Gustave Léonard de Jonghe
Gustave Léonard de Jonghe, Gustave Léonard De Jonghe or Gustave de Jonghe (4 February 1829 – 28 January 1893) was a Flemish painter known for his glamorous society portraits and genre scenes. After training in Brussels, he started out as a painter of historical and religious subjects in a Realist style. After moving to Paris where he spent most of his active career, he became successful with his scenes of glamorous women in richly decorated interiors.[1]
Gustave Léonard de Jonghe | |
---|---|
Born | 4 February 1829, Kortrijk, United Kingdom of the Netherlands |
Died | 28 January 1893, Antwerp, Belgium |
Nationality | Belgian |
Education | Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts, Brussels |
Movement | Social Realism, Realism, Orientalism |
Life
Gustave Léonard de Jonghe was born in Kortrijk as the son of the prominent landscape painter Jan Baptiste de Jonghe. He received his first art lessons from his father. He continued his studies in Brussels at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts where leading Belgian painter François-Joseph Navez was one of his teachers. The history painter Louis Gallait was his close friend and mentor. When de Jonghe’s father died when he was only 15 years old, his native city granted him a scholarship.
From 1848 onwards, de Jonghe participated in the exhibitions of the Brussels Salon. De Jonghe emigrated to Paris and began to exhibit at the Paris Salons in the 1850s. He became a popular painter of elegant women and group portraits of the bourgeoisie. He usually preferred interior settings, in which he represented several fashionable details of the period.
In the 1870s, the artist repeatedly shuttled between Paris and Brussels. The onset of blindness in 1882 following a cerebral haemorrhage ended his artistic career and he returned to Brussels. Leading Belgian and French artists in Paris organized a charity art sale to support the ailing artist and his family.[2] De Jonghe died in 1893 in Antwerp where he had resided since 1884.[3]
De Jonghe was twice awarded a medal for his work: he received in 1862 a first-class medal in Amsterdam and in 1863 a third-class medal at the Paris Salon.[4][5] In 1864, Belgian King Leopold I honoured him with the Order of Leopold.
Work
Gustave de Jonghe's early works explored historical and religious subject matter such as his composition Pilgrims Praying to Our Lady of the Afflicted or Our Lady of Mercy of 1854 (Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium). This large canvas was presented at the Brussels Salon of 1854 and was at the time regarded as an important flag of revolt against the old classics, romantics and academics in Belgian art. The work was considered by artists of that time as a manifesto for the liberation of art as well as the beginning of Realism in Belgian art. It was also noted that this work showed similarities with the work of the French Social Realist painter Charles de Groux who worked in Brussels.[1]
Subsequently de Jonghe left the course of Realism and changed his subject matter to portraits and genre scenes and the occasional landscape. He worked in oil as well as watercolour. While some of his works are found in international museums such as the Hermitage and the Musée d'Orsay, most of his work is held in private collections.
His portrait paintings depict the lifestyle of the contemporary, fashionable city dwellers. This was a fashion started by Belgian painter Alfred Stevens in the late 1850s and then followed by another Belgian painter Charles Baugniet, the Frenchman Auguste Toulmouche and de Jonghe himself.[6] By the late 1860s there was a ready market for genre scenes with bourgeois figures, usually young glamorous women, in luxurious surroundings.[7] With the onset of the Belle Epoque in the 1870s, this type of painting depicting fashionable women set in an interior became popular at the Paris Salon.
Gustave de Jonghe painted many scenes of mothers with their children (usually a daughter) in intimate settings. Through the choice of pose, clothing and setting de Jonghe characterized the type of person represented. The title of his paintings often hinted at the narrative of the picture, such as Going to the ball. His pictures aimed to evoke the quiet joys of family life among the prosperous bourgeoisie.[6]
His work reflects contemporary tastes in art such as the Japonism craze of the latter half of the 19th century with its interest in Japanese art and artifacts. His composition The admirer of Japan depicts a young woman walking in front of a Japanese screen, surrounded by other Japanese objects and catalogues of Japanese pictures.[8][9]
Gustave de Jonghe also painted some Orientalist compositions such as the Afternoon siesta (also called A reclining odalisque), which reflected the contemporary interest in the theme of the harem and the odalisque in Orientalism.[10]
Although his work may now seem sentimental and too reflective of then prevailing tastes in the market, its lasting appeal was already recognized in his time as being the result of the sincerity and perfect taste of its execution.[11]
Gallery
- Afternoon Repose
- Going to the Ball
- Woman at the Piano with a Cockatoo, c. 1870
- Love Letter, c. 1870
See also
References
- Jean-Philippe Huys and Dominique Marechal, Realism: From Living Art to Free Art, in: Howe, Jeffery W., (editor), Courbet : mapping realism : paintings from the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium and American collections by Courbet, Gustave, 1819-1877, McMullen Museum of Art; Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, 2013, p. 24-25
- L'Art moderne, 13 April 1884, p. 126 (in French)
- Gustave Léonard de Jonghe. In: Ulrich Thieme, Felix Becker e.a.: Allgemeines Lexikon der Bildenden Künstler von der Antike bis zur Gegenwart, Volume 19, E. A. Seemann, Leipzig 1926, p. 134 (in German)
- Gustave De Jonghe at Ary Jan Gallery
- George William Sheldon, Hours with Art and Artists, Garland Publishing, Incorporated, 1978, p. 91
- John House, Pierre-Auguste Renoir: La Promenade, Getty Publications, 1997, p. 6-7 and 26
- Manet: Face to face, Courtauld Institute Galleries, Neue Pinakothek (Munich, Germany) Courtauld Institute of Art, 2004, p. 63
- De Jonghe’s The Japanese Fan back on View Archived 2014-11-12 at the Wayback Machine at the Cummer Museum of Art and Gardens
- Karen Pope, The Orient Expressed: Japan's Influence on Western Art, 1854–1918, Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson February 19–July 17, 2011, McNay Museum of Art, San Antonio October 5, 2011–January 15, 2012, in: Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide
- Lynne Thornton, Women as Portrayed in Orientalist Painting, www.acr-edition.com, 1994, p. 16
- Philip Gilbert Hamerton, Painting in France, after the decline of classicism: an essay, by Philip Gilbert Hamerton, Little, Brown, 1895, p. 75-77
External links
Media related to Gustave Léonard de Jonghe at Wikimedia Commons