Marcellin Desboutin, Desboutin dit à la bavette
(aslo known as Desboutin tenant sa pipe de la main gauche, or as L'auteur fumant, à mi-corps)
Drypoint, 1897
Ref: Clément Janin 67
Actually, Marcellin Gilbert Desboutin came from a well-off, cultured background. He was born in Cérilly in 1823. His mother was an aristocrat, and Marcellin was a wealthy young man whose dabblings in literature and art were enthusiastic hobbies rather than career choices. He bought himself a grand villa outside Florence, where he lived from 1854, dealing in old master paintings, gambling, and generally squandering his fortune. During this time, Desboutin maintained contacts with the Paris art world, and was particularly close to Degas. In Florence he met and encouraged the Italian Impressionist Giuseppe de Nittis, with whom he remained on close terms; there exists a drypoint portrait of Degas about which experts remain divided as to whether it is by Desboutin or de Nittis.
Marcellin Desboutin, Femme au toutou, ou au chien
Drypoint, c. 1878
Ref: Clément-Janin 101
Marcellin Desboutin returned to Paris in 1873, at the age of 50, having ruined himself with unwise investments. Here he returned seriously to art, both painting and printmaking. Desboutin specialized in portrait drypoints, often of fellow artists such as his friends Degas, Renoir, Manet, Morisot, Raffaëlli, Goeneutte and Guérard, but also of authors such as Dumas fils, Zola, and Verlaine. Desboutin's technique was to quickly sketch a portrait on copper with a drypoint needle, to catch his subject in as relaxed and lifelike a pose as possible.
Marcellin Desboutin, Norbert Goeneutte
Drypoint, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 111
Marcellin Desboutin, Renoir, les jambes croisées
Drypoint, 1877
Ref: Clément-Janin 208
Marcellin Desboutin, Willette, en Pierrot
Drypoint, 1896
Ref: Clément-Janin 241
One of Desboutin's portraits of artists, that of Pierre-Cécile Puvis de Chavannes, uses a very interesting mixed technique, invented by Félicien Rops and used infrequently by artists such as Louis Legrand and Desboutin. Based on a painting by Desboutin now in the Musée d'Amiens, this print involved making a héliogravure plate after a painting (as in this case) or an etching that needed to be reduced in size (as in the case of Legrand's La parole divine, my only other example of this process); the artist then worked on top of the heliogravure with a drypoint needle, thus producing a strange hybrid between a reproduction and an original print. The composition in the background is part of Puvis's Bois sacré.
Marcellin Desboutin, Puvis de Chavannes, portrait et composition
Drypoint on héliogravure
Ref: Clément Janin 204
Marcellin Desboutin, Jules Jacquemart
Drypoint, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 141
It's interesting to compare the vivacity of Desboutin's portraits from life, such as those of Goeneutte and Renoir, with the eight drypoint portraits of singers and dancers for the anonymous work L'Opéra, Eaux-fortes et Quatrains in 1876 (the author was Henry Cohen). Seven of these are drawn after photographs rather than from life, and although they have great charm, they are much stiffer and more conventional than the free depictions of his friends; the exception is the portrait of Léontine Beaugrand. On all eight the printer, Vve Cadart, has misspelled the artist's name as Desboutins.
(bass-baritone 1822-1872)
Drypoint after a photograph by Pierre Petit, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 186
Drypoint after a photograph by Pierre Petit, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 187
(ballerina, 1842-1925)
Drypoint from life, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 188
(mezzo-soprano, 1844-1891)
Drypoint after a photograph by Pierre Petit, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 189
(bass, 1835-1905)
Drypoint after a photograph by Pierre Petit, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 190
(baritone 1834-1903)
Drypoint after a photograph by Pierre Petit, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 191
(bass, and future director of the Opéra, 1848-1918)
Drypoint after a photograph by Pierre Petit, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 192
(ballerina, 1850-1909)
Drypoint after a photograph by Luckhardt, 1876
Ref: Clément-Janin 193
Despite his late start, Desboutin achieved some fame and success as an artist in the Bohemian circle of Manet and Degas; he exhibited six works at the Second Impressionist Exhibition. The catalogue of his works in Clément-Janin's La Curieuse Vie de Marcellin Desboutin lists 246 original prints and 30 "gravures de réproduction" after artists such as Israëls, Fragonard, and Rembrandt; there's also an impressive list of paintings, showing Desboutin to have been hard at work at his art from 1873 to his death.
Marcellin Desboutin, Les travailleurs de la mer (also known as Les amarreurs)
Drypoint after a painting by Jozef Israëls, 1889
Ref: Clément-Janin 1 (gravures de réproduction)
From 1880 Desboutin lived mostly in Nice, where he died in 1901.
Neil, this is like a novel, in compressed form. I had never thought about who the people were in Degas's painting, much less whether he knew them or they were models in passing.
ReplyDeleteAs for Desboutin's own work, he conveys a satisfying sense of movement that I imagine is difficult to do in an unyielding medium like drypoint (especially his portrait of Puvis de Chavannes and the woman holding her little dog).
I can't help but envy you the privilege of seeing such things in person. (have been looking at two prints by Aristide Maillol and fighting with myself over whether to splurge and actually buy one!)
Thank you, as always.
Thanks, Jane. I think the Impressionists generally preferred using their friends as models - it gives a more relaxed and intimate feel, and also you don't have to pay them! I always think of Renoir's Luncheon of the Boating Party, with so many of his social circle featured. Ellen Andrée is in that one too.
ReplyDeleteI always learn so many interesting things when I read your blog, Neil. This one is a real treat! I think I must have once told you about Fanny Boucher, who has an atelier just outside of Paris who does héliogravure. If not, I think you would enjoy her web site: http://www.heliog.com/ We have a neighbor who prints his helios on our press. He combines it not with drypoint, but with chine collé.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks for the interesting link, Nancy - atelier Hélio'g looks fascinating.
ReplyDeleteJane: yes it reads like a novel. Nancy: indeed a treat and I've learned much about a new to me artist. Neil: thanks !
ReplyDeleteGerrie - Apparently after L'Absinthe was exhibited, Degas had to issue a public statement that Desboutin and Andrée were not a pair of down-and-out drunks...
ReplyDelete