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Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret Biography
French Naturalist painter and printmaker Student of: Alexandre Cabanel (1823-1889), Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (1796-1875), Jean Léon Gérôme (1824-1904). |
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Although he was a Parisian who kept an atelier in Neuilly (just outside Paris) for most of his career, Pascal Adolphe Jean Dagnan Bouveret married into a Franc-Comtois family. He is always mentioned among a group of Franc-Comtois artists including Gustave Courtois (1852-1923) (a cousin of his wife), Louis Girardot (1856-1933), and Jules-Alexis Muenier (1863-1942) all of whom had been students of J.L. Gérôme, a painter who was also from the same general region of France. As a naturalist / regionalist he established his reputation with compositions representing the rural life of the Franche-Comté and of Brittany. These Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret paintings made him one of the most respected members of an international naturalist circle that allowed him to have a very strong influence over other painters, working in a similar vein on the European continent, in England, and in America. It is only later in his career, first in the mid 1880s and then more dramatically in the 1890s, that Pascal Adolphe Jean Dagnan-Bouveret turned to religious themes. These became increasingly more visionary and supernatural during the early years of the 20th century. Spiritual themes reflected his determined turn toward religious revivalism, a genre that obsessed many artists in the 1890s; it also reflected the powerful influence of his wife whose own devout Catholicism was influential in moving him toward some of his religious themes. Spiritual Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret paintings found strong support in the atmosphere of the Catholic Revival in France; Pascal-Adolphe-Jean Dagnan-Bouveret paintings such as the mystical Supper at Emmaus and the Consolatrix Afflictorum (Frick Art and Historical Center, Pittsburgh), among others, were exhibited in a separate location at the Paris World's Fair of 1900 at a moment when his work was highly praised by the establishment. Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret paintings were also well recognized in the United States as they were reproduced in American periodicals, and collected by such independent tastemakers as George Baker, Mrs. Potter Palmer, and Henry Clay Frick. Pascal Adolphe Jean Dagnan-Bouveret was also a portraitist of talent and in his later years he divided his activity between portraits and religious scenes. He painted members of some of the best established families of the Third Republic; Pascal Adolphe Jean Dagnan Bouveret also did portraits of actresses (Mme. Bartet) and military leaders (Maréchal Foch). |
Dagnan exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Français from 1877 (Atalante, Musée des Beaux-Arts in Melun) until 1889; and in 1890 the painter began exhibiting at the Salon of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts where Pascal Adolphe Jean Dagnan Bouveret was one of the founding members. His first popular Salon success came with the anecdotal genre painting Une noce chez le photographe (1879) (Musée des Beaux-Arts, Lyon), but the Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret paintings which established his reputation are his naturalist scenes inspired by life in the Franche-Comté and Brittany including Un accident (1880) in the Walters Art Gallery. | |||||||
The latter work reiterated the intense
nationalistic fervor of the period by
centering the activities of recruitment on
the strength and support of the rural areas
of France - locations that remained totally
behind the central government. The success
of these Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret paintings in the 19th century and
the impact they still have for us today are
in great part due to the influ ence of
photography in their creation.
As a student of Gérôme, Dagnan-Bouveret with many of his colleagues (Europeans and Americans) learned how to use photography as a tool to arrive at a more naturalistic, decidedly casual, rendering for the scenes of daily life. Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret was closely associated with J.-A. Muenier, a painter who also maintained a fervent interest in photography. Both men traveled to the Near East (Algeria) together, at the close of the 1880s (1887-1888), where they actively photographed numerous scenes in Algiers in order to feed their developing interest in orientalist themes. The photographic record of their trip together provides an extensive documentary foundation for seeing how these artists were able to use this medium. Understandably, Dagnan did not merely take photographs so that he could copy them for Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret paintings. Rather, the artist saw the new medium of photography as a creative tool which, when added to the academic tradition of painstaking preparation of a given composition, added significantly to the way in which Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret could increase the intricacy and exactitude of his compositions while reinforcing the general interest in reality. |
Dagnan was also a pastellist and a member of the Société des Pastellistes. In addition to Paris and the European continent, Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret paintings were exhibited in Chicago and in 1901 in a retrospective exhibition at the Art Institute of Chicago and several times in Pittsburgh (Carnegie Internationals) starting in 1896. Pascal Adolphe Jean Dagnan-Bouveret was also a member of the Foreign Advisory Committee for the Carnegie International from 1897 until 1908.
Foreign awards were also numerous. Foreign medals include: a gold medal in Munich and Ghent (1889), and a medal Hors concourse at the 1893 Columbian Exposition in Chicago. Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret paintings have entered numerous French and European public collections, in addition to several north and south American collections. For example, in alphabetical order, Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret works can be studied in Arras, Musée des Beaux-Arts, in Baltimore at the Walters Art Gallery, in Beauvais in the Musée de Picardie, Besançon, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Boston, Museum of Fine Art. Chambéry, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Cherbourg, Musée Thomas Henri. Chicago, Chicago Art Institute, the Cincinnati Art Museum, Dijon. |
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