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RENOIR : A ROMANTIC IMPRESSIONIST MASTER

Cet article se compose de 10 pages.
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During the spring of 1858 the Lévy firm faced difficulties and Renoir lost his job. However he soon found another occupation with a painter of roller-blinds named Gilbert. He notably painted religious scenes on blinds that missionaries in African or Asian countries would hang in their makeshift churches.

Working quite rapidly Renoir saved enough money to achieve the dream of becoming a true painter. In 1861 he was admitted at the School of Beaux Arts in Paris ranking 68th out of 80 lucky candidates. On April 1st 1862 he managed to become a pupil in the studios of Emile Signol and Charles Gleyre, a famous Swiss artist. Renoir worked there anonymously though in a somewhat diligent way.

In the studio of Gleyre Renoir befriended three fellow-pupils, Claude Monet from le Havre, Frédéric Bazille from Montpellier and Alfred Sisley, an Englishman born in Paris.

Despite their different origins and temperaments these four young artists got on well together and were to form the chore of a movement that was to cause deep changes in the history of painting.

Renoir soon felt that Gleyre's teaching was going against his own idea of painting and decided to leave his studio with his friends in April 1863. They then went to produce paintings on the spot in the forest of Fontainebleau where Renoir met Narcisse Diaz and Gustave Courbet whom he much admired.

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