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Jean Baptist Corot 17961875 Barbizon School

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... parents had a successful business that catered to the fashion needs of the Paris ... This painting is a self-portrait as a young man. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Jean Baptist Corot 17961875 Barbizon School


1
Jean Baptist Corot1796-1875Barbizon School
2
Self-portrait 1834
  • Born to a wigmaker and a hat maker in Paris, Jean
    Baptist Corots (core-o) parents had a
    successful business that catered to the fashion
    needs of the Paris aristocracy.
  • Corot originally worked as a draper, making
    curtains. At the age of 26, he turned to
    painting.
  • He trained with painters in Paris and then spent
    the next three years in Italy painting the
    Italian countryside and other classical topics.
  • This painting is a self-portrait as a young man.

3
Rome The Forum Seen from the Farnese Gardens
1826
  • An early painting from his first visit to Rome
    shows Corot struggling to figure out how to paint
    the light. He complained that the sun in Italy
    was very difficult to capture properly.
  • He did many of his early landscapes outside,
    called plein air (pronounced plain air)
    paintings. Earlier artists had largely idealized
    their landscapes, painting from drawings or
    memory in a studio.

4
The Bridge at Nante
  • His first major canvas, Corot submitted this work
    to competitions in Paris. It shows an ancient
    bridge in the springtime.
  • The painting displays the limited range of colors
    used by Corot. He used almost exclusively
    browns, blacks, dark greens and silvers. The
    limited palette creates a dreamy look in many of
    his works.

5
Cabassud Houses
First Leaves, Nantes
  • Corot was revered by later painters. Monet said,
    Theres only one master here--Corot. We are
    nothing compared to him. Nothing. Hes
    considered a bridge between the neo-classical
    style and the impressionists.
  • He tried to capture the fleeting effect of light
    in nature. Note how you can feel how the air is
    colder here than in the previous picture in Italy.

6
Orpheus Leading Eurydice
  • This panel tells a classic Greek story. When
    Eurydice (yer-i-dees) dies, Orpheus gets Hades to
    agree to let him lead her back to the living
    world. Hades puts a condition on the agreement,
    though. Orpheus is told that he can lead
    Eurydice out of the underworld, but he cannot
    look at her until they reach earth. In the tale,
    a few steps from freedom, Orpheus gets scared and
    turns to peek at her, which sends her back to the
    underworld forever.

7
Orpheus detail
  • Orpheus is leading Eurydice and holding the lyre
    (liar), as he is the Greek god of music.
  • Corot used lots of white in his pictures, giving
    many of his pictures a dreamy, blurred quality.
  • Even in a dream landscape, Corot is careful to
    present nature as real and flooded with light.
  • This painting is at the Fine Arts Museum in
    Houston.
  • Does this remind you of Botticelli? Does it look
    like they are in motion or posed?

8
Peasant Woman with a Cow
  • Corot is considered a member of the Barbizon
    school, a French art movement that celebrated
    rural settings as being superior to the cities.
  • Unlike the other members of the school, Corot
    rarely idealized the peasants he painted. He
    really tried to paint what he saw, with a unique
    approach to the light.
  • Later painters loved how he dealt with the effect
    of light on nature--notice that he isnt
    outlining the trees--rather using brief, flicks
    of colors to show how the eye sees them.

9
Woman with a Pearl
  • Although now known for his landscapes, Corots
    contemporaries and early collectors loved his
    portraits.
  • Degas said, He is still the strongest, he
    anticipated everything.
  • He lived to 80, painting over 3,000 works in that
    time. He is thought to be the favorite painter
    for forgers, and there has been a healthy market
    in fakes of his. Why?
  • Notice how he uses a very narrow range of color,
    but still has a lot of variation in his works.

10
Woman in Blue
  • Painted the year before his death, you can see
    how his brushwork has become looser--hes almost
    abandoned any attempt at precise realism.
  • An extremely generous man, Corot donated money
    freely to other artists and good causes. He was
    generous with his time with students and peers.
    Corot was revered by later artists and cited as
    an influence by a wide range of artists.
  • Although working in a variety of styles, he made
    each his own, ultimately forming his own
    statement.
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