Renoir's Controversial Second Act
Late in life, the French impressionist's career took an unexpected turn. A new exhibition showcases his radical move toward tradition
- By Richard Covington
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 3)
Take his 1895-1900 painting Eurydice. Based on a classical pose, the seated nude is endowed with disproportionately large hips and thighs against a diffusely painted Mediterranean landscape of pastel green and violet hues. “It was just this free interpretation of a traditional subject, this sense of liberty, that captivated Picasso,” Patry says. Eurydice was one of seven Renoir paintings and drawings Picasso collected, and, the curator adds, it was a likely inspiration for his 1921 canvas Seated Bather Drying Her Feet. (Despite attempts by Picasso’s dealer Paul Rosenberg to introduce them, the two artists never met.) Einecke remembers her art history professors dismissing Eurydice and similarly monumental Renoir nudes as “pneumatic, Michelin-tire girls.” She hopes today’s viewers will identify them with the classical mode that regarded such figures as symbols of fecundity—and see them as precursors of modern nudes done by Picasso and others.
Renoir’s late embrace of tradition also owed a great deal to settling down after he married one of his models, Aline Charigot, in 1890. Their first son, Pierre, had been born in 1885; Jean followed in 1894 and Claude in 1901. “More important than theories was, in my opinion, his change from being a bachelor to being a married man,” Jean, the film director, wrote in his affectionate 1962 memoir Renoir, My Father.
Jean and Claude Renoir were dragooned into service as models from infancy. For an 1895 painting, Gabrielle Renard—the family’s housekeeper and a frequent model—tried to entertain 1-year-old Jean as the rambunctious child played with toy animals. “Painting Gabrielle and Jean was not exactly a sinecure,” the artist quipped. Claude—who sat for no fewer than 90 works—had to be bribed with promises of an electric train set and a box of oil paints before he would wear a hated pair of tights for The Clown, his father’s salute to Jean-Antoine Watteau’s early 18th-century masterpiece Pierrot. (Years later, Picasso painted his son Paulo as Pierrot, although that work is not in the current exhibition.)
Renoir’s later portraits make little attempt to analyze the sitter’s personality. What most interested him was technique—specifically that of Rubens, whose skill with pigments he had admired. “Look at Rubens in Munich,” he told the art critic Walter Pach. “There is magnificent color, of an extraordinary richness, even though the paint is very thin.”
Renoir was also becoming less interested in representing reality. “How difficult it is to find exactly the point where a painting must stop being an imitation of nature,” he said late in his life to the painter Albert André, whom he served as a mentor. Renoir’s 1910 portrait of Madame Josse Bernheim-Jeune and her son Henry presents an expressionless mother holding her equally expressionless child. When she appealed to Auguste Rodin to persuade Renoir to make her arm look thinner, the sculptor instead advised the painter not to alter a thing. “It’s the best arm” you’ve ever done, Rodin told him. He left it alone.
Renoir, a sociable character with a sharp sense of humor, ran a lively household with his wife in the Montmartre neighborhood of Paris. Claude Monet and the poets Stéphane Mallarmé and Arthur Rimbaud were among the dinner guests.
Diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis in 1897, Renoir followed his doctor’s recommendation to spend time in the warmer climate of the South of France. He bought Les Collettes farm in Cagnes-sur-Mer in 1907. Renoir’s disease would slowly cripple his hands and, ultimately, his legs, but the “threat of complete paralysis only spurred him on to renewed activity,” Jean Renoir recalled. “Even as his body was going into decline,” Matisse wrote, “his soul seemed to become stronger and to express itself with a more radiant facility.”
In 1912, when Renoir was in a wheelchair, friends enlisted a specialist from Vienna to help him walk again. After a month or so on a strengthening diet, he felt robust enough to try a few steps. The doctor lifted him to a standing position and the artist, with an enormous exertion of will, managed to wobble unsteadily around his easel. “I give up,” he said. “It takes all my willpower, and I would have none left for painting. If I have to choose between walking and painting, I’d much rather paint.”
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Related topics: Impressionism Painters Late 19th Century
Additional Sources
Renoir in the 20th Century (exhibition catalog), edited by Claudia Einecke and Sylvie Patry, Hatje Cantz, 2010









Comments (9)
Extemely moving piece. Made me cry.
Posted by linda mccann on April 20,2013 | 05:47 PM
Could you please provide me with direction on who to contact concerning a 5x7 sized Renoir canvas of "The Swimmer Sitting"? I obtained this at an estate sale and it appears to have been purchased in Japan. It is signed, however I cannot make out the signature. Thank you very much.
Posted by Judi Kiehn on September 30,2012 | 01:00 PM
http://renoirdiscovery.
http://renoirstudy.blogspot.com/
this is a newly found renoir painted on renoir's paper he only had. this the birth of renoir's later nudes.
Posted by greg on March 8,2011 | 05:39 PM
July 3, 2010
The Philadelphia Museum of Art on their website would have the admission paying public believe that the “Late Renoir follows the renowned painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir through the final—and most fertile and innovative—decades of his career. [with] Approximately eighty paintings, drawings, and sculptures by Renoir.”
The only problem is there are -no- “sculptures by Renoir” in The Late Renoir exhibition.
The art dealer Vollard and the artist Renoir decided to cash in by misrepresenting bronze forgeries, cast from plasters reproduced from clay models forged by Richard Guino and others, as authentic Renoir sculptures.
Vollard, and too many others to mention, have perpetuated the myth that Renoir actually directed the creation of these so-called sculptures when in fact Renoir himself admits they were -forged- in his absence.
Then to add insult to injury, the so-called “Late Renoir” exhibition contains work, attributed to Renoir, that was so late, he was actually -dead- when it was forged.
The dead don’t sculpt.
Gary Arseneau
artist, creator of original lithographs & scholar
Fernandina Beach, Florida
SOURCES:
http://www.philamuseum.org/exhibitions/359.html
page 75 of the “Renoir in the 20th Century” catalogue
http://www.philamuseum.org/collections/permanent/52099.html?mulR=31958
Posted by Gary Arseneau on July 3,2010 | 08:04 AM
There is the mention of a Renoir film clip from 1915. "An extraordinary three-minute silent film clip in the exhibition captures him at work in 1915."
Does anyone know how to get a look at that? YouTube... whatever?
Thanks!
Posted by Carl & Pam on February 13,2010 | 01:12 PM
Renoir affirms what I have long suspected. "If it's not about beauty, it is nothing." One thing for sure, beauty is not going to reveal itself unless one chases after it. Bravo, Auguste!
Posted by Paul Viera on February 4,2010 | 04:02 PM
I am familiar with a painting at the McNay Museum in San Antonio by Renoir painted in the last year of his life. Titled, "The Serenade", the subject is two women typical for Renoir. They look well-to-do, beautiful, almost erotic, in pastel curvey strokes. I consider it a tribute to a great artist's drive to create, considering that at this time of his life his arthritic condition forced him to paint with the brush taped to his hand. He was painfully crippled and already wealthy. The only reason for works like this was love of his art. It think there is room for admiration on this bases alone.
Posted by jane willenberg on January 28,2010 | 10:36 PM
Dick's article stirred my appreciation of Renoir's genius, and I thank him for this fine work! YITB, LWOjr
Posted by west oehmig on January 28,2010 | 11:59 AM
In this months issue, there is a picture that Renoir painted of two young girls playing the piano. When my uncle was in WW11, he brought home a picture of two girls playing the piano that is painted on silk and looks identical to the picture in the magazine. He has it dated that he bought it in Belgium in 1944. It is beautiful,not very big, about 3x3 in. square. do you know anything about it? I'd like to know if it is worth anything. thank you.
Posted by NANCY R. RAZZANO on January 25,2010 | 01:36 AM