Pierre-Auguste Renoir
From Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia
Pierre-Auguste Renoir[1]
(French: [pjɛʁ
oɡyst ʁənwaʁ]; 25 February 1841 – 3 December 1919) was a French
artist who was a leading painter in the development of the
Impressionist style. As a celebrator of beauty and especially
feminine
sensuality, it has been said that "Renoir is the final
representative of a tradition which runs directly from
Rubens to
Watteau."[2]
He was the father of actor
Pierre Renoir (1885–1952), filmmaker
Jean Renoir (1894–1979) and ceramic artist Claude Renoir
(1901–1969). He was the grandfather of the filmmaker
Claude Renoir (1913–1993), son of Pierre.
Life
Youth

The Theater Box, 1874,
Courtauld Institute Galleries, London
Pierre-Auguste Renoir was born
in
Limoges,
Haute-Vienne, France, in 1841. His father, Léonard Renoir, was a
tailor of modest means, so, in 1844, Renoir's family moved to Paris in
search of more favorable prospects. The location of their home, in rue
d’Argenteuil in central
Paris, placed Renoir in proximity to the Louvre. Although the
young Renoir had a natural proclivity for drawing, he exhibited a
greater talent for singing. His talent was encouraged by his teacher,
Charles Gounod, who was the choirmaster at the Church of St Roch
at the time. However, due to the family's financial circumstances,
Renoir had to discontinue his music lessons and leave school at the
age of thirteen to pursue an apprenticeship at a
porcelain factory.[3][4]
HIDE TEXT
Although Renoir displayed a
talent for his work, he frequently tired of the subject matter and
sought refuge in the galleries of the
Louvre. The owner of the factory recognized his apprentice's
talent and communicated this to Renoir's family. Following this,
Renoir started taking lessons to prepare for entry into
Ecole des Beaux Arts. When the
porcelain factory adopted mechanical reproduction processes in
1858, Renoir was forced to find other means to support his learning.[4]
Before he enrolled in art school, he also painted hangings for
overseas missionaries and decorations on fans.[5]
In 1862, he began studying art
under
Charles Gleyre in Paris. There he met
Alfred Sisley,
Frédéric Bazille, and
Claude Monet.[6]
At times, during the 1860s, he did not have enough money to buy paint.
Renoir had his first success at the
Salon of 1868 with his painting
Lise with a Parasol (1867), which depicted
Lise Tréhot, his lover at the time.[7]
Although Renoir first started exhibiting paintings at the
Paris Salon in 1864,[8]
recognition was slow in coming, partly as a result of the turmoil of
the
Franco-Prussian War.
During the
Paris Commune in 1871, while Renoir painted on the banks of the
Seine River, some
Communards thought he was a spy and were about to throw him into
the river, when a leader of the Commune,
Raoul Rigault, recognized Renoir as the man who had protected him
on an earlier occasion.[9]
In 1874, a ten-year friendship with Jules Le Cœur and his family ended,[10]
and Renoir lost not only the valuable support gained by the
association but also a generous welcome to stay on their property near
Fontainebleau and its scenic
forest. This loss of a favorite painting location resulted in a
distinct change of subjects.
Adulthood
Renoir was inspired by the
style and subject matter of previous modern painters
Camille Pissarro and
Édouard Manet.[11]
After a series of rejections by the Salon juries, he joined forces
with Monet, Sisley, Pissarro, and several other artists to mount the
first Impressionist exhibition in April 1874, in which Renoir
displayed six paintings. Although the critical response to the
exhibition was largely unfavorable, Renoir's work was comparatively
well received.[7]
That same year, two of his works were shown with
Durand-Ruel in London.[10]

The Swing (La Balançoire), 1876, oil on canvas,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris
Hoping to secure a livelihood
by attracting portrait commissions, Renoir displayed mostly portraits
at the second Impressionist exhibition in 1876.[12]
He contributed a more diverse range of paintings the next year when
the group presented its third exhibition; they included Dance at Le
Moulin de la Galette and The Swing.[12]
Renoir did not exhibit in the fourth or fifth Impressionist
exhibitions, and instead resumed submitting his works to the Salon. By
the end of the 1870s, particularly after the success of his painting
Mme Charpentier and her Children (1878) at the Salon
of 1879, Renoir was a successful and fashionable painter.[7]

Dance at Le Moulin de la
Galette (Bal
du moulin de la Galette), 1876,
Musée d'Orsay
In 1881, he traveled to
Algeria, a country he associated with
Eugène Delacroix,[13]
then to
Madrid, to see the work of
Diego Velázquez. Following that, he traveled to Italy to see
Titian's masterpieces in
Florence and the paintings of
Raphael in Rome. On 15 January 1882, Renoir met the composer
Richard Wagner at his home in
Palermo, Sicily. Renoir painted Wagner's portrait in just
thirty-five minutes. In the same year, after contracting pneumonia
which permanently damaged his respiratory system, Renoir convalesced
for six weeks in Algeria.[14]
In 1883, Renoir spent the
summer in
Guernsey, one of the
islands in the
English Channel with a varied landscape of beaches, cliffs, and
bays, where he created fifteen paintings in little over a month. Most
of these feature Moulin Huet, a bay in
Saint Martin's, Guernsey. These paintings were the subject of a
set of commemorative postage stamps issued by the Bailiwick of
Guernsey in 1983.
While living and working in
Montmartre, Renoir employed
Suzanne Valadon as a model, who posed for him (The Large
Bathers, 1884–1887;
Dance at Bougival, 1883)[15]
and many of his fellow painters; during that time she studied their
techniques and eventually became one of the leading painters of the
day.
In 1887, the year when
Queen Victoria celebrated her
Golden Jubilee, and upon the request of the queen's associate,
Phillip Richbourg, Renoir donated several paintings to the "French
Impressionist Paintings" catalog as a token of his loyalty.

Luncheon of the Boating Party, 1880–1881
In 1890, he married
Aline Victorine Charigot, a dressmaker twenty years his junior,[16]
who, along with a number of the artist's friends, had already served
as a model for Le Déjeuner des canotiers (Luncheon
of the Boating Party; she is the woman on the left playing
with the dog) in 1881, and with whom he had already had a child,
Pierre, in 1885.[14]
After marrying, Renoir painted many scenes of his wife and daily
family life including their children and their nurse, Aline's cousin
Gabrielle Renard. The Renoirs had three sons:
Pierre Renoir (1885–1952), who became a stage and film actor;
Jean Renoir (1894–1979), who became a filmmaker of note; and
Claude Renoir (1901–1969), who became a ceramic artist.
Later years

Pierre-Auguste Renoir, c. 1910
Around 1892, Renoir developed
rheumatoid arthritis. In 1907, he moved to the warmer climate of
"Les Collettes," a farm at the village of
Cagnes-sur-Mer,
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, close to the
Mediterranean coast.[17]
Renoir painted during the last twenty years of his life even after his
arthritis severely limited his mobility. He developed progressive
deformities in his hands and
ankylosis of his right shoulder, requiring him to change his
painting technique. It has often been reported that in the advanced
stages of his arthritis, he painted by having a brush strapped to his
paralyzed fingers,[18]
but this is erroneous; Renoir remained able to grasp a brush, although
he required an assistant to place it in his hand.[19]
The wrapping of his hands with bandages, apparent in late photographs
of the artist, served to prevent skin irritation.[19]
In 1919, Renoir visited the
Louvre to see his paintings hanging with those of the old masters.
During this period, he created sculptures by cooperating with a young
artist,
Richard Guino, who worked the clay. Due to his limited joint
mobility, Renoir also used a moving canvas, or picture roll, to
facilitate painting large works.[19]
Renoir's portrait of Austrian
actress
Tilla Durieux (1914) contains playful flecks of vibrant color on
her shawl that offset the classical pose of the actress and highlight
Renoir's skill just five years before his death.
Renoir died at Cagnes-sur-Mer
on 3 December 1919.[20]
Family legacy
Pierre-Auguste Renoir's
great-grandson, Alexandre Renoir, has also become a professional
artist. In 2018, the Monthaven Arts and Cultural Center in
Hendersonville, Tennessee hosted Beauty Remains, an exhibition
of his works. The exhibition title comes from a famous quote by
Pierre-Auguste who, when asked why he continued to paint with his
painful arthritis in his advanced years, once said "The pain passes,
but the beauty remains."[21]
Artworks

Two Sisters (On the Terrace), oil on canvas, 1881,
Art Institute of Chicago
Renoir's paintings are notable
for their vibrant light and saturated color, most often focusing on
people in intimate and candid compositions. The female nude was one of
his primary subjects. However, in 1876, a reviewer in
Le Figaro wrote "Try to explain to Monsieur Renoir that a woman's
torso is not a mass of decomposing flesh with those purplish green
stains that denote a state of complete putrefaction in a corpse."[22]
Yet in characteristic Impressionist style, Renoir suggested the
details of a scene through freely brushed touches of colour, so that
his figures softly fuse with one another and their surroundings.
Portrait of Irène Cahen d'Anvers (La Petite Irène),
1880,
Foundation E.G. Bührle, Zürich[23]
His initial paintings show the
influence of the colorism of
Eugène Delacroix and the luminosity of
Camille Corot. He also admired the realism of
Gustave Courbet and
Édouard Manet, and his early work resembles theirs in his use of
black as a color. Renoir admired
Edgar Degas' sense of movement. Other painters Renoir greatly
admired were the 18th-century masters
François Boucher and
Jean-Honoré Fragonard.[24]
A fine example of Renoir's
early work and evidence of the influence of Courbet's realism, is
Diana, 1867. Ostensibly a mythological subject, the
painting is a naturalistic studio work; the figure carefully observed,
solidly modeled and superimposed upon a contrived landscape. If the
work is a "student" piece, Renoir's heightened personal response to
female sensuality is present. The model was Lise Tréhot, the artist's
mistress at that time, and inspiration for a number of paintings.[25]
In the late 1860s, through the
practice of painting light and water
en plein air (outdoors), he and his friend
Claude Monet discovered that the color of shadows is not brown or
black, but the reflected color of the objects surrounding them, an
effect known today as
diffuse reflection. Several pairs of paintings exist in which
Renoir and Monet worked side-by-side, depicting the same scenes (La
Grenouillère, 1869).
One of the best known
Impressionist works is Renoir's 1876 Dance at Le Moulin de la
Galette (Bal
du moulin de la Galette). The painting depicts an
open-air scene, crowded with people at a popular dance garden on the
Butte Montmartre close to where he lived. The works of his
early maturity were typically Impressionist snapshots of real life,
full of sparkling color and light.

One of a
series, Blonde Bather (1881), marked a distinct change in
style following a trip to Italy
By the mid-1880s, however, he
had broken with the movement to apply a more disciplined formal
technique to portraits and figure paintings, particularly of women. It
was a trip to Italy in 1881 when he saw works by
Raphael,
Leonardo da Vinci,
Titian, and other
Renaissance masters, that convinced him that he was on the wrong
path. At that point he declared, "I had gone as far as I could with
Impressionism and I realized I could neither paint nor draw".[26]
For the next several years he
painted in a more severe style in an attempt to return to classicism.[27]
Concentrating on his drawing and emphasizing the outlines of figures,
he painted works such as
Blonde Bather (1881 and 1882) and The Large Bathers
(1884–87;
Philadelphia Museum of Art) during what is sometimes referred to
as his "Ingres
period".[28]

Girls at the Piano, 1892,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris
After 1890 he changed
direction again. To dissolve outlines, as in his earlier work, he
returned to thinly brushed color.
From this period onward he
concentrated on monumental nudes and domestic scenes, fine examples of
which are
Girls at the Piano, 1892, and
Grandes Baigneuses, 1887. The latter painting is the most
typical and successful of Renoir's late, abundantly fleshed nudes.[29]
A prolific artist, he created
several thousand paintings. The warm sensuality of Renoir's style made
his paintings some of the most well-known and frequently reproduced
works in the history of art. The single largest collection of his
works—181 paintings in all—is at the
Barnes Foundation, in
Philadelphia.
Catalogue raisonné
A five-volume
catalogue raisonné of Renoir's works (with one supplement)
was published by
Bernheim-Jeune between 1983 and 2014.[30]
Bernheim-Jeune is the only surviving major art dealer that was used by
Renoir. The
Wildenstein Institute is preparing, but has not yet published, a
critical catalogue of Renoir's work.[31]
A disagreement between these two organizations concerning an unsigned
work in
Picton Castle was at the centre of the second episode of the
fourth season of the television series
Fake or Fortune.
Posthumous prints
In 1919,
Ambroise Vollard, a renowned art dealer, published a book on the
life and work of Renoir, La Vie et l'Œuvre de Pierre-Auguste Renoir,
in an edition of 1000 copies. In 1986, Vollard's heirs started
reprinting the copper plates, generally,
etchings with hand applied
watercolor. These prints are signed by Renoir in the plate and are
embossed "Vollard" in the lower margin. They are not numbered, dated
or signed in pencil.
Posthumous sales
A small version of
Bal du moulin de la Galette sold for $78.1 million 17 May
1990 at Sotheby's New York.[32]
In 2012, Renoir's
Paysage Bords de Seine was offered for sale at auction but
the painting was discovered to have been stolen from the
Baltimore Museum of Art in 1951. The sale was cancelled.
Gallery of paintings
Portraits and landscapes

Lise Sewing, 1866,
Dallas Museum of Art

La Grenouillère, 1868,
Nationalmuseum, Stockholm

Portrait of
Alfred Sisley, 1868

Pont-Neuf, 1872

Claude Monet Painting in His Garden at
Argenteuil, 1873,
Wadsworth Atheneum,
Hartford, Connecticut

La Parisienne, 1874, (Henriette
Henriot),
National Museum Cardiff

The Dancer, 1874,
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Portrait of
Claude Monet, 1875,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, France

The Grands Boulevards, 1875,
Philadelphia Museum of Art

A Girl with a Watering Can, 1876,
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Mother and Children, 1876,
Frick Collection, New York City

Portrait of
Jeanne Samary, 1877,
Pushkin Museum, Moscow

Mme. Charpentier and her
children, 1878,
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

Portrait of Alphonsine
Fournaise, 1879,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, France

Pierre-Auguste Renoir,
Boating on the Seine (La Yole), c. 1879

By the Water, 1880,
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois

Sleeping Girl with a Cat,
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Massachusetts

Pink and Blue showing Alice and Elisabeth Cahen d'Anvers,
1881,
São Paulo Museum of Art, São Paulo

The Piazza San Marco,
Venice, 1881 (Minneapolis Institute of Art)

Fillette au chapeau bleu,
1881, (Jane
Henriot), private collection

Portrait of Charles and
Georges
Durand-Ruel, 1882

Dance at Bougival, 1882–1883, (woman at left is painter
Suzanne Valadon),
Boston Museum of Fine Arts

Dance in the Country (Aline Charigot and Paul Lhote),
1883,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Dance in the City, 1883,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris, France

Girl With a Hoop, 1885,
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

Girl Braiding Her Hair (Suzanne
Valadon), 1885

Still Life: Flowers, 1885,
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York

Tamaris, France, c.
1885 (Minneapolis Institute of Art)

La Roche Guyon,
1885–86,
Aberdeen Art Gallery

Julie Manet with cat, 1887

Young Woman with a Blue Choker, 1888

Young Girl with Red Hair,
1894

Portrait of
Berthe Morisot and daughter
Julie Manet, 1894

Head of a Young Woman,
late 19th century (Minneapolis
Institute of Art)

Gabrielle Renard and infant son
Jean Renoir, 1895

Portrait of
Ambroise Vollard, 1908

Portrait of
Paul Durand-Ruel, 1910

Portrait of
Ambroise Vollard, 1917

Woman with a
Mandolin, 1919
Self-portraits

Self-portrait, 1875

Self-portrait, 1876

Self-portrait, 1910

Self-portrait, 1910
Nudes

Diana, 1867, The
National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC

Nude in the Sun, 1875,
Musée d'Orsay, Paris

Seated Girl, 1883

The Large Bathers, 1887,
Philadelphia Museum of Art

After The Bath, 1888

Three Bathers, 1895,
Cleveland Museum of Art
Cleveland, Ohio

Nude,
National Museum of Serbia, Belgrade

After The Bath, 1910,
Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia

Woman at the Well, 1910

Seated Bather Drying Her
Leg, 1914,
Musée de l'Orangerie, Paris

Women Bathers, 1916,
National Museum, Stockholm

Bathers, 1918,
Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia
Interactive image

Clickable
image of the
Luncheon of the Boating Party (1881) by
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (The
Phillips Collection,
Washington, D.C.).
Place your mouse cursor over a person in the painting to see their
name;
click to link to an article about them.
|