Master Class
Like generations of painters before them, artists from around the globe go to Paris to copy the masterpieces at the Louvre
- By Joseph A. Harriss
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2002, Subscribe
(Page 5 of 5)
“I got a good foundation at the PennsylvaniaAcademy, but you never stop learning,” Thompson says. “When I copy a masterpiece, I get a sort of mental trip out of it, applying the paint differently, using light and dark the way the artist did. It’s like taking a lesson from an old master.”
Like most Louvre copyists, Thompson often chats with some of the thousands of visitors who enter the museum each day. “There’s a real exchange between the copyists and the public that we consider very positive,” says Ferrier. “Copyists working amid the visitors enhance the way the public sees paintings and incites them to look more closely with a more analytical approach. They start noticing how the artist actually did the work.”
Those who frequent the museum have come to know a small man of 77 with pale blue eyes and a gentle manner. Bruno Nini has been copying nearly every day since 1990, when he retired as maître d’ at a restaurant in Paris’s Austerlitz train station, where he began his days by taking delivery of 5,000 croissants at 5 a.m. Now he is working on a copy of Gabrielle d’Estrées and One of Her Sisters, a tantalizing portrait of the mistress of Henri IV by an anonymous 16th-century painter of the school of Fontainebleau.
“I learned most of my technique from books,” Nini says with obvious pride. “After realizing I wanted to paint, I sought out street artists and tried to get tips from them. Then one day I came here and saw copyists at work. I knew that was what I wanted to do.” Nini estimates he’s done more than 100 copies, some of which he’s sold; the others hang on the crowded walls of his Paris apartment. He’s an amateur in the truest sense of the term—someone who passionately loves what he’s doing. “Sometimes, when I see the figures in a painting coming to life under my brush strokes,” he says, “tears come to my eyes.”
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Comments (3)
Brent: While it could be called a reproduction, I believe the most accurate description would be a copy of Marc Chagall's The Falling Angel by Lerma. I would certainly not think of it as a fake. Enjoy your painting; it would make for a very dramatic reproduction!
Posted by Reproduced Fine Art on November 13,2011 | 09:33 PM
May an artist create a larger than scale painting that is an interpretive rendition and not a brush stroke for stroke copy of a painter whose work resides in the Smithsonian?
Posted by John Travisano on October 16,2010 | 02:56 PM
Could You Please Tell Me If Your Copyist Artists Sign Their Name On The Paintings When They Are Finished? I Have A Painting Of Marc Chagall's The Falling Angel 24"x32" Oil On Canvas {very old} Signed By Lerma Bottom Left Corner.I Was Wondering If You Call This A Fake,Copy,Reproduction,ect.The Painting Is Marked 1Hxx #200c On The Canvas Where It Is Stapled To The Stretcher.The Stretcher Is Nailed To The Frame As Well.Thank You Brent.
Posted by Brent Smith on January 4,2010 | 03:29 PM