Nineteenth-Century French Drawings explores the history of this medium, and chronicles the remarkable part it has played throughout the past decades at the Cleveland Museum of Art. There are works by such iconic artists as Honore Daumier, Berthe Morisot and Auguste Renoir, a luminous coloured pencil study by symbolist artist Alexandre Seon and a group of "noir" drawings-named for their use of varied black drawing media-by Henri Fantin-Latour, Albert-Charles Lebourg and Adolphe Appian, among others. Entries illuminate the role of drawing within 41 artists' works and five essays by leading scholars shed new light on the making and collecting of drawings in France during this extraordinary period. In 19th-century France, drawing expanded from a means of artistic training to an independent medium with rich potential for experimentation. A variety of new materials became available to artists, encouraging figures ranging from Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres to Paul Cezanne to reconsider drawing's place within their practice. Public and private exhibition venues increasingly began to display their works, building an audience attracted by the intimacy of drawings and their unique techniques and subjects.
About the AuthorBritany Salsbury is associate curator of Prints and Drawings, the Cleveland Museum of Art. Previously, she was associate curator of prints and drawings at the Milwaukee Art Museum, where she organized exhibitions including Degas to Picasso: Creating Modernism in France (2017) and Daring Technique: Goya and the Art of Etching (2018). As a postdoctoral Mellon Curatorial Fellow at the Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design (2015-17), Salsbury curated Altered States: Etching in Late 19th-Century Paris
Book InformationISBN 9781913875008
Author Britany SalsburyFormat Hardback
Page Count 200
Imprint GILESPublisher D Giles Ltd