Wednesday, July 21, 2010

European Painting 1850-1900 - Chapter 2

NEW SUBJECT MATTER

In Chapter 1, we discussed how realism in painting came to dominate the culture of mid 1800s.  As society and cultural values began to shift by the mid century, a new group of painters also started to re-examine the tradition of painting especially about its subject matter.  Increasingly, realism was no longer about the technique of illustration, but a direct reflection of their own time by recording their daily events.

HONESTY TO LIFE

Gustave Courbet was a realist painter and freedom thinker.  He was one of the first painters to challenge the prevailing thinking from the French Academy, particularly on the idea of realism.  Neither was he convinced about imaginations drawn up under the disguise of realism, nor was he obsessed with perfecting the technical skills of painting for the sake of visual beauty.  Rather, his idea of realism was to paint daily life directly and honestly by stripping away all pretenses and to portray life just the way it was.

Fig.7

After attending his grand uncle’s funeral, Courbet painted “Burial at Ornans” in 1850 on a large canvas measuring 10 feet tall by 22 feet long (Fig.7).  People in the painting were drawn up close, filling most of the canvas area and as a result, they were about life size.  People walking into an exhibition room to look at this picture could come under the impression of stepping into the funeral itself and standing next to the mourners witnessing the event. (See Fig. 8 for the relative size of a human figure to the painting) Courbet’s intent was to bring the viewers to face what he saw and imparted upon them his own feelings of sadness.  Even the distant landscape was rendered as bleak with cloudy sky and fading sunlight.  To Courbet, there was nothing glamorous in a burial where a dead person was simply lowered into a hole in the ground.

Fig.8

There is something to be mentioned about the size of an image.  Large images simply have greater visual impact to viewers because our body can relate empathetically to an object when it has an easily understandable human scale.  Courbet understood this instinctively and he drew up the people in more or less life-size to maximize the effect. 

The impact of Courbet’s treatment was indeed powerful.  Putting a funeral on a huge canvas drew both praise and contempt from the public.  Monumental paintings of this size had long been reserved for far more uplifting themes with dignified subject matters than what Courbet had chosen.  Such was the shock and outcry from the critics and many considered the painting ugly and inappropriate.  But for Courbet, this was the reality of life and the new definition of realism.  Painters should carry out their duty to reflect the reality honestly.



DIGNITY OF WORKING CLASS

While daily life may not be glamorous, it certainly has its dignity.  At least this was how Millet saw it especially for those who worked in the countryside with their manual labor.  Jean-Francois Millet came from a peasant community in France and only slowly did he earn his way to become accepted as part of the cultural establishment.


Fig.9

In 1857, Millet painted one of his most famous paintings, The Gleaners. (Fig 9)  In the painting, three peasants were bending down to pick up left over grain on the field after harvest.  Immediately, the gesture suggested backbreaking hard work endured by many peasants as part of their daily living.  Concentrating on their work by look down at the field, Millet did not reveal much of their faces either.  Perhaps Millet felt that their true identity was really rooted in what they do rather than how they appear in front of people.  This was in stark contrast to Ingres portraits in which the identity of the woman was not reflected in what her labor was but in her appearance, the tasteful interior decoration and her sumptuous clothing. (See Chapter 1, Fig. 5) But the most interesting aspect of this painting was how the peasants came to dominate the picture, and became the three monumental figures as if they were the real owner of the land.

Including peasants in a major piece of painting was not new, but treating them as the primary monumental figures was no doubt ground breaking.  Monumentality was a status typically reserved for prominent people or legendary figures.  By portraying the peasants as monumental figures, Millet was attempting to elevate their status equal to the past dignitaries and heros of his time.  Like Courbet, Millet’s down to earth realism taught us to respect the peasants, and in return, won him many praises.  His first hand understanding of the working class allowed him to capture the essence of their daily labor with strength and dignity.


BREAKING SOCIAL HYPOCRISY

If the lowly and the working class could became the primary subject of an important painting, who else in the society could deserve a place in painting?  In 1863, Manet took on this challenge and created a nude painting for the exhibition in the Salon.  He called it Olympia, a nude courtesan lying on her bed. (Fig.10)

Fig.10

Fig.11

Judging from the bodily gesture of the woman and the overall composition of the painting, it was obvious that the painting resembled several historical precedents, such as Venus of Urbino by Titan in 1538. (Fig.11) In fact, as a young painter, Manet must have learned or even copied old masters’ work during his study.  Therefore, one can look at Olympia as Manet’s personal re-interpretation of a familiar historical subject.

What departed from history, however, was that the woman in Olympia was no longer the mythical Venus, but a flesh and blood courtesan of the 1860s.  Like Courbet, Manet discarded painting historical and mythical figures and rather pursued realism based on an honest observation of modern life.  Such perspective and interpretation of historical precedents might actually reflect his disdain to the undercurrent of the affluent class where courtesans were often visited.  It also reflected his discontentment towards the contemporary culture, where the sexual fetish of the upper class towards women was often sanctioned by the Academy and exercised under the disguise of mythical figural appreciation.  Being born into an affluent family and possibly exposed to the courtesan culture, Manet must have felt the dishonesty in painting bounded by such academic tradition.

Even more penetrating and provocative was that Manet painted Olympia with her defiant stares, looking straight at the viewer without shame.  Her eyesight told us that she was demanding her recognition as part of the established social circle.  She could no longer accept her status as being someone subservient and hidden away.  From the flower bouquet brought to her by her black maid, we knew that she was indeed admired by many.  This clearly bolstered her confidence in who she was and what she did.  It prompted her to present her bare body in just the way she was sought after and exploited.

This stinging portrait stirred uproar and triggered an immediate re-examination of the collective moral conscience of the public.  With a few decisive brushstrokes, Manet stripped away the social hypocrisy, which was so prevalent at his time.  To Manet, realism was not only about what we liked to see, but also what we avoided to see.  Realism, to Manet, demanded honesty despite the pain required to overcome our own hypocritical conflict.

WOMEN AND DOMESTIC LIFE

Not all new subjects of the second half of 19th century were socially oriented.  New painters brought fresh approaches to old subjects.  Largely unknown and born in the United States, Mary Stevenson Cassatt was an accomplished impressionist painter and printmaker of her time.  She excelled in a series of paintings portraying the intimate relationship between the mother and her child, many of them infants.



Fig.12

Fig.13

The theme of mother and child has its historical precedent in Madonna and Child frequently painted by Raphael. (Fig.12) They belonged to a group of religious painting often commissioned by churches.  Taking the same theme, however, Cassatt transformed such genre from religious to domestic setting.  In 1897, Mary painted Breakfast in Bed. (Fig.13) The mother in the picture was looking intently at her child and holding her securely with her locking hands, signaling her love and attention being rendered to her child at all time.  On the other hand, the child was looking at the outside world with little awareness of her mother’s attention, telling us that she wanted to be free and independent. Cassatt’s skillful perception allowed her to convey such a moment in which one could foresee the fundamental tension between the mother and the child for years to come.

NEW PAINTING STYLE

We noticed with all of the above paintings, there is something new besides from the their subject matter.  The paintings simply looked different from the Neo-Classical period.  Something unusual was introduced into the visual qualities of the paintings.  In the next chapter, we will explore their drawing technique and discuss what was being altered and changed from the classical tradition.

Wednesday, July 7, 2010

European Painting 1850-1900 - Chapter 1

I have always wondered about paintings ever since I began to pick up a book when I was six. Back then, books with only words bored me but I could not stop flipping all those pages and spending hours looking at books filled with paintings, illustrations and interesting graphics. Paintings, in particular, fascinate me not only because of the great variety of their visual appeal, but also for what they are trying to communicate. Looking at a painting long enough, I find myself drawn into a world in which the painting represents. It is like stepping into a world with its unique space and time qualities that only the painter knows how to create. For me, looking at paintings is a process of profound understanding. On one hand, we can dissect how painters apply their mastery skills to document what they see or imagine; on the other hand, we can unlock the message that lies within each painting.

It is obvious that painting changes over time. Changes include the technique of applying pigment, the method of representation of the outside world, subject matter, to name a few. Given the political, religious and social atmospheres evolving continuously in history, it is reasonable to assume that paintings will also evolve and continue to reflect those changes. However, from 1850-1900, European painting went through a more radical re-thinking than any other period before then. A cursory review of this period will inevitably encompass a spectrum of paintings ranging from neo-classical realism in the 1850s, all the way to the dawn of modern abstract painting by 1900. In just 50 years, the great academic tradition of western painting was increasingly superseded and substituted by a radical school of abstractionism that the world had never seen before. What drove the painters in that period to abandon the tradition, and how did abstractionism become the vanguard of the western painting at the turn of 20th century?

VISIONARY ROMANTICISM

To answer these questions, we shall first discuss the general characteristics of painting just prior to 1850s. In searching for their basic characters, I look back to Claude Lorrain in the late 1600s. Lorrain was an established landscape painter. His landscapes were often treated with a sense of calmness and tranquility. Although historians had classified his work under the Baroque period, he was credited as a pre-romantic painter for his inspiration contributed to future Romanticism.

Fig.1

Typical in Lorrain’s paintings, vistas into the far distance were set up to represent the depth and vastness of the landscape. The soft and glowing light created the magical romantic atmosphere. “Ascanius Shooting the Stag of Sylvia” in 1682 (Fig.1) is an example of such work. In this picture, Lorrain painted nature right next to the ruin of the antiquity and forced the viewers to contemplate our fertile man-made endeavor as represented by the ancient ruin in the context of the eternal landscape. For Lorrain, man could not recognize their fertility despite its mounting evidence; and he lamented such blind-sighted ignorance by using the seemingly harmless pleasure of hunting as a gentle reminder of our constant exploitation of nature.

We need to recognize Lorrain’s genius in delivering his admonitions in such a poetic manner. The painting penetrates and appeals to our conscience at the same time. And there lies the power of romantic painting, which is not about actuality but about poetry to excite our innate yearning of an ideal vision.

IMAGINARY RATIONALISM

By late 1700, the return to the Roman antiquity was the primary source of inspiration, which led to a period of resurgence in classicism and classical knowledge. It was also a period of enlightenment and rational thinking. Rationalism gradually overtook Romanticism and ushered in the neo-classical period. Borrowing heavily from the Roman stylistic precedents, Neo-Classicism espoused a rational approach to painting with a clear intent supported by equally clear compositional logic.

Fig.2

The “Oath of the Horatii” By Jacques-Louis David in 1784 (Fig.2) is a good example of this period. The theme of this picture was a scene of the story of the Horatii swearing on their swords, in front of their father, in defending Rome to their death. This scene of loyalty to the State unto death was later considered as a defining image inspiring the French revolution.

David used tripartite composition and one-point perspective to organize this picture, with the vanishing point being the focus of this climax. (Fig.3) Figural style was based on Roman Classicism. Forceful and deliberate, the meaning of loyalty to the state and the dedication to a cause worthy of their death was eloquently communicated by composing a picture in an unambiguous and rational manner.

Fig.3

This picture was considered “real” in the sense that the technique in representing 3-dimensional space on a 2-dimensional canvas was impeccably executed. The 1-point perspective of the room was convincingly natural; the human figures were well proportioned and anatomically accurate. Masterfully applied shade and shadow further enhanced the perception of depth in space. In other words, centuries of good painting techniques were skillfully applied in the most straightforward manner. However, just like Lorrain’s landscape paintings, this entire picture was a result of an imagination, drawn up with convincing realism to serve as an illustration to convince the viewers at their first glance.

NATURAL REALISM

Rational realism influenced even mythological figures paintings of the mid to late 1800s. This approach celebrated a pursuit of originality with life-likeness realism to illustrate legendary imageries. “The Birth of Venus” in 1879 by Bouguereau (Fig. 4) belongs to such genre. The French Academia supported such an approach of technical excellence and considered the painters producing them the defender of the orthodoxy well into late 19th century.

Fig.4

Trained under the academia tradition, Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres inherited such tradition but his keen observation of the physical world and his ability to record it faithfully surpassed most of his contemporaries. Realism under Ingres reached a new height of life-likeness with breathtaking color accuracy and detail. His mastery of the human form and his eventual distortion of it earned him the reputation of the great portrait master in mid 1800s.

Fig.5

Fig.6

Since Raphael, life-like imagery had been the ideal pursuit of European painting. Ingres portraits were very life-like and he produced some of his masterpieces later in his life. “Princess Albert de Broglie” is an example of his later work. (Fig.5&6) Ingres portraits were classically composed with absolutely accurate perspective. He employed soft lighting to render his picture with an even tone and luminous glow. Such pictorial beauty was a demonstration of how Ingres had perfected the tradition of highly blended brush stroke producing crisp details of the physical materiality. Looking at the picture closely, one can almost feel the texture of the fabrics. It is daunting for us today to imagine a paintbrush alone could create such a tour-de-force in realism. Ingres natural realism can indeed rival today’s best photographic prints.

DEBATE ON REALISM

Despite such achievement with all its elegance and beauty, these paintings failed to convince a young group of artists who believed Ingres portraits were too rigid and emotionally remote. To them, these portraitures were too frozen in their luxurious elegance and Ingres had failed to penetrate beyond the physical beauty to reveal the inner psychology of his subjects.

At the same time, photographic advancement 1870s opened up for the first time a means to optically record our physical reality with speed and accuracy. While painting of natural realism had reached a high point as demonstrated by Ingres work; perfecting it in painting under the context of rapid photographic advancement had become increasingly a mute point; and seemingly a dead end. The situation prompted an intense debate among the young artists on the idea of realism and gave them the energy to search for new direction to break away from centuries of painting tradition.

With only a few paintings we have discussed, we can hardly conclude the status of European painting up till the late neo-classical period. Broadly speaking, however, one can established some major characteristics of paintings leading up to the early 1850s.

  1. Subject matters were uplifting and beautiful, ranging from mythological figures to prominent social figures to visionary scenes of highly imaginary reality.
  2. Three-dimensional quality based on the application of perspective principle.
  3. Classical composition arrangement is based on tried and true tradition, often times with triangular and stable hierarchy.
  4. Brush stroke were highly refined and blended and were typically employed to provide a smooth transition between colors.
  5. Realism was the goal with excellent shade and shadow with exquisite detail to portray to the natural world.

In chapter 2, we will discuss how a new generation of painters had turned away from historical imageries and began to explore new subject matter to reflect their own time.