Date: Fri 27-Feb-1998
Date: Fri 27-Feb-1998
Publication: Ant
Author: JUDIR
Quick Words:
Dahesh
Full Text:
Training An Artist
w/3 cuts
NEW YORK CITY -- The Dahesh Museum will present "Training an Artist: Alexandre
Cabanel and the Academic Process in Nineteenth Century France" from March 10
to June 13.
The exhibition traces the development of academic art from sketch to finished
painting by exploring how the Nineteenth Century French academic artist was
created through a rigorous system of training and competition. More than 40
prints and photographs, drawings, oil sketches, plaster casts and finished
paintings show how leading academic artists such as Cabanel were carefully
honed for artistic success by the intensive training process of the Ecole des
Beaux-Arts and competition for the Prix de Rome.
"Training an Artist" follows Cabanel and other renowned academic artists such
as Adolphe-William Bourguereau through their training and competition,
revealing to the viewer how they acquired - and later used - the constituent
elements and techniques of history painting, foremost among them mastering the
nude human figure, theatricalized expression, linear perspective and rigorous
pictorial composition.
Focusing on the process of training rather than simply its finished product,
the exhibition reveals how a rigorous system of instruction shaped artists not
only within the French academy but in the United States as well as Europe.
"Training an Artist" presents loans drawn from the Ecole Nationale Superieure
des Beaux-Arts, Paris, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Art Institute of
Chicago, The Baltimore Museum of Art, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, The Art
Students League of New York and the National Academy Museum and School of Fine
Arts.
The exhibition also features academic works from the Dahesh Museum's own
collection, including its recently acquired early Cabanel masterpiece, "The
Death of Moses" (1851), Francois-Leon Benouville's "Portrait of Leconte de
Floris" (1840), a study for "Captive Andromache" (circa 1888) by Frederic Lord
Leighton, J.A.F. Naudin's "Joseph's Coat Brought Back to Jacob" (a submission
to the 1841 Prix de Rome contest) and Theodore Ribot's drawing, "In the
Kitchen."
Cabanel's monumental canvas, "The Death of Moses," is the centerpiece of the
exhibition. This early masterpiece represents the culmination of Ecole des
Beaux Arts training. It was Cabanel's "dernier envoi" - the last painting he
sent to Paris after five years of study at the French Academy in Rome - and it
established his reputation when it won second prize at the Salon of 1852.
Embarking with this work as a summation of Cabanel's early training and as a
paradigm of the successful academic artist's acquisition of requisite
history-painting skills, the exhibition unfolds as a deconstruction of a
finished masterpiece, unwrapping each layer of skill and technique acquired by
Alexandre Cabanel as he traversed the road of a student at the Ecole des
Beaux-Arts to the crowning achievement of an artist of his day, the Prix de
Rome.
Although it focuses on Cabanel as an exemplar of academic success in
Nineteenth Century France, "Training an Artist" also presents comparative
works by other artists of Cabanel's generation that trace their progressive
mastering of the fundamental skills of history painting, particularly the
depiction of the human figure.
Nude studies, including examples from a competition in which students at the
Ecole des Beaux-Arts were required to paint a half-figure composition from a
live model within a specified period of time, are a central focus of the
exhibition, which features successful student entries by the young Leon
Benouville and Adolphe-William Bourguereau. It also presents works in which
artists demonstrate their ability to capture emblematic and expressive human
emotions, from melancholy to disdain, that would later be deployed as central,
dramatic ingredients of history paintings such as Benouville's "Jesus in the
Praetorium" (1845).
The exhibition also pairs works by artists of the same generation - such as
Benouville and Cabanel, respectively first- and second-place winners at the
Prix de Rome contest of 1845 - to demonstrate the atmosphere of competition
that shaped artists-in-training of the day.
A series of public programs that focus on Nineteenth and Twentieth Century
approaches to the training of artists will complement the exhibition. The
Dahesh Museum is located at 601 Fifth Avenue at 48th Street and is open
Tuesday through Saturday, 11 am to 6 pm. Admission is free.
