Daumier, Honoré
Contributors:
Mark Harden and
Carol Gerten-Jackson.
Daumier, Honoré (1808-79).
French caricaturist, painter, and sculptor.
In his lifetime he was known chiefly as a political and social satirist,
but since his death recognition of his qualities as a painter has grown.
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Two Sculptors
Undated (150 Kb); Oil on wood, 11 x 14 in;
The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.
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Wandering Saltimbanques
c. 1847-50 (130 Kb); Oil on wood, 32.6 x 24.8 cm (12 7/8 x 9 3/4 in);
The National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
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The Burden (The Laundress)
c. 1850-53 (110 Kb);
Oil on canvas, 130 x 98 cm (51 1/8 x 38 5/8 in);
The Hermitage, St. Petersburg;
No. 3K 1500. Formerly collection Gerstenberg/Scharf, Berlin
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The Uprising
c. 1860 (190 Kb); Oil on canvas, 87.6 x 113 cm (34 1/2 x 44 1/2 in);
The Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.
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Laveuse au Quai d'Anjou (Laundress on the Quai d'Anjou)
c. 1860 (170 Kb);
Oil on wood panel, cradled, 28.5 x 19.7 cm (11 1/4 x 7 3/4 in);
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY
In 1830, after learning the still fairly new process of
lithography,
he began to contribute political cartoons to the anti-government weekly
Caricature.
He was an ardant Republican and was sentenced to six months' imprisonment
in 1832 for his attacks on Louis-Philippe, whom he represented as
`Gargantua swallowing bags of gold extorted from the people'.
On the suppression of political satire in 1835 he began to work for
Charivari and turned to satire of social life,
but at the time of the 1848 revolution he returned to political subjects.
He is said to have made more than 4,000 lithographs, wishing each time
that the one he had just made could be his last. In the last years of
his life he was almost blind and was saved from destitution by
Corot.
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Don Quixote and the Dead Mule
1867 (180 Kb); 132.5 x 54.5 cm, Musee d'Orsay, Paris
Daumier's paintings were probably done for the most part fairly late in
his career. Although he was accepted four times by the
Salon,
he never exhibited his paintings otherwise and they remained practically
unknown up to the time of an exhibition held at
Durand-Ruel's gallery in 1878, the year of his death.
The paintings are in the main a documentation of contemporary life and
manners with satirical overtones, although he also did a number featuring
Don Quixote as a larger-than-life hero.
His technique was remarkably broad and free. As a sculptor he specialized
in caricature heads and figures, and these too are in a very spontaneous
style. In particular he created the memorable figure of `Ratapoil'
(meaning `skinned rat'), who embodied the sinister agents of the government
of Louis-Philippe. A similar political type in his graphic art was
`Robert Macaire', who personified the unscrupulous profiteer and swindler.
In the directness of his vision and the lack of sentimentality with which
he depicts current social life Daumier belongs to the
Realist school of which
Courbet
was the chief representative. As a caricaturist he stands head and shoulders
above all others of the 19th-century. He had the gift of expressing the
whole character of a man through physiognomy, and the essence of his
satire lay in his power to interpret mental folly in terms of physical
absurdity. Although he never made a commercial success of his art, he was
appreciated by the discriminating and numbered among his friends and
admirers
Delacroix,
Corot, Forain, and Baudelaire.
Degas
was among the artists who collected his works.
Daumier and the lower classes
Honore Daumier, a French artist, was deeply interested in people,
especially the underprivileged. In
Third-Class Carriage
he shows us, with
great compassion, a group of people on a train journey. We are especially
concerned with one family group, the young mother tenderly holding her small
child, the weary grandmother lost in her own thoughts, and the young boy fast
asleep. The painting is done with simple power and economy of line. The
hands, for example, are reduced to mere outlines but beautifully drawn. The
bodies are as solid as clay, their bulk indicated by stressing the essential
and avoiding the nonessential. These are not portraits of particular people
but of mankind.
© 28 Jan 1996,
Nicolas Pioch -
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