Pierre August Renoir (Kunst)
Pierre August Renoir (1841-1919) was born in Limoges, France and moved to Paris with his family when he was just four years old. At the tender age of thirteen, young Renoir worked at a porcelain factory where he learned his earliest lessons of color and drawing and became a skilled decorator of fine china. The budding artist often visited the Louvre, which was still half-palace and half-museum. There the young budding artist began his formative studies of the French masters.
In 1862, Renoir joined the classical painting school of Charles Gleyre, where he met Alfred Sisley, Frédéric Bazille, and Claude Monet, who were all exploring plein air painting and studying the effects of color and light.
He first exhibited at the Paris Salon in 1864, but his recognition did not come for nearly a decade. Through the 1860s, he sometimes could hardly afford to even buy paints. Finally in 1874, he displayed six works at the first Salon des Réfuses, the pioneer exhibition of the Impressionists. With a new avant-garde audience,Renoir found acceptance and recognition of his extraordinary abilities.
Although he was one of the most controversial Impressionists, Renoir eventually established himself with the general public and eventually participated in the official Salons. By 1880, he also began concentrating on painting the female figure. But Renoir never gave up his roots as a traditional arts craftsman and as an admirer of the old masters. In the early 1880sRenoirhad the feeling of exhaustion and that he had done everything he could do with Impressionist style.
Starting in 1881, Renoir traveled to Algeria, Spain, and Italy, absorbing the styles and techniques of Delacroix, Velazquez, Raphael, and Titian. Through the 1880s, he worked with the Italian style of restrained brushwork and empathetic modeling of subjects, focusing on details and more elaborate lines. In 1883, he spent a prolific summer painting at Guernsey, an island in the English Channel.
As Renoir matured, his style changed again, growing softer and more sketchily outlined. He used very strong colorsoften reds and orangesand thick brush strokes. His preferred subjects were voluptuous young female nudes.
Stricken with severe arthritis, by 1903 he was hardly able to hold the brush. Yet, still determined to paint, he resorted to strapping the brush to his wrist. This improvised technique affected his style in the last decade of his life, but it allowed him to continue painting through the last years of his life. At the end of his life in 1919,Renoir had the rare opportunity to see his own paintings hanging at the Louvre alongside the masterpieces that influenced him as a young boy.
Art Institute of Chicago
Fitzwilliam Museum at the University of Cambridge
J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles
Louvre Museum, Paris
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Minneapolis Institute of Arts
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.
National Gallery of Canada, National Gallery, London
Norton Museum of Art, Florida
State Hermitage Museum, Russia
Aberdeen Art Gallery and Museums, Scotland
Accademia Carrara, Italy
Appleton Museum of Art, Florida
Chrysler Museum, Virginia
Cincinnati Art Museum, Ohio
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Folkwang Museum, Germany
Joslyn Art Museum, Nebraska
Le Chateau-Musee de Dieppe, France
Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Quebec
Musée dOrsay, Paris
Musee des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux
Musée Marmottan Monet, Paris
Museu Calouste Gulbenkian, Lisbon
Museu de Arte de Sao Paulo, Brazil
National Museum of Western Art, Tokyo
National Museum, Sweden
New Orleans Museum of Art, Louisiana
Norton Simon Museum, California
Portland Museum of Art, Maine
Reading Public Museum, Pennsylvania
Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Israel
Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Connecticut
Wright Museum of Art at Beloit College, Wisconsin
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