ArtCult : News of the art market .
Find in the whole site :
  Home
  News
  Features
  Experts tools
  Communication
  Une question ?
Recherche
Find in page Biographies :
Find in the whole site :

Actuellement
Latest Ads
27/06: A MAN NOT TO BE TRUSTED
A man by the name of Oscar Oleg (alproofing75@gmail.com ) has been asking artcult ...
07/03: LOOKING FOR MISSING PIECES
URGENTLY LOOKING FOR THE FOLLOWING MISSING PIECES SINCE FEBRUARY 3, 20161) Fauv...
05/01: MR ROBINSON'S DEC 6, 2014 FORGOTTEN RAMPAGE
On December 6, 2014 Mr David Robinson of Pacific Grove (CA) visited the Au Temps Jadis ...
> Post an ad
Online estimate
Send us a photography and a description and questions, and we will return our point of view.
Sumit estimate

Newsletter
Type in your email to subscribe to our newsletter

Biographies

Page précédente 91/165
Retour
RENOIR : A ROMANTIC IMPRESSIONIST MASTER

Cet article se compose de 10 pages.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Renoir resuscitated old mythological legends like the Judgement of Pâris in 1908. Still he also painted the portraits of many friends though he preferred to represent young women like Gabrielle Renard, Madeleine Bruno, Hélène Bellon, Joséphine Gastaud or Andrée Hessling called «Dédé» who became Jean Renoir's first wife in 1920.
Renoir, despite being affected by severe bouts of rhumatism, was then at his height like when he painted Gabrielle with her naked breasts in 1907 or a similar portrait with jewels in 1910. He had finally mastered the art of applying vibrant colours on the canvas in sticking to close reality.
However, despite being confined to a wheelchair from 1912, he continued to paint until the end of his life taking up sculpture in his late years with his assistant Richard Guino to act as his hands.

The outbreak of the First World War caused a rupture in his life. His two sons Pierre and Jean enlisted in the French army and were soon engaged in fighting in Eastern France. Both were seriously wounded and their anxious mother rushed to the hospital where they had been sent. Back in Cagnes she fell ill and Renoir rushed her to an hospital in Nice but she died on June 28th 1915.
Much affected by the death of his wife, Renoir's health progressively deteriorated. He returned to Paris and working with his brushes attached to his forearm and fingers, he produced his last paintings and was happy to see his portrait of Mrs Charpentier exhibited in the Louvre Museum. Renoir was given a warm reception in the Museum, which he visited in his wheel-chair while he was hailed as the «Pope of painting». Back in Cagnes, he resumed work but caught a cold while painting in his garden.

On December 1st 1919, after posing for the sculptor Marcel Gimond he had a chat with the dealer Ambroise Vollard and Felix Fénéon, adviser to the Bernheim Jeune Gallery.

Then he felt feverish and weak after starting to paint a small still life of apples and was forced to lay down. He died at 2 a.m on December 3rd after asking for his palette to paint some woodcocks to which his doctor had referred to while at his bedside telling him that he had killed two such birds during a hunting party. «Give me my palette back... Turn the head of this woodcock to the left... I cannot paint this beak... Colours, quickly... Change the place of these woodcocks», were his last words.

Renoir was among the most interesting Impressionist painters because of his subjects- children, flowers, beautiful scenes and nudes- and his desire to make art pretty.

Today Renoir's paintings are rated between $ 20,000 for very small studies up to between $ 1 million and $ 82 millions (Le Moulin de la Galette) for major works.
Adrian Darmon

Mentions légales Conditions d'utilisation Rédaction Annonceurs Plan du site
Login : Password ArtCult - Made by Adrian Darmon