We
finish would look at the works of Jean-Louis Ernest Meissonier (1815-1891) with this treasure from
1853, The Chess Players. This small scale painting (just 9.5x12.5 –
slightly larger than the paper in your printer) is quite terrific. One of the more interesting things about this
picture, to my mind, is how Meissonier plays again and again with patterns.
A chessboard
has a specific pattern – fair enough. But then see how he buffets this with
square shapes representing the ornate room divider, the tapestries, and various
pictures scattered about the room. Also interesting
is how he places his major players in the picture – the player on the left
poised for attack, the player on the right hesitant, the sleeping dog and table
with decanter standing off to the side like unused pieces in a game. Here is composition as strategy, and it
illustrates the keen eye Meissonier had for placement and his very conscious
selection of components of a picture.
One of
the other fascinating things about this work, when seen opposite some of his
other pictures, is the lack of detail. To
be sure the chairs, the clothes, the tables and the dog are all depicted with a
photographic sensibility, but Meissonier chooses to uncharacteristically wash-out
some of the background detail. We have
only a sense of the tapestries, room divider and surrounding pictures. I think, though, that this is in keeping with
Meissonier’s overall approach to the picture: the “board” is less important
than the psychology of the major “pieces.”
Unlike
contemporary artists, Meissonier believed in that fine art helped make for a
better citizenry. He wanted art to be an
elevating experience, filled with the grandeur of history and the lessons found
in heroic deeds. He consciously spent
the later part of his life painting scenes of Napoleonic glory. Executed with the same fine brushwork and
acute attention to detail as his earlier subjects, these scenes from the great
days of the French Empire eventually made Meissonier’s works the
highest-grossing, most sought-after paintings of any living artist. The largest
and most-ambitious of these works, finished in 1875, was Friedland (see below), now in the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
It sold for 380,000 francs, more than triple the highest price ever paid
for a painting by a living artist. Unlike
his smaller works, Friedland was a
large-scale picture which took the artist 14 years to complete. It is considered by many to be his
masterpiece, but I much prefer his smaller, more intimate pictures.
It is
interesting to contrast a picture like The Chess Players with Friedland. Though both pictures are
composition-as-strategy, and involve participation in a game of war, the
smaller picture has a warmth, humanity and … sensitivity missing from the larger
work. Perhaps depictions of simple
people, living their lives, is the most elevating artistic goal of all.
No comments:
Post a Comment