Charles-François Daubigny
Template:Short description Template:Infobox artist
Charles-François Daubigny (Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell,[1] Template:IPAc-en Template:Respell,[2][3] Script error: No such module "IPA".; 15 February 1817Template:Snd19 February 1878) was a French painter, one of the members of the Barbizon school, and is considered an important precursor of impressionism.
He was also a prolific printmaker, mostly in etching, and one of the main artists who used the cliché verre technique.
Biography
Daubigny was born in Paris, into a family of painters; taught art by his father, Template:Ill, and his uncle, miniaturist Pierre Daubigny (1793-1858). He was also a pupil of Jean-Victor Bertin, Jacques Raymond Brascassat and Paul Delaroche, from whom he would quickly emancipate himself. Though best known for his painted landscapes, Daubigny survived for many years as a graphic artist, illustrating books, magazines and travel guides for publication.[4]
In 1838, he set up, at the Rue des Amandiers-Popincourt, a community of artists, a phalanstery, with Adolphe-Victor Geoffroy-Dechaume, Hippolyte Lavoignat, Ernest Meissonnier, Auguste Steinheil, Louis Joseph Trimolet, with whom he already had expressed his interest in subjects drawn directly from daily life and nature. These artists will work, among others, for the publisher Léon Curmer, who was specialized in books illustrated with vignettes. From this period date the first confirmed engravings by Daubigny.
Initially Daubigny painted in a more traditional style, but this changed after 1843 when he settled in Barbizon to work outside in nature. Even more important was his meeting with Camille Corot in 1852 in Optevoz (Isère). On his famous boat Botin, which he had turned into a studio, he painted along the Seine and Oise, often in the region around Auvers. From 1852 onward, he was influenced by Gustave Courbet. The two artists were from the same generation and were driven by the realist movement: during a joint stay, each composed a series of views of Optevoz.
In 1848, Daubigny worked on behalf of the Chalcographie du Louvre, performing facsimiles, which testifies to his great expertise in this art, and revisiting the technique of aquatint in a less cumbersome process. His famous series of Rolling Carts dates from this period. In 1862, with Corot, he experimented with the cliché-verre technique, halfway between photography and printmaking.
In 1866, he joined the jury of the Paris Salon for the first time, alongside his friend Corot. The same year, Daubigny visited England, eventually returning because of the Franco-Prussian war, in 1870. In London he met Claude Monet, and they left for the Netherlands together. Back in Auvers, he met Paul Cézanne, another important Impressionist. It is assumed that these younger impressionist painters were influenced by Daubigny.
Daubigny died in Paris in 1878. His remains are interred at cimetière du Père-Lachaise (division 24).
His followers and pupils included his son Template:Ill (whose works are occasionally mistaken for those of his father), Template:Ill, Hippolyte Camille Delpy, Albert Charpin and Pierre Emmanuel Damoye. The two painters who introduced the Barbizon School in Portugal, in 1879, António da Silva Porto and João Marques de Oliveira, were also his disciples.[5]
Paintings
The most striking paintings by Daubigny were those produced between 1864 and 1874, which depict mostly forest landscapes and lakes. Disappointed because he felt that he did not meet with the same level of success and admiration as his contemporaries, by the end of his career he was nonetheless an extremely sought-after and appreciated artist. The motifs of his paintings, sometimes tending towards repetitiveness and often playing on the horizontality of the landscape underlined by a backlight effect, would be taken up and accentuated by Hippolyte Camille Delpy, his most influenced student.
His most ambitious canvases include Springtime (1857), in the Louvre; Borde de la Cure, Morvan (1864); Villerville sur Mer (1864); Moonlight (1865); Auvers-sur-Oise (1868); and Return of the Flock (1878). He was named by the French government as an Officer of the Legion of Honor.[6]
In popular culture
The life of Daubigny was adapted into a graphic novel by Belgian comics writer Bruno de Roover and artist Luc Cromheecke. It appeared under the title De Tuin van Daubigny in 2016,[7][8][9] and in an ebook English translation by James Vandermeersch, as Daubigny's Garden, in 2017.[10]
Public collections
Among the public collections holding works by Charles-François Daubigny are: Template:Col-list
Gallery
-
The Ponds of Gylieu (1853)
Cincinnati Art Museum -
The River Seine at Mantes (1856)
Brooklyn Museum -
Banks of the Oise (1863)
Saint Louis Art Museum -
The Creek (1863), oil on panel, 11 13/16 x 19 in. (30 x 48.3 cm), Clark Art Institute
-
The Bridge between Persan and Beaumont-sur-Oise (1867), oil on panel, 15 1/8 x 26 7/16 in. (38.4 x 67.1 cm), Clark Art Institute
-
Les Sables-d'Olonne, seaside town
in western France -
Les Laveuses (1873)
Aberdeen Art Gallery -
Woodland Scene (1873), oil on panel, 9 1/16 x 7 in. (23 x 17.8 cm), Clark Art Institute
-
Lever de lune à Auvers, or Le Retour du troupeau (1878)
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts
See also
- Daubigny's Garden, painted three times by Vincent van Gogh.
Notes
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References
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Further reading
- Fidell-Beaufort, Madeleine and Bailly-Herzberg, Janine; parallel text, French/English, with English translation by Judith Schub (1975). Daubigny. Series: La Vie et l'œuvre. Paris: Geoffroy-Dechaume.
- Hellebranth, Robert. Charles François Daubigny, 1817-1878. Vol. I, Catalogue Raisonné, 1016 paintings (1976); Vol. 2, Supplement, 224 paintings (1996). Morges: Matute.
- Henriet, Frédéric (1897). C. Daubigny et son œuvre gravé. Paris: A. Lévy.
- Ives, Colba, with Barker, Elizabeth E. (2000). Romanticism & the school of nature: nineteenth-century drawings and paintings from the Karen B. Cohen collection, pp. 186-193. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
- Mollett, John W. (1890). "Charles-François Daubigny" (pp. 34-58) in The Painters of Barbizon, Volume 2, London: Sampson Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington.
- Wickenden, Robert J. (1914). Charles-François Daubigny, painter and etcher. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Houghton Mifflin Company.
External links
Template:Sister project Template:Sister project
- Musée Daubigny, Auvers-sur-Oise, France.
- La Maison-Atelier de Daubigny, the artist's home and studio at Auvers-sur-Oise, France, decorated with extensive wall paintings by Daubigny, his son Karl, and his friends Corot, Daumier, and Template:Ill.
- Charles-François Daubigny bio at Rehs Galleries.
- Charles-François Daubigny bio at askart.com.
- Template:Art UK bio
Template:Authority control (arts)
- ↑ Template:Cite dictionaryTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore
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- ↑ José-Augusto França, A Arte em Portugal no Século XIX, Lisbon, Bertrand Editora, 3rd edition, 1990, volume 2 (Portuguese)
- ↑ The Iconographic Encyclopaedia of the Arts and Scien: Sculpture and painting, 1887, page 138
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- Wikipedia articles incorporating text from the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica
- 1817 births
- 1878 deaths
- Painters from Paris
- 19th-century French painters
- French male painters
- French Realist painters
- French landscape painters
- Officers of the Legion of Honour
- Burials at Père Lachaise Cemetery
- 19th-century French male artists