Skip to main content

Lagrenée



Louis-Jean-François Lagrenée was born in Paris on December 30, 1724. A student of Carlo Van Loo, Lagrenée is a painter of pure French Rococo with beautiful skin tones and bright, sumptuous colors that are pleasing to the eye. In fact, Lagrenée is one of the most erotic painters of his day, rivaling even Boucher. It is his Classical DNA that makes him more interesting than other Rococo artists however because he combines solid anatomy and figures with expressive composition and unabashed color. His colors are purely emotional.

A familiar theme in painting, Amor and Psyche above in the hands of Lagrenée becomes a sensual moment. Look at how Psyche gazes into his eyes, touching his cheek with her hand. Lagrenée is setting the scene for a passionate kiss that will take place only in our minds. Here Lagrenée reinterprets this mythology into an allegory of young love, with Cupid as a young man who has met the woman of his dreams. The way in which Lagrenée paints his wings also indicates a sense of triumph and resoluteness, something more than the deceitfulness of mere arrows. The feelings are mutual here. The use of yellow and blue here create a sense of calm and happiness.








Lagrenée Diana and Endymion
Diana and Endymion, 1776

Lagrenée creates a study from life of a foreshortened pale Endymion that catches the eye of goddess Diana, who falls in love with the mortal shepherd. In Lagrenée's version, however, Diana is gazing straight at his crotch while touching her breast with her left hand and holding a long bow in the other. Needless to say the sexual innuendo here is about as obvious as it could possibly get without jumping his bones right then and there. It is amusing that Lagrenée would take such a tongue-in-cheek view of this mythological tale and reinterpret it into a display of female lust for sleeping men. At any rate Lagrenée's skin tones and drapery are superb here, and the unusual diagonal composition give her a sense of superiority over him, in every sense of the word.








Lagrenee, Louis Jean - The Abduction of Deianeira by the Centaur Nessus - 1755
The Abduction of Deianeira by the Centaur Nessus, 1755

This action-packed scene of Greek mythology has an incredible design to the composition. Lagrenée creates a crooked C arrangement of the figures with highly dramatic anatomy and light. The centaur Nessus is running off with Deianeira, the wife of Heracles, who is off in the distance looking mighty upset as he is about to fire a poison arrow at Nessus. I'm not sure who the man is grasping at the tail of Nessus...I can only assume it is Neptune, which is painted in absolutely flawless detail in his legs and feet. The dominant blue palette in this painting adds an unusually sombre atmosphere to this harrowing event, and again Lagrenée paints his main figure in yellow drapery. Lagrenée proves here he isn't just a painter of pretty girls and boys. This is a triumph of painting.









LOUIS JEAN FRANÇOIS LAGRENÉE - Marte y Venus, alegoría de la Paz (Jean Paul Getty Museum, Los Ángeles, 1770. Óleo sobre lienzo, 64.8 x 54 cm)
Mars & Venus: "Allegory of Peace", 1770

An utterly beautiful painting, sensual and rich with texture and skin...Lagrenée, in contrast to Diana and Endymion, creates a theme of allegory with Venus as a beautiful sleeping woman and Mars caught by her beauty. The difference here is that Mars is getting ready to abandon her for war, but stops a moment to admire her. Look closely at this sample and see how Lagrenée painted her pillows in thick greyish, green-yellow strokes. This time there is no yellow drapery; they are both swathed in the same red robe. The skin is also painted brilliantly...note the green scumbling on the shadow side of her belly, and the use of pinks to add life to her predominant yellow tones. And note the brushwork on Mars: you can see the raw umber underneath his shadows. The shadow on his arm holding the curtain has green undertones also. Lagrenée seems to be also commenting on adultery here, in the way that he is anxious to not stay. It is pure poetry here.







Lagrenee, Louis Jean - Allegory on the Death of the Dauphin - 1765
Allegory on the Death of the Dauphin, 1765

Lagrenée's eye for drama and beauty is splendid here. Note the X composition of the figures. He creates a sense of space by staggering the placement of the figures here, and the use of color is heightened to increase the drama. Although this is very patriotic and nationalistic, the use of light and shadow here is definitely worth studying along with the juxtaposition of color.







Ljf lagrenee pygmalion and galatea
Pygmalion and Galatea, 1781

A very Classical interpretation of this ancient myth, it is a myth of every artist's fantasy and a beautiful story. Here Galatea gazes warmly into her creator's eyes, who fawns over his breathing statue come to life. It is also an allegory of an artist staying true to himself and rewarded for his hard work, and for this Lagrenée proves he can breathe life into mythology and humanity itself.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

More Old Master Drawings

There is nothing in all the world more beautiful or significant of the laws of the universe than the nude human body. Robert Henri Charles Louis Müller , A Standing Female Nude Leaning Against an Arch, ca.1864 Once again I decided to talk about some Old Master drawings and delve into the thinking behind how these drawings may have been created and the knowledge of the artist. In the above drawing by Müller, done in sanguine with white chalk highlights, the figure is drawn from a low view-point, with her body twisting toward her left side while resting on one knee. Note how Müller alternates the bent right leg with the bent left arm to create dynamic contrast. The right arm is also foreshortened and partially in shadow. Expressing power and femininity, this is a study that is Renaissance in spirit, even Mannerist, revealing the female nude as sculptural yet always graceful. Anton Raphael Mengs , Seated male nude viewed from the back, 1755 One of several Academic nu

The Genius of Ramon Casas

Open Air Interior, 1892 Born on January 4, 1866 in Barcelona, Ramon Casas i Carbó was a Spanish portrait painter and graphic designer. He was a contemporary of Santiago Rusiñol , both founders of the Spanish art movement modernisme . Where Santiago painted pensive interiors and moody landscapes, Casas focused more on the portrait and figure with a penchant for costume and posture. His palette often consists of more muted tones with vibrant color accents. Casas enjoyed a lengthy and prominent career throughout Europe and South America where he often exhibited in shows with his friend Rusiñol. In Open Air Interior above, Casas encapsulates a quiet moment outdoors during tea time. I love these kind of paintings for their calm visual intensity. The way that man sits in his chair, lost in thought while his wife carefully stirs her tea...this is the kind of mindfulness in the subjects that makes us, the viewer, envision ourselves in this scene. Casas paints the far wall of the house

Isaac Levitan, Russian Poet of Nature

Before the Storm, 1890 Born August 30, 1860, Isaac Ilyich Levitan was a Russian landscape painter. Born in Congress Poland to a Jewish family, Levitan would study art in Moscow where he would become friends with Anton Chekov and his brother, Nikolay who was also an artist. Levitan's work has a unique mood that is very distinct from the Impressionism of France and the Classicism of Russia...sometimes compared to Monet but still different. Levitan has a rare presence with astute attention to detail and a fascination with light at different times of day. At times highly accurate, while in his more personal work deeply Impressionistic and imbued with rich tone and color. There is something about Levitan that lingers in your mind long after seeing his work...in a way that is individual and personal, not attached to a specific genre or movement, but to the world around him. In Before the Storm , Levitan captures a moment so stunning it seems to defy words...of sunlight piercing