Gautier s Portraits contemporains includes a short chapter on Grandville 7 Over 25 years after Grandville s death Gautier wrote that Grandville still enjoyed a popular reputation and whose drawings caricatures and illustrations are known to everyone Although Gautier judged Grandville less a colorist than Daumier and less a poet than Tony Johannot he stated His original pen and ink drawings are exquisite in finesse liveliness and well rendered and will gain in value year after year We can ape Grandville but will not equal it again 13 Honore de Balzac expressed ambivalent views of Grandville He was an enthusiastic supporter and collector of Grandville s early print series and the two worked together at La Caricature in the early 1830s where Balzac worked as an editor and caricatures were an integral part of the newspaper However in the 1840s when publishers begin including illustrations in books Balzac became more critical He believed illustrations competed with the written word distorted and diluted the text and were undermining the market for novels perhaps with some justification Balzac contributed chapters to Grandville s Scenes de la vie privee et publique des animaux 1842 which was one of the bestsellers of the 1840s selling 25 000 copies while Balzac s first edition novels of the period were only selling 1 200 3 000 copies 1 5 14 Charles Baudelaire friend and champion of Honore Daumier was not a fan of Grandville It seems odd that the author of Les Fleurs du mal The Flowers of Evil with poems such as Spleen and the great admirer and translator of Edgar Allan Poe felt frightened by the images of Grandville Today his criticisms read like an underhanded complement 10 9 There are superficial people whom Grandville amuses but as for me he frightens me When I enter into Grandville s work I feel a certain discomfort like in an apartment where disorder is systematically organized where bizarre cornices rest on the floor where paintings seem distorted by an optic lens where objects are deformed by being shoved together at odd angles where furniture has its feet in the air and where drawers push in instead of pulling out Charles Baudelaire 1857 15 His style and humour had a marked influence on John Tenniel and various other Punch cartoonists 8 nbsp Crime and Expiation 1847 wood engraving The original drawing was made 12 days before he died The art historian H W Janson noted Grandville s imagery anticipated various aspects of dada surrealism and pop art Janson speculated if Marcel Duchamp s Tu m 1918 could have been inspired by Grandville s View of the Paris Salon from Un autre monde both of which involve subjects from the two dimensional surface of a painting emerging from the canvas into the real three dimensional space of the viewer Janson asserted that Grandville s illustration The Finger of God also from Un autre monde must have been familiar to pop artists producing large scale sculptures such as Cesar Baldaccini s Le pouce The Thumb in 1966 16 Grandville s affinity with surrealism has been recognized since the 1930s His work was included in the Museum of Modern Art s landmark exhibition Fantastic Art Dada and Sureealism in 1936 17 However the art historian William Rubin pointed out the absence of any reference or recognition of Grandville by Andre Breton in his two manifestos of surrealism or the other surrealists in the formative years of the movement in the 1920s 18 After a period of relative obscurity in the early 20th century Grandville s work became widely reproduced in the 1930s 16 Renewed interest in his work coincided with the rise of surrealism as a mainstream movement It was apparently only in hindsight that Andre Breton Georges Bataille Max Ernst and others came to recognize Grandville as a significant precursor to the movement but not an influence 18 Max Ernst was particularly enthusiastic about Grandville s work and included him in a montage of 40 names titled Max Ernst s favorite poets and painters originally published in View 1941 alongside Bosch Vinci Shakespeare Blake Poe Van Gogh Chirico and others 19 Ernst later made the frontispiece for a 1963 facsimile edition of Un autre monde with a caption reading A new world is born All praise to Grandville 9 British rock band Queen used part of his artwork for their 1991 album Innuendo and alternate pieces for most of the subsequent single releases the album s title track I m Going Slightly Mad These Are the Days of Our Lives and The Show Must Go On The single I m Going Slightly Mad also featured one of Grandville s characters on the back of the sleeve and as the basis for a picture disc release American grunge band Alice in Chains used part of Grandville s artwork for their self titled 1995 album The graphic novel Grandville by Bryan Talbot was greatly inspired by Grandville s illustrations Grandville s art is used extensively in the video game Aviary Attorney 20 which is set during a fictionalized version of the French Revolution of 1848 Gallery editLa Fontaine s Fables 1838 1840 wood engravings nbsp The Fox and the Crow Vol I no 2 nbsp Death and the Woodcutter Vol I no 16 nbsp The Oak and the Reed Vol I no 22 nbsp The Monkey and the Dolphin Vol IV no 7 nbsp The Earthen Pot and the Iron Pot Vol V no 2 nbsp The Turtle and the Hare Vol VI no 10 nbsp The Two Rats the Fox and the Egg Vol X no 1Un autre monde 1843 44 preliminary drawings graphite pen amp ink some with watercolor nbsp Concert a la Vapor private collection nbsp The Circus Seen from the Sky Musee Carnavalet nbsp The Finger of God private collection nbsp The Celebration of Flowers private collection nbsp The Bridge of the Planets private collection nbsp The Big and Small private collection nbsp A Dramatic Radish Bibliotheque municipale de NancyUn autre monde 1844 wood engravings nbsp Another World Title page nbsp Another World Frontispice nbsp 200 Trombones Performing a Tune from the Symphony nbsp In a Case Attached to the Bottle was a Manuscript nbsp Puff s Shop Sign for Transvestite Disguises nbsp An April Voyage nbsp Blind Deaf and Impartial Judge nbsp Conjugal Eclipse nbsp Venus of the Opera nbsp An Amphibious Dromedary nbsp An Elastic Rocket nbsp A Magician with the Planets nbsp Summer Chose this Place to Make its Thunder nbsp Gold is a Chimera nbsp The Battle of the Cards nbsp His Skill Consist of Being ImmobileJerome Paturot a la recherche d une position sociale 1846 wood engravings nbsp Title page nbsp The Bonnet of the Great Romantic nbsp The premiere of Hernani nbsp The Asp Literary Journal nbsp The Water Cure nbsp Breakfast with the emancipated nbsp The hat on the move nbsp A Small Paturot nbsp The hungry nbsp The hall is solid it can take the strain Berlioz nbsp Artist admiring his work nbsp Tobacco nbsp Skeletons of the Moon Sheep nbsp A Strange Funnel nbsp The genius cooksSelected works editLes Metamorphoses du jour Metamorphoses of the Day 73 lithographs Aubert Paris 1829 Voyage pour l eternite Voyage to Eternity 9 lithographs Aubert Paris 1830 La Silhouette The Silhouette 9 lithographs periodical illustrations 1829 1831 La Caricature The Caricature 120 lithographs periodical illustrations 1830 1835 Le Charivari Le Charivari 106 lithographs periodical illustrations 1832 1835 L Association Mensuelle lithographique The Association of Monthly Lithographs 16 lithographs 1 etching 1 engraving periodical illustrations 1832 1834 Le Magasin pittoresque The Picturesque Store 67 woodcuts periodical illustrations 1833 1857 24 breuvages de l homme 24 Beverages of Man 8 lithographs Bulla Paris 1835 Oeuvres completes de P de Beranger Complete works of P de Beranger 38 wood engravings Fournier et Perrotin Paris 1835 100 wood engravings in 1837 edition Fables de La Fontaine La Fontaine s Fables 258 wood engravings Fournier et Perrotin Paris 1838 1840 Voyages de Gulliver Gulliver s Travels by Jonathan Swift 346 wood engravings Fournier et Furne Paris 1838 Les Aventures de Robinson Crusoe The Adventures of Robinson Crusoe by Daniel Defoe 206 wood engravings Fournier Paris 1840 Les Francais peints par eux memes The French Painted by Themselves periodical illustrations 18 wood engravings 1840 Fables de Lavalette Fables of Lavalette 21 etchings Paulin et Hetzel Paris 1841 33 etchings in 1847 ed Fables de Florian Fables of Florian 95 wood engravings Dubochet Paris 1842 Scenes de la vie privee et publique des animaux Scenes of the Private and Public Life of Animals 320 wood engravings Hetzel et Paulin Paris 1842 Petites miseres de la vie humaine Little Miseries of Human Life by Old Nick amp Grandville 222 wood engravings Fournier Paris 1843 L Illustration The Illustration 17 wood engravings periodical illustrations 1843 1845 Un autre monde Another World text by Taxile Delord 185 wood engravings Fournier Paris 1844 Cent proverbes par trois Tetes dans un bonnet One Hundred Proverbs by Three Heads in a Bonnet by Old Nick Taxile Delord amp Amedee Achard 105 wood engravings Fournier Paris 1845 Jerome Paturot a la recherche d une position sociale Jerome Paturot in Search of a Social Position by Louis Reybaud 186 wood engravings Dubochet Paris 1846 Les fleurs animees Animated Flowers or Flowers Personified text by Taxile Delord 2 wood engravings 50 engravings Gabriel de Gonet Paris 1846 L Ingenieux hidalgo Don Quichotte de La Mancha The Ingenious Gentleman Don Quixote of La Mancha by Cervantes 18 wood engravings 8 engravings Ad Mame et Cie Tours 1848References edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Rose Cynthia 2020 J J Grandvill A Matter of Line and Death The Comics Journal accessed 6 July 2022 a b Hansen Kelli 2014 Weird and Wonderful Images from Artist J J Grandville University of Missouri Library Special Collections accessed 6 July 2022 a b Claudon Francis 1980 The Concise Encyclopedia of Romanticism Chartwell Books Inc Secaucus N J 304 pp pages 87 88 ISBN 0 89009 707 0 Passeron Rene 1975 The Concise Encyclopedia of Surrealism Chartwell Books Inc Secaucus N J 288 pp page 99 ISBN 0 89009 664 3 a b c d e f g h i j k l Melot Michel 2007 Grandvelli J J encyclopedia com accessed July 2 2022 a b c d e f g h Manty Kris 2020 The Wonderfully Odd World of French Artist J J Grandville antiquetrader com accessed July 2 2022 a b c d e f Gerard Jean Ignace Isidore Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed 1911 p 765 a b c d e f Melot Michel 1984 The Art of Illustration Edition d Art Albert Skira Rizzoli International Publishing New York N Y 269 pp pages 148 158 ISBN 0 8478 0558 1 a b c d e f g Mainardi Patricia 2018 Grandville Visions and Dreams The Public Domain Review accessed 2022 a b Rey Robert 1965 Daumier The Library of Great Painters Harry N Abrams Inc New York 160 pp pages 18 19 28 amp 40 a b Paulson Noelle C 2011 Book Review Clive F Getty The Diary of J J Grandville and the Missouri Album The Life of an Opposition Caricaturist and Romantic Book Illustrator in Paris under the July Monarchy Madison NJ Fairleigh Dickinson University Press 2010 ISBN 9780838642009 College Art Association J J Grandville 1844 Un autre monde H Fournier Paris Gautier Theophile 1874 Portraits Contemporains Charpentier et cie Paris 464 pp pages 231 233 Berg Keri Ann 2003 Fighting for the page Balzac Grandville and the power of images 1830 1848 Texas Scholar Works University of Texas at Austin accessed July 28 2022 Baudelaire Charles 1857 Ecrits sur l art Quelque caricaturistes francaises Present October 1 Yves Florence editor 1971 Paris Gallimard Vol I page 349 a b Janson H W 1977 History of Art A Survey of the Major Visual Arts from the Dawn of History to the Present Day 2nd edition Harry N Abrams Inc Publishers New York 767 pp pages 662 amp 687 ISBN 0 8109 1052 7 Barr Alfred H Jr 1936 Fantastic Art Dada and Surrealism The Museum of Modern Art New York 248 pp page 209 210 a b Rubin William S 1968 Dada and Surrealist Art Harry N Abrams Inc Publishers New York 525 pp page 122 Hofmann Werner Wieland Schmied Werner Spies 1973 Max Ernst Inside the Sight Institute for the Arts Rice University Houston Texas 159 pp page 9 ISBN 978 0 914412 06 9 Aviary Attorney review Eurogamer 21 January 2016 Appelbaum Stanley 1987 1974 Bizarreries amp fantasies of Grandville Dover reprint ISBN 0 486 22991 2 266 illustrations from Un autre mode and Les animaux External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard Grandville nbsp French Wikisource has original text related to this article Grandville nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Grandville caricaturist J J Grandville gutenberg org free available files html epub kindle text Works by or about Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard Grandville at Internet Archive J J Grandville at Library of Congress with 96 library catalogue records Mainardi Patricia Grandville Visions and Dreams Public Domain Review Retrieved 28 September 2018 Further reading editMichele Hannoosh 1994 The allegorical artist and the cries of history Benjamin Grandville Baudelaire Word amp Image 10 1 38 54 Getty Clive F 2010 The Diary of J J Grandville and the Missouri Album The Life of an Opposition Caricaturist and Romantic Book Illustrator in Paris under the July Monarchy Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Madison New Jersey 354 pp ISBN 9780838642009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Ignace Isidore Gerard Grandville amp oldid 1202937049, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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