WIMAR, Carl - b. 1828 Siegburg, d. 1862 Saint Louis - WGA

WIMAR, Carl

(b. 1828 Siegburg, d. 1862 Saint Louis)

American painter and photographer of German birth. When he was 15 years old he moved with his family from Germany to St. Louis, Missouri. Prior to the outbreak of the Civil War, the Missouri River was the centre of America’s fur trading industry. The diverse people and scenery along this route inspired numerous artists, including the young Wimar. During his years in St. Louis, he became fascinated with the Western Frontier, the Native Americans, and the objects they traded. These interests, and their inherent conflicts, become the focal point of Wimar’s career.

From 1846 to 1850 he studied painting under the St Louis artist Leon de Pomarede (1807-92). During the 1850’s, Düsseldorf was the primary destination for American artists studying in Europe because of Emanuel Leutze and the Düsseldorf Academy influence. In 1852 Wimar continued his studies at the Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf, where he worked with Josef Fay (1813-75) and Emanuel Gottlieb Leutze until about 1856.

In 1858, having once more based himself in St Louis, he travelled up the Mississippi in order to draw and photograph Indians. During the last years of his life Wimar chose not to perpetuate the romanticized myth of the American West, but to create works that objectively document its land and people before both became extinct. He joined a party of the American Fur Trading Company and made several journeys between 1858 and 1860 up the Mississippi, Missouri and Yellowstone rivers in search of Indian subjects. In 1861 Wimar was commissioned to decorate the rotunda of the St Louis Court-house with scenes of the settlement of the West (mostly destroyed).

"Madame Monet Reading "Le Figaro"
"Madame Monet Reading "Le Figaro" by

"Madame Monet Reading "Le Figaro"

In this small private portrait it would seem the painter surprised Madame Monet at home in Argenteuil, lying on the sofa reading the paper. Without troubling to adopt any more formal pose, she is gazing calmly at the artist with her fine, dark eyes. This was a natural, unstudied scene precisely observed.

A Box at the Theater (At the Concert)
A Box at the Theater (At the Concert) by

A Box at the Theater (At the Concert)

Renoir made several paintings of spectators at theaters or concerts - a subject that explores the theme of seeing and being seen. Although the artist may have begun the painting as a portrait of specific individuals, he later reworked it to present two women whose identities and relationship are unknown. The subdued lighting and clearly defined forms suggest that Renoir was beginning to modify his experimental painting techniques by adopting a more traditional approach, as several critics noted when the work was first exhibited in 1882.

Acrobats at the Cirque Fernando
Acrobats at the Cirque Fernando by

Acrobats at the Cirque Fernando

The Cirque Fernando was established in 1875, in 1890 it was renamed Cirque Medrano. It was a major attraction for Montmartre artists. The Cirque Fernando had its pitch on the Boulevard Rochechouart. In 1894 it was redesigned as a theatre. Included among its regular guests were Lautrec, and also Degas, Renoir and Seurat, who decorated the rooms with their paintings.

The present painting features Francisca Wartenberg (left) and her sister, Angelina (right), members of an itinerant German acrobatic troupe. Ages 17 and 14, respectively, the girls take their bows after a performance.

After the Bath
After the Bath by
At the Luxembourg Garden
At the Luxembourg Garden by

At the Luxembourg Garden

At the Theatre (La Première Sortie)
At the Theatre (La Première Sortie) by

At the Theatre (La Première Sortie)

The picture shows a young girl in a theatre box. The subject of a theatre box had been treated earlier by Renoir in ‘La Loge’ (London, Courtauld Institute).

Banks of the Seine at Champrosay
Banks of the Seine at Champrosay by

Banks of the Seine at Champrosay

Bather
Bather by
Bather (Grande Baigneuse)
Bather (Grande Baigneuse) by

Bather (Grande Baigneuse)

Bather Arranging her Hair
Bather Arranging her Hair by

Bather Arranging her Hair

Renoir painted this nude at a pivotal moment in his career. In the 1870s, the artist experimented with Impressionist techniques, dissolving figures and forms in the atmospheric effects of light and shadow. By the 1880s, the figures in his paintings had become more solid and better defined. This shift in style is visible in the smooth texture of the woman’s pearly skin and the crisp outline of the curves of her body set against a sketchy, vibrant background.

Blossoming Chestnut Tree
Blossoming Chestnut Tree by

Blossoming Chestnut Tree

Bouquet of Chrysanthemums
Bouquet of Chrysanthemums by

Bouquet of Chrysanthemums

Bust of Jacobus Franciscus van Caverson
Bust of Jacobus Franciscus van Caverson by

Bust of Jacobus Franciscus van Caverson

The masterly portrait bust is the only surviving part of the mausoleum of Jacobus Franciscus van Caverson and his wife, Johanna Schockaert, which once stood in the former Dominican church in Brussels. The monument was demolished at the end of the 18th century. All the other elements apart from the bust were then lost, having been mentioned together for the last time in the Brussels auction catalogue of 1820. The composition is also known to us through an engraving in Jacobus Le Roy’s Le Grand th�atre sacr� du Duch� de Brabant (1734) and by a small number of designs preceding the completion of the grave. Above a tomb with the funerary text stands, on a base, a portrait of the deceased, flanked to the left and right by two stately seated female figures, Fortitude and Prudence, a reference to Caverson’s motto: Fortiter et prudenter. On the fronton Saturn is depicted, his left arm resting on an hourglass and pointing with his right hand to the words Prope est. The architectural conception of the monument is classical: the tomb is decorated with two consoles, and in front of and next to the two Corinthian pilasters hang the sixteen quarters of the two deceased, whilst their helmeted coats of arms are set up under the fronton.

Judging from the engraving this was an impressive composition, the loss of which is to be lamented. Fortunately the well preserved remaining bust is proof of Michiel van der Voort’s skill and mastery. Although the sculptor represents his model realistically with deep eye sockets, sunken cheeks, narrow, pressed lips and a prominent nose, he does not impair either the bearing or the worthiness of Caverson, speaker of the second chamber of the Council of Brabant and member of the Privy Council and the Council of State. The imposing Regency wig and the virtuously draped toga further emphasis the magistrate’s dignity. One may assume that Michiel van der Voort received the commission for the Brussels funerary monument around 1713, the year of Caverson’s death. Right then he was at the peak of his career as a highly productive artist and had just completed the pulpit for St Bernard’s Abbey in Hemiksem with its Four Continents, which now stands in Antwerp Cathedral.

By the Seashore
By the Seashore by

By the Seashore

This canvas was painted in the artist’s studio, where Renoir’s model, Aline Charigot — whom he married in 1890 — posed in a wicker chair. The beach depicted here is probably near Dieppe, on the Normandy coast.

Camille Monet and Her Son Jean in Their Garden
Camille Monet and Her Son Jean in Their Garden by

Camille Monet and Her Son Jean in Their Garden

Monet recounted what happened that day in his Argenteuil garden. Renoir appeared, and, attracted by the atmosphere, decided to paint the same subject as painted by Manet, Camille Monet and Her Son in Their Garden.

It is interesting to compare the two works painted that day. We see that Manet’s painting seems both more carefully thought out and more ambitious than Renoir’s. Manet remains allusive, lacking the spontaneity shown by Renoir. But then, Renoir was practiced at this kind of painting, whereas Manet was the beginner.

Child with a Whip
Child with a Whip by

Child with a Whip

Although a commissioned work, this portrait of five-year-old �tienne Goujon, the son of a French senator, was painted en plein air and is entirely Impressionistic. The freshness of the summer garden envelops the boy, filling his smock with a play of reflected colours. Only the face, executed with a classically precise line, displays an unchildlike seriousness.

Child with a Whip (detail)
Child with a Whip (detail) by

Child with a Whip (detail)

The face, executed with a classically precise line, displays an unchildlike seriousness.

Children's Afternoon at Wargemont
Children's Afternoon at Wargemont by

Children's Afternoon at Wargemont

Renoir had numerous patrons from the newly prosperous professional class of later-nineteenth-century Paris. This led to his keen sense for the harmony of ideal bourgeois domestic happiness in the Children’s Afternoon at Wargemont

Claude Monet Painting
Claude Monet Painting by

Claude Monet Painting

Couple Sitting in a Garden
Couple Sitting in a Garden by

Couple Sitting in a Garden

Dance at Bougival
Dance at Bougival by

Dance at Bougival

Bougival is a village in north-central France, located about 15 km from Paris in its western suburbs. Bougival was a popular recreation spot where the Impressionist painters, including Renoir, Monet and Sisley, painted country scenes along the Seine.

Dance at Bougival
Dance at Bougival by

Dance at Bougival

Bougival is a village in north-central France, located about 15 km from Paris in its western suburbs. Bougival was a popular recreation spot where the Impressionist painters, including Renoir, Monet and Sisley, painted country scenes along the Seine.

Dance at Bougival (detail)
Dance at Bougival (detail) by

Dance at Bougival (detail)

The woman’s face, framed by her red bonnet, is the focus of attention, both ours and her companion’s.

Dance in the City
Dance in the City by

Dance in the City

In 1883, Renoir painted two large dance scenes, Dance in the City, and Dance in the Country, conceived as pendants. Paul Lhote, a friend of the artist, served as the model for the male dancer in both pictures; the figures of the women and the treatment of the background are different.

The elegant young woman in Dance in the City is pictured with her partner in a room in which the chic decor is emphasized by the pillar and the large potted plants. The dancer is the 17-year-old Suzanne Valadon, who later became a painter herself. The model posing for Dance in the Country, who gazes smilingly out at the onlooker, is Aline Charigot, who was 18 years Renoir’s junior and whom he was to marry in 1890.

These two paintings were created during a period in which Renoir started to distance himself from impressionistic paintings in the search for new stylistic media and subject matter. They mark the transition to the painter’s final great period of creativity.

Dance in the Country
Dance in the Country by

Dance in the Country

In 1883, Renoir painted two large dance scenes, Dance in the City, and Dance in the Country, conceived as pendants. Paul Lhote, a friend of the artist, served as the model for the male dancer in both pictures; the figures of the women and the treatment of the background are different.

The elegant young woman in Dance in the City is pictured with her partner in a room in which the chic decor is emphasized by the pillar and the large potted plants. The dancer is the 17-year-old Suzanne Valadon, who later became a painter herself. The model posing for Dance in the Country, who gazes smilingly out at the onlooker, is Aline Charigot, who was 18 years Renoir’s junior and whom he was to marry in 1890.

These two paintings were created during a period in which Renoir started to distance himself from impressionistic paintings in the search for new stylistic media and subject matter. They mark the transition to the painter’s final great period of creativity.

Dance in the Moulin de la Galette
Dance in the Moulin de la Galette by

Dance in the Moulin de la Galette

This picture is one of Renoir’s largest composition. It features the cheerful attitude to life and the Impressionist theme of figures in the open air. The assembled company are enjoying the carefree mood of a Sunday and the agreeable warmth of the sunlight filtering through the leaves. Renoir painted the canvas directly from the scene, the models in the foreground are his friends.

The Moulin de la Galette was a dancing garden, created by converting two old windmills in Montmartre, where the public could come and dance on Sundays.

Dance in the Moulin de la Galette
Dance in the Moulin de la Galette by

Dance in the Moulin de la Galette

This is a sketchier version of medium size of the famous painting in the Mus�e d’Orsay. In almost every detail it matches the larger version. This version was probably made for the home of his friend Victor Chocquet. It was sold in 1990 at Sotheby’s in New York for US$ 78.100.000, the second highest price ever paid for a work of art at that date.

Dance in the Moulin de la Galette (detail)
Dance in the Moulin de la Galette (detail) by

Dance in the Moulin de la Galette (detail)

Dance in the Moulin de la Galette (detail)
Dance in the Moulin de la Galette (detail) by

Dance in the Moulin de la Galette (detail)

Dancing Girl with Castanets
Dancing Girl with Castanets by

Dancing Girl with Castanets

This painting, together with its companion piece Dancing Girl with Tambourine, forms a pair Dancing Girls with Musical Instruments. They were painted to decorate a dining room of an apartment in Paris. It was intended that the pictures should hang either side of a mirror. The model for both girls was Georgette Pigeot, but the head of the figure in the Dancing Girl with Castanets was modelled on Renoir’s maid, Gabrielle Renard.

Dancing Girl with Tambourine
Dancing Girl with Tambourine by

Dancing Girl with Tambourine

This painting, together with its companion piece Dancing Girl with Castanets, forms a pair Dancing Girls with Musical Instruments. They were painted to decorate a dining room of an apartment in Paris. It was intended that the pictures should hang either side of a mirror. The model for both girls was Georgette Pigeot, but the head of the figure in the Dancing Girl with Castanets was modelled on Renoir’s maid, Gabrielle Renard.

Diana
Diana by

Diana

This painting is a study of a nude for which the model was Lise Tr�hot, the artist’s mistress. Although the study was transformed into Diana, the ancient goddess of the hunt, in order to produce a painting acceptable for the jury of the 1867 Salon, the painting was rejected.

The style of the painting shows the influence of Courbet.

Frédéric Bazille at His Easel
Frédéric Bazille at His Easel by

Frédéric Bazille at His Easel

Renoir and Bazille met in November 1862 in the studio of Charles Gleyre, where they attended drawing classes along with Monet and Sisley. The four pupils quickly became friends and left Gleyre in the spring of 1863 in order to devote themselves entirely to open-air painting. The next summer Bazille moved into a studio in Paris and shared it with Renoir. Toward the end of 1867, Bazille painted his friend in a nonchalant attitude with his feet up on the seat of his chair. The painting remained in Renoir’s possession for the rest of his life.

Renoir reciprocated by painting a picture of his friend in their studio. Bazille is at his easel, leaning forward slightly with his legs crossed, working on a still-life of dead birds. On the wall behind him is a winter landscape by Claude Monet with a view of Honfleur. The predominant colours in the picture are gray and beige.

Despite their differences, one factor is common in these paintings: they depict what appears to be a random moment in everyday life and avoid any semblance of a posed composition.

Gabrielle with Jewellery
Gabrielle with Jewellery by

Gabrielle with Jewellery

When Renoir painted the maid, Gabrielle, he transformed her into the very epitome of female youth, bloom and happiness. We see her in a flimsy neglig�e at an 18th-century dressing table, pleased to see how jewellery and a rose in her hair enhance her own beauty.

Gabrielle Renard (1879-1959) was a cousin of Aline’s who joined the household in 1894 as Jean’s nanny and did not leave till she married an American painter in 1914. Possibly she did not really possess the grace we see in her. Perhaps Renoir was following his own ideal rather than visible fact.

Gabrielle with a Rose
Gabrielle with a Rose by

Gabrielle with a Rose

Garden in Fontenay
Garden in Fontenay by

Garden in Fontenay

Girl with Sheaf
Girl with Sheaf by

Girl with Sheaf

Girl with a Fan
Girl with a Fan by

Girl with a Fan

Renoir was exceptionally sensitive to details: earrings, a flower in the hair, and a neck scarf play no less role in his heroines’ outfits and his paintings’ colour schemes than do the dress or the coiffure. The present portrait is dominated by the fan.

The painting was a great success at the seventh Impressionist exhibition in 1882.

Girl with a Hoop
Girl with a Hoop by

Girl with a Hoop

This painting is the result of a commission to paint a nine-year-old girl named Marie Goujon. It is an example of Renoir’s new style which he developed after his trip to Italy in 1881. Renoir called this style “aigre,” or “sour.” The word conveys a sense of the hardness and tightness of his new style.

Girl with the Hat
Girl with the Hat by

Girl with the Hat

Girls Picking Flowers in a Meadow
Girls Picking Flowers in a Meadow by

Girls Picking Flowers in a Meadow

Girls at the Piano
Girls at the Piano by

Girls at the Piano

Guitar Player
Guitar Player by
In the Summer
In the Summer by

In the Summer

Renoir’s In the Summer is not that far from Salon painting of the period. Only the free rendering of sunstruck leaves in the background and the unprettified, forthright girl indicate a new direction.

La Grenouillère
La Grenouillère by

La Grenouillère

La Grenouillère
La Grenouillère by

La Grenouillère

In 1869, Renoir and Monet produced a whole series scenes of modern life painted outdoors. Their subject was La Grenouill�re (literally “frogpond”). Situated on the banks of the Île de Croissy on the Seine near Paris (opposite Bougival), La Grenouill�re was an elegant establishment built on a barge and combining bathing cabins and a restaurant. It was reached by footbridges and a small island with a tree, from which one watched the bathers. The island forms the centrepiece of a pair of twin compositions by the two artists. Monet’s is the more structured, while Renoir’s is livelier, more tightly framed, and more picturesque. Both paintings devote much attention to the reflections of trees, people, and sky in the rippling water.

La Loge (The Theatre Box)
La Loge (The Theatre Box) by

La Loge (The Theatre Box)

La Loge was Renoir’s principal exhibit in the first Impressionist exhibition in Paris in 1874. The complexity of its subject matter and its virtuoso technique helped to establish the artist’s reputation as one of the leaders of this radical new movement in French art. Renoir’s brother Edmond and Nini Lopez, a model from Montmartre known as ‘Fish-face’, posed for this ambitious composition.

La Promenade (The Walk)
La Promenade (The Walk) by

La Promenade (The Walk)

La fin du déjeuner
La fin du déjeuner by

La fin du déjeuner

Lady in Black
Lady in Black by

Lady in Black

Character, emotion, individuality - Renoir has left all those aims of portraiture aside in pursuit of a harmony of black, white, and blue that is reminiscent of Manet’s finest works. The subject of this painting may be the same model, Anna, whom the artist painted nude in the celebrated work from the same year that is now in the Pushkin Museum in Moscow.

Landscape
Landscape by

Landscape

In Renoir’s late period, when he no longer pursued the expression of lighting effects or concerned himself with thorough drawing, he emerged in full measure as a master of sensuous, baroque colour. In his paintings, the everydayness dear to the Impressionists gave way to the classical genres: landscape, still-life, and the nude.

Large Bathers (Les Grandes Baigneuses)
Large Bathers (Les Grandes Baigneuses) by

Large Bathers (Les Grandes Baigneuses)

Renoir’s change of direction between 1884 and 1887 was dictated by an individual approach. The spontaneity of Impressionism, as well as its traditional fondness for landscape, gave way to a gradual elaboration of composition that enabled Renoir to reexamine the problem of the nude in a landscape. For his Large Bathers, Renoir did a number of preliminary designs. Having been a Delacroix admirer in his early years, Renoir here seems to turn toward Ingres, and the way he neatly outlines his shapes places him in the context of the nude that in the 1890s was to preoccupy such artists as F�lix Valloton and Charles Maurin.

Faced with criticism of his new style after completing The Large Bathers, an exhausted Renoir never again devoted such painstaking effort to a single work.

Lise (Woman with Umbrella)
Lise (Woman with Umbrella) by

Lise (Woman with Umbrella)

This painting is the life-size portrait of the painter’s mistress, Lise Tr�hot. It was exhibited at the 1868 Salon.

Madame Georges Charpentier and Her Children
Madame Georges Charpentier and Her Children by

Madame Georges Charpentier and Her Children

Madame Georges Charpentier and Her Children was one of the paintings Renoir exhibited in the Salon of 1879. The painting was commissioned by Georges Charpentier (1846-1905), a publisher in Paris, who published novels of Flaubert, Maupassant, Zola, and Goncourt. Charpentier and his wife, n�e Margu�rite-Louise Lemonnier (1848-1904) collected paintings by the Impressionists.

The two children in the painting are Georgette-Berthe (1872-1945) and Paul-�mile-Charles (1875-1895). Following the fashion of the time, the boy’s clothes match those of his sister Georgette.

Madame Renoir
Madame Renoir by

Madame Renoir

This bust is of Renoir’s young wife, Aline Charigot. The couple married in 1890. It was created in collaboration with Richard Guino (1890-1973). The sitter died in 1915, and Renoir had one of the busts erected on her grave.

Madame Renoir with Bob
Madame Renoir with Bob by

Madame Renoir with Bob

Renoir met Aline Charigot in 1880, and they married in 1890.

Mademoiselle Romaine Lacaux
Mademoiselle Romaine Lacaux by

Mademoiselle Romaine Lacaux

Maternity
Maternity by
Near the Lake
Near the Lake by
Nude (Anna)
Nude (Anna) by

Nude (Anna)

Renoir was especially close to Monet, both personally and in his aesthetics. For him, though, the human figure rather than landscape was always the main focus of attention. For his female models he always sought out girls of ampler proportions in his Montmartre neighbourhood, many of them sempstresses by trade. They liked posing, and had nothing against indulging a lover who could pay,either. Renoir liked them. Without troubling over questions of morality and society, he glorified the beauty and sensuality he saw in them.

Renoir admiration for French 18th-century masters such as Watteau, Boucher and Fragonard, whom he copied in his own youthful days as a porcelain painter, lay behind erotic pictures such as Anna. This nude is entirely natural, neither coquettish, nor provocative. Renoir’s colourist subtlety tenderly recorded nuanced shades in the flesh of this woman sitting on the edge of a lilac patterned armchair in front of a sketchy background of what seem to be white undergarments against darker plum black. The interplay of lighter and darker areas is as important in lending the composition its baroque dynamism as are the turned and arrested position of the body or the red highlighting on the chair, lips and the corners of the eye.

Nude in the Sunlight
Nude in the Sunlight by

Nude in the Sunlight

The beautiful young woman, a 19-year-old model called Anna, with her very feminine body and delicate features, is the perfect embodiment of Renoir’s ideal of womanhood. The painter remained loyal to this ideal to the end of his life.

Oarsmen at Chatou
Oarsmen at Chatou by

Oarsmen at Chatou

Chatou was a popular excursion site in the environs of Paris. Renoir painted several pictures here, including his famous Luncheon of the Boating Party (Phillips Collection, Washington). With its celebration of leisure culture, its lush, vibrant colour, and its flickering brushwork, Oarsmen at Chatou is a quintessentially Impressionist painting.

Odalisque (Woman of Algiers)
Odalisque (Woman of Algiers) by

Odalisque (Woman of Algiers)

This picture was painted in the Oriental style which was in fashion since Delacroix’s Women of Algiers. The model for the painting was Lise Tr�hot, the artist’s mistress.

Path through the High Grass
Path through the High Grass by

Path through the High Grass

Piazza San Marco in Venice
Piazza San Marco in Venice by

Piazza San Marco in Venice

This painting was executed during Renoir’s trip to Italy in 1881. In Italy he found new inspiration in the works of Renaissance artists.

Picking Flowers
Picking Flowers by

Picking Flowers

Pink and Blue (Alice and Elisabeth Cahen d'Anvers)
Pink and Blue (Alice and Elisabeth Cahen d'Anvers) by

Pink and Blue (Alice and Elisabeth Cahen d'Anvers)

The painting depicts the sisters Alice (born 1876) and Elisabeth (born 1874), daughters of the Jewish banker Louis Raphael Cahen d’Anvers (1837-1922).

Pinning the Hat
Pinning the Hat by

Pinning the Hat

Pont Neuf in Paris
Pont Neuf in Paris by

Pont Neuf in Paris

Pont Neuf in Paris (detail)
Pont Neuf in Paris (detail) by

Pont Neuf in Paris (detail)

Portrait of Charles le Coeur
Portrait of Charles le Coeur by

Portrait of Charles le Coeur

Portrait of Jeanne Samary (La Reverie)
Portrait of Jeanne Samary (La Reverie) by

Portrait of Jeanne Samary (La Reverie)

Jeanne Samary (1857-1890) was a French actress who also worked as model. She came from a strong musical and theatrical background: her father was a cellist, and two of her maternal aunts, as well as her grandmother, had been actresses.

She featured in Renoir’s 1876 work The Ball at the Moulin de la Galette and was the main subject of The Swing, also done that summer. At some point around 1877, Samary became Renoir’s lover, a move commemorated in the The Dreaming Woman (La Reverie). Renoir painted two other portraits of her.

Portrait of Jeanne Samary (detail)
Portrait of Jeanne Samary (detail) by

Portrait of Jeanne Samary (detail)

Portrait of Madame Alphonse Daudet
Portrait of Madame Alphonse Daudet by

Portrait of Madame Alphonse Daudet

Alphonse Daudet (1840-1897) was a French novelist. As a close friend of Goncourt, Flaubert, and Zola, he belonged to the Naturalist school of prose. In 1867 Daudet married Julia Allard (1844-1940), French poet and essayist, author of Impressions de nature et d’art (1879), L’Enfance d’une Parisienne (1883), and some literary studies written under the pseudonym “Karl Steen.”

Portrait of Madame Georges Charpentier
Portrait of Madame Georges Charpentier by

Portrait of Madame Georges Charpentier

Madame Georges Charpentier, n�e Margu�rite-Louise Lemonnier (1848-1904) was the wife of Georges Charpentier (1846-1905), a publisher in Paris, who published novels of Flaubert, Maupassant, Zola, and Goncourt. The couple collected paintings by the Impressionists.

Portrait of Mademoiselle Irene Cahen d'Anvers
Portrait of Mademoiselle Irene Cahen d'Anvers by

Portrait of Mademoiselle Irene Cahen d'Anvers

In 1880 Renoir was commissioned by Cahen d’Anvers, a banker, to paint portraits of his daughters.

Portrait of a Bearded Man
Portrait of a Bearded Man by

Portrait of a Bearded Man

The painting portrays an unidentified man of age 32. There are two inscriptions on the picture: A.V NooRT / AET’. 32. (signature, top right) and 1615 (date, coat of arms, top left).

Portrait of the Actress Jeanne Samary
Portrait of the Actress Jeanne Samary by

Portrait of the Actress Jeanne Samary

Jeanne Samary (1857-1890) was a French actress who also worked as model. She came from a strong musical and theatrical background: her father was a cellist, and two of her maternal aunts, as well as her grandmother, had been actresses.

Renoir became acquainted with the 20-year-old actress Jeanne Samary, who had already made her mark on the Parisian stage, at the home of his patron, Madame Charpentier. This large portrait in a ball dress - one of many Renoir painted - was intended for the 1879 Salon and reflected his pursuit of official recognition.

Jeanne Samary featured in Renoir’s 1876 work The Ball at the Moulin de la Galette and was the main subject of The Swing, also done that summer. At some point around 1877, she became Renoir’s lover, a move commemorated in the The Dreaming Woman (La Reverie). Renoir painted two other portraits of her.

Pulpit
Pulpit by

Pulpit

After a fourteen-year stay in Rome, Michiel van der Voort returned to his native town, Antwerp. There, he specialized in carving pulpits decorated by figures and foliage, vivid and picturesque illustrations in sculpture of themes for sermons, handled with extravagant rhetoric. With an appeal to the senses intended to enhance the efficacy of religious eloquence, the sculptor here represents the dramatic conversion of St Norbert, who has fallen off his horse at the foot of the Crucified Christ, near a cave and a storm-tossed copse.

The pulpit was executed for the Church of the Norbertine Order in Mechelen and it found a new home in the Cathedral. Theodor Verhaegen (1701-1759), a follower of Faydherbe, is credited with the execution of the countless little animals and the rich foliage of the pulpit. The pulpit was completed by Jan Frans van Geel.

Pulpit
Pulpit by

Pulpit

This fine pulpit came from the abbey of St Bernard in Hemiksem on the River Scheldt. The body of the pulpit is supported by personifications of the four then known continents, symbolizing the spread of the Catholic faith over the entire earth. Europe holds a sceptre, representing her supremacy over the rest of the world. To the right, Asia is dressed in oriental-style costume, while on the left, in the darkness below the steps, we see Africa - a black woman in turban. America, finally, wears a feathered head-dress. The consoles beneath the actual pulpit are decorated with symbols of the Four Evangelists.

The most striking feature is the staircase, which is carved in the shape of trees, oak and beech trunks and intertwining branches and twigs in which birds and other small creatures sit. The big birds sit on large branches and the small ones among the leaves and on the roof. They are rendered very realistically and can be readily identified: a parrot, a turkey, a heron, a peacock, a cock, a little owl and many other birds. The dove appears as a symbol of the Holy Spirit in an aureole below the sounding board, which is held up by a trumpet-blowing angel and a variety of small angels.

The whole displays a strange mixture of styles: the body of the pulpit is baroque but the sounding board above it is closer to rococo. The staircase, meanwhile, with the trees and animals is carved very realistically. Despite this variety, the pulpit is a peerless masterpiece of Flemish sculpture.

Pulpit
Pulpit by

Pulpit

After a fourteen-year stay in Rome, Michiel van der Voort returned to his native town, Antwerp. There, he specialized in carving pulpits decorated by figures and foliage, vivid and picturesque illustrations in sculpture of themes for sermons, handled with extravagant rhetoric. With an appeal to the senses intended to enhance the efficacy of religious eloquence, the sculptor here represents the dramatic conversion of St Norbert, who has fallen off his horse at the foot of the Crucified Christ, near a cave and a storm-tossed copse.

The pulpit was executed for the Church of the Norbertine Order in Mechelen and it found a new home in the Cathedral. Theodor Verhaegen (1701-1759), a follower of Faydherbe, is credited with the execution of the countless little animals and the rich foliage of the pulpit. The pulpit was completed by Jan Frans van Geel.

Pulpit (model)
Pulpit (model) by

Pulpit (model)

The picture shows the original design of the pulpit executed for the Church of the Norbertine Order in Mechelen and now in the Sint-Romboutskathedraal, Mechelen. The original model for the pulpit is now in the City Museum in Mechelen.

Pulpit (rear view)
Pulpit (rear view) by

Pulpit (rear view)

The preaching pulpits in the Antwerp and Mechelen cathedrals by Michiel van der Voort and that in the St Gudule in Brussels by Hendrik Frans Verbruggen, as well as the carved confessionals covered with statues, which have lost all resemblance to furniture, may scandalise purists. To us they represent the most characteristic and the most convincing product of the inventive imagination of northern Baroque: there is nothing else like it outside Belgium.

Riding in the Bois de Boulogne
Riding in the Bois de Boulogne by

Riding in the Bois de Boulogne

Roses
Roses by
Seated Bather
Seated Bather by
Seated Bather
Seated Bather by
Self-Portrait
Self-Portrait by

Self-Portrait

When Renoir made this self-portrait in 1875, his paintings were bringing in little income. The artist presents himself with unkempt hair and beard, yet smartly dressed in a striped shirt and dark blue necktie. The textured paint - almost transparent in some places, thickly applied in others - suggests he was experimenting with technique. This work was shown at the second Impressionist exhibition in Paris in 1876 and eventually purchased by an important collector, Dr. Georges de Bellio, who Renoir claimed had “gone crazy” for it.

Self-Portrait
Self-Portrait by

Self-Portrait

Renoir presents himself in this self-portrait as a mature and confident man. He was in his late fifties and well-established as an artist; the flowered wallpaper and his bourgeois clothes allude to a comfortable living. His health, on other hand, was poor, and the intensity of his gaze suggests an incisive investigation of the features of his face in a mirror. Renoir never exhibited this painting, and it remained in his studio until his death twenty years later.

Skaters in the Bois de Boulogne
Skaters in the Bois de Boulogne by

Skaters in the Bois de Boulogne

Skaters in the Bois de Boulogne (detail)
Skaters in the Bois de Boulogne (detail) by

Skaters in the Bois de Boulogne (detail)

Snowy Landscape
Snowy Landscape by

Snowy Landscape

Still-Life
Still-Life by
Still-Life with Peaches
Still-Life with Peaches by

Still-Life with Peaches

Terrace at Cagnes
Terrace at Cagnes by

Terrace at Cagnes

The Bathers
The Bathers by

The Bathers

After 1900 Renoir mainly lived in the south of France. Shortly before his death - by then the nearly 80-year-old artist was crippled in a wheelchair and had to have his paintbrush tied to his twisted arthritic fingers - Renoir devoted himself to a series of composition with nude bathers.

His markedly violent method of painting conflicts with the physical condition of the artist. The large painting which shows two voluminous women reclining at leisure in a lush landscape has the effect of an improvisation placed directly onto the canvas. Over the long years of his career as an artist Renoir had created an extensive repertoire of female nudes and poses which he was able to call upon quite easily, now that he was painting the Bathers. By using thinly applied colours he endowed his nudes with a liveliness which turns them into embodiments of sheer vitality.

The Bathers (detail)
The Bathers (detail) by

The Bathers (detail)

The Cabaret of Mère Anthony
The Cabaret of Mère Anthony by

The Cabaret of Mère Anthony

The Clown
The Clown by

The Clown

The painting represents Claude, Renoir’s the third son at the age of eight.

The Engaged Couple
The Engaged Couple by

The Engaged Couple

This painting is also titled (wrongly) Mr. and Mrs. Sisley. The painter Sisley is indeed recognizable, but the lively young lady on his arm is not in fact Sisley’s companion but Renoir’s favourite model at this period, Lise Tr�hot. This is an outdoor scene in a town garden, which is suggested in a rather vague way.

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