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Renoir Pierre Auguste | 1841-1919 | [ Back | Photos ]
Pierre-Auguste Renoir was born in
Limoges and brought up in Paris, where
his father, a tailor with a large
family, settled in 1845. From the
age of thirteen he worked as an apprentice
painter, painting flowers on porcelain
plates. This early apprenticeship
left a certain trace on his art, which
was always decorative in spite of
its later realism. After machines
for coloring ceramics had been introduced,
he had to switch to decorating fans
and screens. Having saved some money,
in 1862 Renoir entered the Atelier
Gleyre and there made friends with
Monet, Sisley and Bazille; some time
later he met Pissarro and Cézanne.
He first exhibited at the Salon in
1864; after that the jury rejected
his works and only in 1867 accepted
Lise, portrait of his model and lover
Lise Trehot. In 1867, he and Monet
lived at Bazille’s house. In
1868-1870, he shared a studio with
Bazille in Paris. Young artists sat
for each other, i.e. Frederic Bazille
at His Easel by Renoir and Portrait
of Pierre-Auguste Renoir by Bazille.
He spent the summer of 1869 with Monet
at Bougival on the Seine; together
they worked out the main principles
of the Impressionist method. It was
most strongly manifested in the plein-air
studies of La Grenouillère
(1869). See and compare La Grenouillere
by Monet and La Grenouillere by Renoir,
the painters worked side by side.
It was in the 1870s, that Renoir’s
Impressionism style reached its peak.
He worked at Argenteuil and in Paris.
He participated in the Impressionist
exhibitions of 1874, 1876, 1877 and
1882 and was a founding member of
the review L’Impressionniste
(1877), where he published his article
on the principles of contemporary
art. The Swing and the great composition
of Le Moulin de la Galette, one of
the finest, most smiling of his masterpieces,
the models for which were his friends,
mostly artists, and Montmartre girls.
It is like a marvelous tissue of interwoven
sunlight and soft hazy blue.
Renoir achieved recognition earlier
than his friends. In 1879-80, he sent
several portraits to the official
Salon, among them Portrait of the
Actress Jeanne Samary and Portrait
of Mme Charpentier and Her Children.
The artist found himself at a critical
point. In 1880, he met Aline Charigot,
a common woman, whom he would marry
in 1890, they had 3 sons: Pierre (1885-),
Jean (1894 - ), who would become an
important film director, and Claude
(1901- ), called “Coco”.
The same year, 1880, Renoir broke
his right arm and for some time painted
with his left hand. In 1881, he traveled
to Algeria, later to Italy, where
he was impressed by Raphael and the
Pompeii frescoes. The Luncheon of
the Boating Party is certainly one
of Renoir’s finest canvases.
In the 1880s, he abandoned Impressionism
for what is often called the “dry
style”. He began a search for
solid form and stable composition,
a search, which led him back to the
masters of the Renaissance. He worked
more carefully and meticulously, his
colors became cooler and smoother.
He later returned to hot rich colors
and free brushwork of his earlier
days to portray nudes in sunlight,
a style, which he continued to develop
to the end of his life: The Bathers
(1887).
In 1886, the art dealer Durand-Ruel
exhibited 32 of Renoir's paintings
in New York, thus opening the American
market for Impressionism. The evidence
of Renoir’s (and other Impressionists’)
success in the USA is a great number
of their pictures in American museums.
In December 1888, Renoir suffered
the first attacks of arthritis, which
would cripple his hands; in 1898 after
a serious attack of the disease his
right arm was paralyzed. From now
on he painted, overcoming strong pains,
strapping a brush to his wrist. In
1919, not long before his death, he
finished, in great pain, his large-scale
composition The Great Bathers (The
Nymphs).
Renoir died in Cagnes on 3 December
1919 and was buried in Essoyes, next
to Aline.
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| Renoir Pierre Auguste |
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| Luncheon of the boating party |
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| Group of women |
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| The swing |
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| Moulin de la galette |
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