After
our recent survey of works by Leon
Cogniet (1794-1880), I thought it would be interesting to look at some
pictures by his most successful student, Jean-Louis Ernest
Meissonier (1815-1891).
Meissonier was born
in Lyons, and showed a taste for painting during his early boyhood. Some of his surviving sketches from 1823 show
considerable promise; but his family still placed him with a druggist so he
could learn a trade. After a while, he managed to obtain leave from his parents
to study art, and thanks to a recommendation from painter Jules Potier, he was admitted to Leon Cogniet’s studio. He paid
short visits to Rome and to Switzerland, and exhibited in the Salon of 1831 a
picture then called Les Bourgeois
Flamands --also known as The Visit
to the Burgomaster. It was the first attempt in France in the particular
genre which was destined to make Meissonier famous: miniatures in oils.
Meissonier
started working for various publishers, producing highly finished
illustrations, while also working on pictures for the Salon (appearing in 1836 with
The Chess Players and The Errand Boy).
Meissonier
dabbled unsuccessfully in religious painting, a genre he never really
mastered. But he continued to paint –
and his work found great favor with the European public, making him one of the
most successful (and wealthiest) painter of his generation. In 1855 he reached the highest mark of his
achievement with The Gamblers and The Quarrel, which was presented by Napoleon III to the English Court. During the Salon of 1857 he exhibited nine
pictures and drawings.
Meissonier
was a slow worker, sometimes taking as long as 10 years on a canvas. Despite his painstaking craftsmanship, he
managed to create an astonishing number of pictures: for example, he exhibited
16 pictures to the great exhibition of 1878.
Meissonier
eventually moved away from the Salons and sent his work to smaller exhibitions.
He made huge amounts of money, and, more important, significant social and
political connections. In 1838,
Meissonier married into an artistic family.
He was attached by Napoleon III to the imperial staff, and accompanied
him during the campaign in Italy and at the beginning of the war in 1870. During the siege of Paris in 1871, Meissonier
was named a colonel of a marching regiment. In 1840 he was awarded a
third-class medal and a second-class medal in 1841; these followed by
first-class medals in 1843 and 1844 and medals of honor at the great
exhibitions. In 1846 he was appointed knight of the Legion of Honor and later
received the Grand Cross in 1889. And if
you doubted that he was the most successful painter of his time – he would have
been the first to correct you.
Today’s
picture is not that small – 24x28 – but it does show all of Meissonier’s
considerable skill. Many in today’s
contemporary art establishment would say that The Sergeant's Portrait, painted in 1874, was kitsch, but they
would be wrong. Here is a painting of
considerable skill, created by a master of composition and with a fine sense of
humor.
Gad … I
like this picture. First off, it shows
how seat-of-the-paints informal portraiture of the era truly was. Artists – or friends and family members with
some ability – were often huddled over chairs, trying to capture a
likeness. I particularly like the look
of strained concentration of the artist’s face – something you will see on the
face of anyone working on a picture. (Contrast
his intensity to the two rather bored, but still judgmental, soldiers looking
over his shoulder on the right hand side of the painting, and with the two on
the left hand side who are standing by expectantly! And see the completely disinterested
participant, leaning against the wall and idly smoking – a wonderful touch.)
Perhaps
the two figures that make the picture most amusing are those of the model and
the dog. The model stands, hands on
hips, knees bents, and perhaps a bit impatient.
The dog, however, looks up at him … wondering just what that fellow he’s
looking at is about to do.
Meissonier
worked in a manner that prized high finish and depth of detail. Look, for example, at the brickwork of the
building in the background: bits of mortar and subtle gradation of color are
evident. The cobblestones show
considerable virtuosity, and I am deeply impressed by the level of detail on
the soldiers’ uniforms. This is a
picture that is smart, funny, and brilliantly executed.
More Meissonier tomorrow!
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