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CHARDIN RETROSPECTIVE IN PARIS
01 September 1999


Cet article se compose de 5 pages.
1 2 3 4 5

The Silver Goblet (detail above)

This quiet man was like Giorgio Morandi who limited himself to painting bottles most of his life and Chardin did not try to extend his range when he painted the same goblets, the same apples and the same still life arrangements. Still he was a realist painter in the vein of some 19th Century artists and was only rediscovered by the Goncourt brothers when they published a study of his works in 1863 and 1864.

The Goncourt brothers hailed Chardin as a naturalist painter but he did not really inspire other masters. In fact Manet was much influenced by Spanish and Dutch still life painters and was less minute than Chardin. Only François Bonvin might have been inspired by him regarding his lighting effects and the way he painted copper recipients. All Impressionist artists ignored Chardin while Cézanne was the only one to draw some of the items shown in his paintings and once said on seeing his self-portrait that he was « cunning» but Cézanne, who paved the way to Cubism, was above all influenced by Venetian painters as well as by Rubens and Delacroix. In fact only Matisse paid some attention to Chardin and copied some of his works in the Louvre Museum during the 1890's. It seems that Matisse was much inspired by Chardin when he painted still lifes and tried to instil colours in his works as the 18th Century painter did.

Chardin probably had some little influence over Braque and Picasso when they painted still lifes around 1910 and only André Lhote went as far as hailing him in 1921 for having approached nature with much respect.

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