fbpx
Wikipedia

Jean Lurçat

Jean Lurçat (French: [ʒɑ̃ lyʁsa]; 1 July 1892 – 6 January 1966) was a French artist noted for his role in the revival of contemporary tapestry.

Jean Lurçat
Art auction in Amsterdam 1958, including a painting by Jean Lurçat

Biography edit

He was born in Bruyères, Vosges, the son of Lucien Jean Baptiste Lurçat and Marie Emilie Marguerite L'Hote. He was the brother of André Lurçat, who became an architect. After his secondary education at Épinal, he enrolled at La Faculté des sciences de Nancy and studied medicine. He went to Switzerland and Germany (Munich) and in leaving his educational path, he went to the workshop of Victor Prouvé, the head of the École de Nancy.

Painting and the War edit

In 1912, Jean Lurçat took residence in Paris with his brother André. He enrolled at the Académie Colarossi, then at the workshop of the engraver, Bernard Naudin. He met painters such as Matisse, Cézanne, Renoir; his friends included Rainer Maria Rilke, Antoine Bourdelle, and Elie Faure. Lurçat and three associates founded the Feuilles de Mai (The leaves of May), a journal of art in which these celebrities participated. He then became an apprentice of the painter Jean-Paul Lafitte with whom he had an exhibition at La faculté des sciences de Marseille. His first journey to Italy was interrupted in August by the declaration of war. Back in France, Lurçat joined the infantry, but was evacuated on 15 November after falling ill. During his recovery to health, in 1915, he practised painting and lithography. In July 1916, he returned to the front, but was evacuated once again due to injury. He never returned to the front. In September, his art was put on exhibition in Zürich.

Discovery of tapestry edit

In 1917, Jean Lurçat made his first tapestries: Filles Vertes (Green Girls) and Soirée dans Grenade (Evening in Grenada). At the end of the war in 1918, he returned to Switzerland where he had a holiday in Ticino (Swiss Italy), with Rilke, Busoni, Hermann Hesse and Jeanne Bucher. His second exhibition took place in Zürich in the same year. In 1920, he travelled extensively: Berlin, Munich, Rome, Naples. Then he took up residence in Paris with Marthe Hennebert. It was she who wove two tapestries: Pêcheur (Fisherman) and Piscine (Swimming pool). He unveiled in the same year, at Le Salon des Indépendants, two tapestries and four paintings. He met the art merchant Étienne Bignou.

In 1921, Jean Lurçat met Louis Marcoussis, he discovered Picasso and Max Jacob, and created decoration and costumes for Le spectacle de la Compagnie Pitoeff: "He who receives slaps", and then spent the autumn near the Baltic sea. The following year, he created his fifth tapestry, Le Cirque (the circus), for Mme. Cuttoli. His first personal exhibition took place in Paris in April and September. He made a large decoration on a wall (no longer visible today) at the Castle of Villeflix. Then he went to Berlin, where he met Ferruccio Busoni.

During the next two years Lurçat resumed travelling. In 1923 he went to Spain; in 1924 he went to North Africa, the Sahara, Greece and Asia Minor. Upon his return, he signed a contract without exclusivity with his friend, Étienne Bignou. His brother André built his new house, Villa Seurat, in Paris. He devoted a portion of the year 1924 to the making of his sixth tapestry, Les arbres (The trees). On 15 December, Lurçat married Marthe Hennebert and traveled in 1925 to Scotland, then Spain and northern Africa. Upon his return, he took up residence at La Villa Seurat. He participated in several expositions with Raoul Dufy, Marcoussis, Laglenne and others. He revealed, at the home of Jeanne Bucher, elements of decoration (carpets and paintings) of Le Vertige, a film by Marcel l'Herbier. In 1926, he exhibited in Paris and Brussels, and participated in collective exhibitions in Vienna, Paris, and Anvers. His fame began due to several articles devoted to him.

Years of glory edit

With the company of Marthe, he departed in 1927 for the Orient and spent the summer in Greece and Turkey. He decorated the lounge of the family of David David-Weill. There are four tapestries in developing and implementing L'Orage (The storm), for George Salles (Musée National d'Art Moderne, National Museum of Modern Art). He returned to Greece and Italy (Rome) in 1928 before embarking in October for the United States of America, for his first exhibition in New York. He spent 1929 in Marco. In 1930 he had exhibitions in Paris, London, New York, and Chicago; he created nine drypoint illustrations for Les Limbes (The limbo) by Charles-Albert Cingria; and he made another visit to America. In that same year he divorced Marthe Hennebert. In 1931 he married Rosane Timotheef and they took up residence in Vevey (Switzerland). He wrote several articles about painting, and reduced his production of pictures.

In December, 1932, Lurçat participated in the exhibition Sélections with Matisse, Picasso, Braque, Derain and Raoul Dufy; the event was organised in New York by the Valentine Gallery. Being aligned with the far left, from then on he often mixed his political opinions with his art. In 1933, he was living in New York. He created the decoration and the costumes for the Jardin Public (Public Garden), a ballet by George Balanchine. 1933 also saw his first tapestry sewn at Aubusson, following the new and revolutionary technique that he developed.

Lurçat and the revival of French tapestry edit

In order to fully appreciate and understand the works of Jean Lurçat, one must view them in the context of the history of tapestry, in particular, the downfall of its existence during the rise of the Renaissance. It was during this time that tapestry was somewhat re-invented, where by traditional techniques were misplaced in the likening of tapestry to paintings by artists of the likes of Raphael. Jean Lurçat is largely responsible for its revival in the 20th century when he redefined the importance of designing tapestry in a way that embraced the integrity of authentic tapestry from the Middle Ages, inspiring artists like Picasso to acquire the skills to design for tapestry.[1]

It was in the 15th century that tapestry, in its authentic form, was first recorded as being practiced.[2] By this time the technique had been mastered which gives us no reference as to when it was first put into practice. What we do know is that during the rise of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century, the art of tapestry was alienated by a demand for tapestry to imitate painting as closely as possible.[2] This allowed for traditional techniques, like hachure and hatching, to fall by the wayside allowing the art of tapestry to experience a kind of identity crisis. Techniques like shape-building dominated this new presence, creating an aesthetic dissimilar to that of traditional tapestry in that it achieved shading and implied dimension by building shapes as opposed to blending shapes and colour with the above mentioned techniques. This, in essence, created a new art form; a derivative of tapestry, effectively superseding it.

Western European tapestry history spans the foundation of the Gobelins manufactory 1662 to the beginning of the third republic of France in 1871.[2] It is in this time period where the subservience to painting is observed as being the dominant characteristic of tapestry. The commission by Pope Leo X in the early sixteenth century of The Acts of the Apostles by Raphael, to be woven in the Brussels workshops is thought be the turning point whereby tapestry was to, from that point on, be fashioned after designs supplied by painters.[2]

The relationship of painting to tapestry in fact began in 1476 where the first counts of tapestry weaving were in Belgium, and painters had ostracized weavers for creating their own cartoons.[2] Thus indicating that tapestries were originally made in the likeness of paintings, and is where traditional techniques were formed.[2] Furthermore, in the 1500s, painters (with paint) and later designated specialized glazers (with only ink, wild-grain colour or chalk) were commissioned to touch up and create defined lines around the shapes on the surface of woven tapestry.[2] The need for this integration of painting on tapestry has been observed as being the result of poor tapestry cartoons.[2]

Jean Lurçat himself began as a painter and tapestry weaver in 1915.[1] He became intrigued by tapestry weaving when he was learned of its history. Lurçat was especially influenced by Apocalypse of Angiers (14C) which he viewed in 1937.[1] He came away from this experience more sure that emotional content and reduction of means, or "scale of pre-arranged colour" [1] were of ultimate importance to tapestry design. Lurçat was already practicing these values and was pleased to see them validated by such an illustrious and historically powerful piece. Consequently, his convictions about how tapestry should be designed, regarded and used became stronger.

The opening statement of Lurcat's Designing Tapestry, distinguishes tapestry and easel paintings by their location: tapestries custom made for a specific, large wall.[1] Lurçat later refers to tapestry as a medium whose most authentic form is: 1) embedded with content; 2) is invariably large scale (15 meters X 15 meters), and; 3) is designed and thought of as being forever connected to architecture.[1] The artist asserts: "I want to remind you that Tapestry knew its proudest moments in a time when a style of extremely grandiose architecture reigned supreme".[1]

There are many things about tapestry that Lurçat is sure of, e.g. the emphasis of content in relation to economy; the importance for tapestry to continue to thrive as a partner to architecture. The most recurring theme in his book, Designing Tapestry, is that of the strict design guidelines of which should be followed in order for the weaver, who is presumably not the designer, to have no artistic freedom so as for the designer to be able to design a tapestry cartoon and achieve exactly what they had envisioned as a result. In essence, Lurçat recommends a non-interpretive code in which the weaver would have no question as to what the designer requires of them. Additionally, Lurçat makes it very clear that the idea of fashioning a tapestry after a painting, especially one that had originally been painted with no intention of becoming a tapestry, was to Lurçat misrepresentative and disrespectful to the art form.[1]

Expositions in the USSR edit

In 1934, Lurçat returned to New York where he participated in the creation of new decoration and costumes for a choreography of Balanchine; which he unveiled in Chicago and Philadelphia. Then he returned to Paris and Vevey for the summer. At summer's end, he departed for Moscow, where he had an exhibition at the Musée Occidental (Western Museum), then at the museum of Kiev. In 1935, he painted the Dynamiteros in Spain; with inspiration from the revolution and the War of Spain. In Paris, he participated in the activities of the Association of the revolutionary authors and artists. Then, he followed, with Malraux and Aragon, the Journées d'Amité pour l'Union Soviétique (The Journeys of Friendship for the Soviet Union). In 1936, he exhibited in London and released his first tapestry, made at La Manufacture des Gobelins (The Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory, Paris), Les Illusions d'Icare (The Illusions of Icare). In 1937, he met François Tabard.

Vision of the apocalypse edit

In 1936, Jean Lurçat was inspired when he saw the tapestry L'Apocalypse (The Apocalypse), which was woven in the 14th century. In 1938, Moisson was sewn. In 1939, he exhibited in New York and in Paris. In September, he took up residence in Aubusson with Gromaire and Dubreuil in order to renovate the art of tapestry, which at the time had fallen to a low point. His innovative technique used a simplified palette and robust weaving at broad point. During this period he abandoned oil painting in favour of poster paints. The Musée National d'Art Moderne (National Museum of Modern Art) acquired Jardin des Coqs (Garden of Roosters) and L'Homme aux Coqs (The Man of the Roosters), of which the cardboard would be destroyed by the SS in 1944 in Lanzac. In 1940, he collaborated with André Derain and Raoul Dufy.

Resistance edit

In June 1944, he associated himself with the fighters of the communist resistance, namely, Tristan Tzara, André Chamson, René Huyghe, Jean Cassou, and Jean Agamemnon. He was put on the Comité de Libération (Committee of Liberation). He also met Simone Selves, who would later become his wife. His adoptive son, Victor, was captured while on an intelligence mission in France and was put to death. Lurçat would not learn of his disappearance until the following year.

Legacy edit

Lurçat died on 6 January 1966 in Saint-Paul de Vence. During the 1980s, his widow Simone established the Musée Jean Lurçat de Saint-Laurent les Tours and the Musée Jean Lurçat et de la Tapisserie contemporaine, and bequeathed many of his works to posterity.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Lurcat, Jean (1950). Designing Tapestry. London: Rockcliff. p. 7.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Pommier, Sophie (1985). Textile Art: Embroideries, Tapestries, Fabrics, Sculptures. New York: Rizzoli. p. 155.
  3. ^ Arnaud d’Hauterives (30 March 2009). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 April 2018. Retrieved 9 April 2018.

External links edit

  • Vidéo: Jean Lurçat (FR)
  • Vidéo: Jean Lurçat(FR) Archived 2013-01-16 at archive.today
  • The UNESCO Works of Art collection
  • Mobilier national : Jean Lurçat

jean, lurçat, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, march, 2018, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Jean Lurcat news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this message Jean Lurcat French ʒɑ lyʁsa 1 July 1892 6 January 1966 was a French artist noted for his role in the revival of contemporary tapestry Jean Lurcat source source source source Art auction in Amsterdam 1958 including a painting by Jean Lurcat Contents 1 Biography 2 Painting and the War 3 Discovery of tapestry 4 Years of glory 5 Lurcat and the revival of French tapestry 6 Expositions in the USSR 7 Vision of the apocalypse 8 Resistance 9 Legacy 10 References 11 External linksBiography editHe was born in Bruyeres Vosges the son of Lucien Jean Baptiste Lurcat and Marie Emilie Marguerite L Hote He was the brother of Andre Lurcat who became an architect After his secondary education at Epinal he enrolled at La Faculte des sciences de Nancy and studied medicine He went to Switzerland and Germany Munich and in leaving his educational path he went to the workshop of Victor Prouve the head of the Ecole de Nancy Painting and the War editIn 1912 Jean Lurcat took residence in Paris with his brother Andre He enrolled at the Academie Colarossi then at the workshop of the engraver Bernard Naudin He met painters such as Matisse Cezanne Renoir his friends included Rainer Maria Rilke Antoine Bourdelle and Elie Faure Lurcat and three associates founded the Feuilles de Mai The leaves of May a journal of art in which these celebrities participated He then became an apprentice of the painter Jean Paul Lafitte with whom he had an exhibition at La faculte des sciences de Marseille His first journey to Italy was interrupted in August by the declaration of war Back in France Lurcat joined the infantry but was evacuated on 15 November after falling ill During his recovery to health in 1915 he practised painting and lithography In July 1916 he returned to the front but was evacuated once again due to injury He never returned to the front In September his art was put on exhibition in Zurich Discovery of tapestry editIn 1917 Jean Lurcat made his first tapestries Filles Vertes Green Girls and Soiree dans Grenade Evening in Grenada At the end of the war in 1918 he returned to Switzerland where he had a holiday in Ticino Swiss Italy with Rilke Busoni Hermann Hesse and Jeanne Bucher His second exhibition took place in Zurich in the same year In 1920 he travelled extensively Berlin Munich Rome Naples Then he took up residence in Paris with Marthe Hennebert It was she who wove two tapestries Pecheur Fisherman and Piscine Swimming pool He unveiled in the same year at Le Salon des Independants two tapestries and four paintings He met the art merchant Etienne Bignou In 1921 Jean Lurcat met Louis Marcoussis he discovered Picasso and Max Jacob and created decoration and costumes for Le spectacle de la Compagnie Pitoeff He who receives slaps and then spent the autumn near the Baltic sea The following year he created his fifth tapestry Le Cirque the circus for Mme Cuttoli His first personal exhibition took place in Paris in April and September He made a large decoration on a wall no longer visible today at the Castle of Villeflix Then he went to Berlin where he met Ferruccio Busoni During the next two years Lurcat resumed travelling In 1923 he went to Spain in 1924 he went to North Africa the Sahara Greece and Asia Minor Upon his return he signed a contract without exclusivity with his friend Etienne Bignou His brother Andre built his new house Villa Seurat in Paris He devoted a portion of the year 1924 to the making of his sixth tapestry Les arbres The trees On 15 December Lurcat married Marthe Hennebert and traveled in 1925 to Scotland then Spain and northern Africa Upon his return he took up residence at La Villa Seurat He participated in several expositions with Raoul Dufy Marcoussis Laglenne and others He revealed at the home of Jeanne Bucher elements of decoration carpets and paintings of Le Vertige a film by Marcel l Herbier In 1926 he exhibited in Paris and Brussels and participated in collective exhibitions in Vienna Paris and Anvers His fame began due to several articles devoted to him Years of glory editWith the company of Marthe he departed in 1927 for the Orient and spent the summer in Greece and Turkey He decorated the lounge of the family of David David Weill There are four tapestries in developing and implementing L Orage The storm for George Salles Musee National d Art Moderne National Museum of Modern Art He returned to Greece and Italy Rome in 1928 before embarking in October for the United States of America for his first exhibition in New York He spent 1929 in Marco In 1930 he had exhibitions in Paris London New York and Chicago he created nine drypoint illustrations for Les Limbes The limbo by Charles Albert Cingria and he made another visit to America In that same year he divorced Marthe Hennebert In 1931 he married Rosane Timotheef and they took up residence in Vevey Switzerland He wrote several articles about painting and reduced his production of pictures In December 1932 Lurcat participated in the exhibition Selections with Matisse Picasso Braque Derain and Raoul Dufy the event was organised in New York by the Valentine Gallery Being aligned with the far left from then on he often mixed his political opinions with his art In 1933 he was living in New York He created the decoration and the costumes for the Jardin Public Public Garden a ballet by George Balanchine 1933 also saw his first tapestry sewn at Aubusson following the new and revolutionary technique that he developed Lurcat and the revival of French tapestry editIn order to fully appreciate and understand the works of Jean Lurcat one must view them in the context of the history of tapestry in particular the downfall of its existence during the rise of the Renaissance It was during this time that tapestry was somewhat re invented where by traditional techniques were misplaced in the likening of tapestry to paintings by artists of the likes of Raphael Jean Lurcat is largely responsible for its revival in the 20th century when he redefined the importance of designing tapestry in a way that embraced the integrity of authentic tapestry from the Middle Ages inspiring artists like Picasso to acquire the skills to design for tapestry 1 It was in the 15th century that tapestry in its authentic form was first recorded as being practiced 2 By this time the technique had been mastered which gives us no reference as to when it was first put into practice What we do know is that during the rise of the Renaissance in the early sixteenth century the art of tapestry was alienated by a demand for tapestry to imitate painting as closely as possible 2 This allowed for traditional techniques like hachure and hatching to fall by the wayside allowing the art of tapestry to experience a kind of identity crisis Techniques like shape building dominated this new presence creating an aesthetic dissimilar to that of traditional tapestry in that it achieved shading and implied dimension by building shapes as opposed to blending shapes and colour with the above mentioned techniques This in essence created a new art form a derivative of tapestry effectively superseding it Western European tapestry history spans the foundation of the Gobelins manufactory 1662 to the beginning of the third republic of France in 1871 2 It is in this time period where the subservience to painting is observed as being the dominant characteristic of tapestry The commission by Pope Leo X in the early sixteenth century of The Acts of the Apostles by Raphael to be woven in the Brussels workshops is thought be the turning point whereby tapestry was to from that point on be fashioned after designs supplied by painters 2 The relationship of painting to tapestry in fact began in 1476 where the first counts of tapestry weaving were in Belgium and painters had ostracized weavers for creating their own cartoons 2 Thus indicating that tapestries were originally made in the likeness of paintings and is where traditional techniques were formed 2 Furthermore in the 1500s painters with paint and later designated specialized glazers with only ink wild grain colour or chalk were commissioned to touch up and create defined lines around the shapes on the surface of woven tapestry 2 The need for this integration of painting on tapestry has been observed as being the result of poor tapestry cartoons 2 Jean Lurcat himself began as a painter and tapestry weaver in 1915 1 He became intrigued by tapestry weaving when he was learned of its history Lurcat was especially influenced by Apocalypse of Angiers 14C which he viewed in 1937 1 He came away from this experience more sure that emotional content and reduction of means or scale of pre arranged colour 1 were of ultimate importance to tapestry design Lurcat was already practicing these values and was pleased to see them validated by such an illustrious and historically powerful piece Consequently his convictions about how tapestry should be designed regarded and used became stronger The opening statement of Lurcat s Designing Tapestry distinguishes tapestry and easel paintings by their location tapestries custom made for a specific large wall 1 Lurcat later refers to tapestry as a medium whose most authentic form is 1 embedded with content 2 is invariably large scale 15 meters X 15 meters and 3 is designed and thought of as being forever connected to architecture 1 The artist asserts I want to remind you that Tapestry knew its proudest moments in a time when a style of extremely grandiose architecture reigned supreme 1 There are many things about tapestry that Lurcat is sure of e g the emphasis of content in relation to economy the importance for tapestry to continue to thrive as a partner to architecture The most recurring theme in his book Designing Tapestry is that of the strict design guidelines of which should be followed in order for the weaver who is presumably not the designer to have no artistic freedom so as for the designer to be able to design a tapestry cartoon and achieve exactly what they had envisioned as a result In essence Lurcat recommends a non interpretive code in which the weaver would have no question as to what the designer requires of them Additionally Lurcat makes it very clear that the idea of fashioning a tapestry after a painting especially one that had originally been painted with no intention of becoming a tapestry was to Lurcat misrepresentative and disrespectful to the art form 1 Expositions in the USSR editIn 1934 Lurcat returned to New York where he participated in the creation of new decoration and costumes for a choreography of Balanchine which he unveiled in Chicago and Philadelphia Then he returned to Paris and Vevey for the summer At summer s end he departed for Moscow where he had an exhibition at the Musee Occidental Western Museum then at the museum of Kiev In 1935 he painted the Dynamiteros in Spain with inspiration from the revolution and the War of Spain In Paris he participated in the activities of the Association of the revolutionary authors and artists Then he followed with Malraux and Aragon the Journees d Amite pour l Union Sovietique The Journeys of Friendship for the Soviet Union In 1936 he exhibited in London and released his first tapestry made at La Manufacture des Gobelins The Gobelins Tapestry Manufactory Paris Les Illusions d Icare The Illusions of Icare In 1937 he met Francois Tabard Vision of the apocalypse editIn 1936 Jean Lurcat was inspired when he saw the tapestry L Apocalypse The Apocalypse which was woven in the 14th century In 1938 Moisson was sewn In 1939 he exhibited in New York and in Paris In September he took up residence in Aubusson with Gromaire and Dubreuil in order to renovate the art of tapestry which at the time had fallen to a low point His innovative technique used a simplified palette and robust weaving at broad point During this period he abandoned oil painting in favour of poster paints The Musee National d Art Moderne National Museum of Modern Art acquired Jardin des Coqs Garden of Roosters and L Homme aux Coqs The Man of the Roosters of which the cardboard would be destroyed by the SS in 1944 in Lanzac In 1940 he collaborated with Andre Derain and Raoul Dufy Resistance editIn June 1944 he associated himself with the fighters of the communist resistance namely Tristan Tzara Andre Chamson Rene Huyghe Jean Cassou and Jean Agamemnon He was put on the Comite de Liberation Committee of Liberation He also met Simone Selves who would later become his wife His adoptive son Victor was captured while on an intelligence mission in France and was put to death Lurcat would not learn of his disappearance until the following year Legacy editLurcat died on 6 January 1966 in Saint Paul de Vence During the 1980s his widow Simone established the Musee Jean Lurcat de Saint Laurent les Tours and the Musee Jean Lurcat et de la Tapisserie contemporaine and bequeathed many of his works to posterity 3 References edit a b c d e f g h Lurcat Jean 1950 Designing Tapestry London Rockcliff p 7 a b c d e f g h Pommier Sophie 1985 Textile Art Embroideries Tapestries Fabrics Sculptures New York Rizzoli p 155 Arnaud d Hauterives 30 March 2009 Hommage Simone Lurcat AdH PDF Archived from the original PDF on 9 April 2018 Retrieved 9 April 2018 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Jean Lurcat Video Jean Lurcat FR Video Jean Lurcat FR Archived 2013 01 16 at archive today The UNESCO Works of Art collection Mobilier national Jean Lurcat Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jean Lurcat amp oldid 1217712751, 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.