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| Pierre-Auguste Renoir (1841 - 1919)
was a hugely prolific artists, completing some 6000 paintings during his
carrer. Born in Limoges, France on February 25, 1841 his father Leonard was
a tailor and mother Marguerite a seamstress. Renoir, the youngest child, had
a happy childhood in Paris. Interestingly the Renoir family's first home in
Paris was an apartment in the Louvre which was then still a royal palace.
Renoir spent five years as a porcelain painter. His work payed well and
earned a him the nick-name Mr Rubens for his skilled brushwork. When the
porcelain factory was automated Renoir's position became obsolete and he
spent a year painting murals in cafes before joining the art school of
Charles Gleyre in 1862.
Though the schooling with Gleyre was very traditional it was of good
quality and with an emphasis on sketching outdoors. Fellow students at
Gleyre's school included
Claude Monet,
Alfred Sisley and
Frederic Bazille . Renoir's connection with these artists led to
him meeting
Edgar Degas and
Edouard Manet . The concept of impressionism developed from the
times this group spent together in the cafes of Paris. The first
impressionist paintings were those produced by Renoir and Monet during the
summer of 1869.
Prior to this, Renoir had met 16 year old Lise Trehot, whose dark
features and rounded figure attracted Renoir. Lise became Renoir's favorite
model and mistress and can be seen in a number of works from this period.
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| In 1870 Renoir was called up for duty in the
Franco-Prussian War returning to Paris in 1871. The impressionist group
reformed and he met Paul Durand-Ruel, the first art dealer to support the
impressionists. This led to enough sales for Renoir to move into a large
studio in the Rue St Georges, gradually a small group of other enthusiastic
followers emerged.
His collectors increased among the hierarchy of Parisian society. Around
1880 Renoir met Aline Charigot a pretty girl about 20 years his junior who
had occasionally been his model. Aline and Renoir developed a relationship
over the summer of 1881 while he painted his impressionist masterpiece
The Luncheon of the Boating Party for which she modelled. Aline
appears in the foreground her natural beauty eccentuated by the red flowers
in her hat and a show of gentle affection to the small dog which she holds.
The Umbrellas was also begun in 1881.
Aline later ended the relationship. Renoir responded by travelling first
to Normandy, then to Algeria, then to Spain to see the work of
Velazquez and then Italy to see
Titian's work in Florence and Raphael in Rome. On January 15 1882
in Italy Renoir met composer Richard Wagner at his home in Sicily and
painted his portait in only 35 minutes. |
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| Throughout his travels Renoir's love for Aline
remained strong and in 1882 he returned to Paris to marry her. Moving
back into his old Rue St Georges studio, Renoir developd a new style of
painting, surrounding his figures with sharp hard outlines as can be
seen in The Bathers (1884 -7). This is known as his 'harsh' style. At
first his dealer had difficulty in selling this new style of painting
until about 1885 when it became popular with the Americans. 1885 also
saw the birth of Pierre, the first of three sons.
In 1887 Renoir broke his arm falling from a bicycle. This brought on
his first attack of muscular rheumatism. This disease worstened as time
went on making Renoir constantly in pain but he continued to paint.
Chasing the pain relieving warmth Renoir spent more and more time in the
south of France. The brilliant light, beauty and warmth combined to ease
the pain and enthuse his creativity, but it was far from a cure. By 1912
Renoir's arms and legs were crippled and he was confined to a
wheelchair. Despite all of this and the death of Aline in 1915, Renoir
still continued to paint.
Over his last few years of life Renoir began to sculpt with the
assistance of two young sculptors to work as his hands, as his were too
crippled to use. And to the end he continued to paint, working in a
glass studio constructed in his garden and with his loyal aide
Gabrielle having to push the paint brush between his twisted
fingers. Pierre-Auguste Renoir died on the night of December 3, 1919 |
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