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Loan Exhibition of 19th Century French Drawings, March 8-April 6, 1947

 Sub-Series

Scope and Contents

An exhibition of over 150 drawings by the greatest nineteenth century French artists, including Ingres, Degas, Manet, Renoir, Seurat, Toulouse-Lautrec, and Van Gogh.
The exhibition records span 18 folders and include a press release, event invitation, layout of the gallery, planning correspondence, shipping information, publicity correspondence, catalog drafts and correspondence, lender and insurance information, rejected lender correspondence, registration receipts, and correspondence with participating lenders. A copy of the exhibition catalog is in the catalog collection. The Bulletin of the California Palace of the Legion of Honor Vol. 4, No. 11 served as the exhibition brochure and is available in the archives. Installation photograph prints are in the photograph collection. Installation and object photograph negatives are in the quarantine box. A related magazine "Art News" Vol XLVI, No. 2 is available in the reference book collection.

Dates

  • Creation: March 8-April 6, 1947

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

At this time, the exhibition records are unavailable to the public and will only be made available to FAMSF staff upon request.

Biographical / Historical

The 19th century was to be a turning point for French art, and for art around the world, especially during the latter part of the century. From the emergence of Delacroix in the early 19th century to the surrealists 100 years later, France was to dominate the art scene. The established art school in France at the beginning of the 19th century was represented by Jacques-Louis David and Jean Ingres and had two main characteristics: great attention to fine detail and exact shading in the art produced and focus on painting 'proper' subjects, such as portraits of the great and good, ruined buildings in idyllic settings, etc. The focus of the middle of the 19th century was in questioning whether this was the correct approach to painting. As it turned out neither of these characteristics would bear close scrutiny, or stand the test of time. Ferdinand Delacroix and Theodore Gericault, leaders of the romantic art movement in France, were among the first to question the priorities of the art being painted at that time, and adopted a style that was more interested in catching the spirit of the subject rather than every fine detail, and more interested in painting 'real' subjects than classical ruins and subjects. The second characteristic–what should or should not be painted–was challenged by Jean Francois Millet, who painted peasants working in the fields rather than nobles sitting by a window. These trends continued with Gustave Courbet, who was adamant that he would paint what he wanted, in the way he wanted. This period of art was a very important step forward. Painting could now represent the spirit of an occasion or event, rather than simply being a 'photographic record', although it was to take a long time for traditional admirers of art to appreciate the leap in progress that had been made.

The next stage in the development of art was to fall to one of Courbet's 'disciples', Edouard Manet, and his colleagues developing Impressionism which came to dominate the art scene in time.

Source: https://www.francethisway.com/culture/nineteenth-century-art-france.php

Extent

0.4 Linear Feet (The exhibition records span 18 folders plus a catalog, brochure, object and installation photographs, and a related magazine.)

Language of Materials

From the Collection: English

Abstract

An exhibition of over 150 drawings by the greatest nineteenth century French artists, including Ingres, Degas, Manet, Renoir, Seurat, Toulouse-Lautrec, and Van Gogh. The exhibition records span 18 folders plus a catalog, brochure, object and installation photographs, and a related magazine.

Arrangement

The materials are separated by content and type and organized chronologically.

Related Exhibitions

Legion of Honor: Paintings, Drawings, Lithographs by Henri Matisse and his Contemporaries (1926)
Legion of Honor: Loan Exhibition of Paintings and Drawings by Vincent van Gogh (1936)
de Young: Masters of the School of Paris (1940)
de Young: French Drawings and Water Colors (1941)
Legion of Honor: French Drawings: Masterpieces from Seven Centuries (1956)
Legion of Honor: 19th Century French Drawings: Selections from the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts (1978)
Legion of Honor: Nineteenth-Century French Drawings (1989)

Separated Materials

The exhibition catalog is housed in the Legion of Honor Exhibition Catalog collection in box 4. The Bulletin of the California Palace of the Legion of Honor Vol. 4, No. 7 served as the exhibition brochure and is available in the archives.
Installation photograph prints are housed in the Legion of Honor Exhibition Photograph collection in box 3. Installation and object photograph negatives are housed in the exhibition photo quarantine box in the FAMSF Archives. Ask the Archivist for access.
A related magazine "Art News" Vol XLVI, No. 2 is available in the reference book collection.

Repository Details

Part of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco Archives Repository

Contact:
50 Hagiwara Tea Garden Dr
San Francisco California 94118 USA