Search this Site
 
Arts & Crafts Articles »» Art History <<
Search Articles 
Pierre-auguste Renoir - Young Girl Promenading
By Camille Mauclair

Excerpt from "The French Impressionists (1860-1900)"

Renoir's realism bears in spite of all, the imprint of the lyric spirit and of sweetness. It has neither the nervous veracity of Manet, nor the bitterness of Degas, who both love their epoch and find it interesting without idealising it and who have the vision of psychologist novelists. Before everything else he is a painter. What he sees in the Bal au Moulin de la Galette, are not the stigmata of vice and impudence, the ridiculous and the sad sides of the doubtful types of this low resort.

He sees the gaiety of Sundays, the flashes of the sun, the oddity of a crowd carried away by the rhythm of the valses, the laughter, the clinking of glasses, the vibrating and hot atmosphere; and he applies to this spectacle of joyous vulgarity his gifts as a sumptuous colourist, the arabesque of the lines, the gracefulness of his bathers, and the happy eurythmy of his soul. The straw hats are changed into gold, the blue jackets are sapphires, and out of a still exact realism is born a poem of light. The Déjeûner des Canotiers is a subject which has been painted a hundred times, either for the purpose of studying popular types, or of painting white table-cloths amidst sunny foliage. Yet Renoir is the only painter who has raised this small subject to the proportions and the style of a large canvas, through the pictorial charm and the masterly richness of the arrangement.

The Box, conceived in a low harmony, in a golden twilight, is a work worthy of Reynolds. The pale and attentive face of the lady makes one think of the great English master's best works; the necklace, the flesh, the flounce of lace and the hands are marvels of skill and of taste, which the greatest modern virtuosos, Sargent and Besnard, have not surpassed, and, as far as the man in the background is concerned, his white waistcoat, his dress-coat, his gloved hand would suffice to secure the fame of a painter. The Sleeping Woman, the First Step, the Terrace, and the decorative Dance panels reveal Renoir as an intimiste and as an admirable painter of children. His strange colouring and his gifts of grasping nature and of ingenuity—strangers to all decadent complexity—have allowed him to rank among the best of those who have expressed childhood in its true aspect, without overloading it with over-precocious thoughts. Finally, Renoir is a painter of flowers of dazzling variety and exquisite splendour. They supply him with inexhaustible pretexts for suave and subtle harmonies.





 

 Articles
Free Articles
Arts and Crafts
Decorating Tips
Parenting Articles
Most Popular Articles
Top Authors
Submit Article
Contact Us
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to Google


 Authors Login
 Forgot Password?
Not a member? Sign up here!

Submit Article
If you would like to contribute an original article to be shared with our readers, please Click Here!


Start Your Own Mural and Faux Business. Learn the Secrets to Success From a Professional Artist.


 

Home | About Us | Mural Pricing | Contact Us | Link to Us | Add URL | Links | Shopping-DIY Store | Tell-A-Friend | Start Your Own Mural and Faux Business
Photo Gallery Lobby | Childrens Murals | Trompe L'Oeil Murals | Faux painting | Kids room Ideas | Custom Murals | Religious Murals | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Arts and Crafts Articles | Decorating Articles | Parenting Articles | Arts and Crafts Article Directory | Submit an Article | Free widget/RSS/JavaScript/Content | Newsletter
© All rights reserved www.silverspoonmurals.com