Caillebotte, Gustave

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'''Gustave Caillebotte''' ([[August 19]], [[1848]] – [[February 21]], [[1894]]), was a [[France|French]] [[painter]], member and patron of the group of artists known as [[Impressionists]], stamp collector, and yacht engineer.
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[[Image:Gustave Caillebotte photo c1878.jpg|thumb|250px|Gustave Caillebotte]]
  
==Biography==
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'''Gustave Caillebotte''' (August 19, 1848 – February 21, 1894), was a wealthy and generous [[France|French]] [[painter]]. Caillebotte originally sought a career as a [[lawyer]], but his youthful interest in painting led him to study under [[Léon Bonnat]]. Caillebotte soon became a friend and a major patron of the group of artists known as [[Impressionism|Impressionists]].
  
Gustave Caillebotte was born on August 19, 1848 to an upper-class Parisian family. His father, Martial Caillebotte (1799-1874), was the inheritor of the family's textile industry and was also a judge at the Seine's Tribunal de Commerce. Caillebotte's father had been twice widowed before marrying Caillebotte's mother, Céleste Daufresne (1819-1878), who had two more sons after Gustave, René (1851-1876) and Martial (1853-1910).
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While Caillebotte's own style belongs to the school of [[Realism]], he also shared certain traits of the Impressionists. He is best known for his paintings of [[urban]] [[Paris]]. These paintings were quite controversial for their banal and often lower-class subjects as well as the cropping and "zooming in" techniques he employed as a result of his interest in [[photography]].
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Caillebotte used his wealth to become something of a [[renaissance man]] as he collected the art of his contemporaries and [[Postal system|stamps]] (his collection is now in the [[British Museum]]), as well as became an expert in [[orchid]] [[horticulture]], yacht building, and even [[textile]] design.  
  
Caillebotte was born at his family's home on rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis in Paris, and lived on that street until 1866 when his father had a home built on rue de Miromesnil in [[Paris]]. The Caillebottes began spending many of their summers in [[Yerres]], a town on the Yerres River about 12 miles south of Paris, in 1860, when Martial Caillebotte, Sr. bought a large property there. It was around this time that Caillebotte probably began to draw and paint. Many of Caillebotte's paintings depict members of his family and daily domestic life; ''Young Man at His Window'', 1875, shows René in the home on rue de Miromesnil, ''The Orange Trees'', 1878, depicts Martial Jr. and his cousin Zoë in the garden of the family property at Yerres, and ''Portraits in the Country'', 1875, includes Caillebotte's mother along with his aunt, cousin, and a family friend.
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==Early life and career==
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Gustave Caillebotte was born to a life of privilege and wealth on August 19, 1848. His father, Martial Caillebotte (1799-1874), inherited the family fortune and became the proprietor of the Caillebotte family [[textile]] industry. Martial Caillebotte also held the esteemed position of  [[judge]] at the ''Seine's Tribunal de Commerce''. Martial Caillebotte was married and [[widowed]] twice in his younger years. His third marriage to Céleste Daufresne (1819-1878) resulted in three sons. Gustave was the first born, followed by René (1851-1876) and Martial (1853-1910). 
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The Caillebotte family home was located on one of the most famous streets in [[Paris]], the ''rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis''. The family occupied a home there until 1866, when Martial decided to build a home on ''rue de Miromesnil'' in Paris. At this time, the Caillebotte family began vacationing during the summer months in the small town of [[Yerres]]. Yerres is 12 miles south of Paris, and located near a beautiful river and relaxing countryside. The beauty and serene charm of Yerres was the inspiration to Caillebotte's beginnings in drawing and painting. He found many subjects along the river, including [[bird]]s, [[animal]]s, [[tree]]s, and [[flower]]s. Caillebotte was also prone to depicting his parents and brothers and their daily domestic activities. His painting, ''Young Man at His Window'', 1875, shows René in the family home on rue de Miromesnil; in ''The Orange Trees,'' 1878, Caillebotte painted Martial Jr. along with his cousin Zoë in the garden at Yerres, and ''Portraits in the Country,'' 1875, includes Caillebotte's mother, his aunt, cousin, and a family friend.<ref>Answers.com, Gustave Caillebotte.</ref>
  
Caillebotte earned a law degree in 1868 and a license to practice law in 1870. Shortly afterwards, he was drafted to fight in the [[Franco-Prussian war]], and served in the Garde Mationale Mobile de la Seine.  After the war, Caillebotte began visiting the studio of painter [[Léon Bonnat]], where he began to seriously study painting.  In 1873, Caillebotte entered into the [[École des Beaux-Arts]], but apparently did not spend much time there.  Around this time, Caillebotte met and befriended several artists working outside the official French academy, including [[Edgar Degas]] and Giuseppe de Nittis, and attended (but did not participate in) the first [[Impressionist]] exhibition of 1874.
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Even though he showed an inclination towards art, Caillebotte earned a [[law]] degree in 1868, and a license to practice law in 1870. Before he was able to start practicing law, Caillebotte was drafted for the [[Franco-Prussian war]]. He served in the ''Garde Nationale Mobile de la Seine''.  After the war Caillebotte began visiting the studio of painter [[Léon Bonnat]], where he began to seriously study painting and began to meet and befriended several artists including [[Edgar Degas]] and [[Giuseppe de Nittis]]. As a result he attended (but did not participate in) the first [[Impressionism|Impressionist]] exhibition of 1874.
  
Caillebotte's sizable allowance and the inheritance he received after the death of his father in 1874 and his mother in 1878 allowed him to paint without the pressure to sell his work.  It also allowed him to help fund Impressionist Exhibitions and support his fellow artists and friends (including [[Claude Monet]], [[Auguste Renoir]], and [[Camille Pissarro]] among others) by purchasing their works and, at least in the case of Monet, paying the rent for their studios.  In addition, Caillebotte used his wealth to fund a variety of hobbies for which he was quite passionate, including stamp collecting (his collection is now in the [[British Museum]]), orchid horticulture, yacht building, and even textile design (the women in his paintings ''Madame Boissière Knitting'', 1877, and ''Portrait of Madame Caillebotte'', 1877, may be working on patterns created by Caillebotte).
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==Artistic career==
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In 1874, Gustave Caillebotte made the acquaintance of several up and coming artists including [[Edgar Degas]], [[Claude Monet]], and [[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]]. He loved their art and admired their talent. He was also very interested in the new style of painting that the group was introducing in Paris, a style that created a movement known as [[Impressionism]]. Upon meeting the artists, Caillebotte helped them to organize and fund their first major group exhibition in Paris. Caillebotte, the only one with any serious financial means, would become a main patron and supporter of the group, as well as becoming a member with his own art. He constantly bought paintings of his friends for high prices and supported the expenses of their exhibitions for the next six years. The group expanded to include [[Camille Pissarro]], [[Paul Cezanne]], [[Alfred Sisley]], and [[Berthe Morisot]].
  
[[Image:Caillebotte.jpg|250px|thumb|Gustave Caillebotte. ''Paris Street, Rainy Day.'' 1877. [[Art Institute of Chicago]].]]
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In 1876 Caillebotte decided to showcase several of his paintings, instead of working behind the scenes. Upon the death of his father in 1874, followed by that of his mother in 1878, Caillebotte received a sizable inheritance that gave him the freedom of painting without the pressure and need to sell his work for money. The year before Caillebotte's this exhibition he tried submitting work to the Official Salon in Paris, but was refused entry. As a result he entered the same painting, ''The Floor Scrapers'' in this exhibition and gained some attention.  
  
Caillebotte's style belongs to the school of [[Realism (arts)|Realism]].  As did his predecessors [[Jean-Francois Millet]] and [[Gustave Courbet]], as well his contemporary Degas,  Caillebotte aimed to paint reality as it existed and as he saw it, hoping to reduce painting's inherent theatricality.  He also shared the Impressionists' commitment to optical truth.  Caillebotte painted many domestic, familial scenes, interiors, and figures in a landscape at Yerres, but he is most well known for his paintings of urban Paris, such as ''The Floor Scrapers'', 1875, ''Le pont de l'Europe'', 1876, and ''Paris Street, Rainy Day'', 1877. These paintings were quite controversial for their banal and often lower-class subjects, and for their exaggerated, plunging perspective.  The tilted ground common to these paintings is very characteristic of Caillebotte's work, which may have been strongly influenced by Japanese prints and the new technology of photography. Cropping and "zooming in," techniques which are also commonly found in Caillebotte's oeuvre, may also be the result of his interest in photography. A large number of Caillebotte's works also employ a very high vantage point, including his many balcony paintings such as ''Vue des toits, effet de neige'', 1878 and ''Boulevard vu d'en haut'', 1880.
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Caillebotte's ''Paris Street; Rainy Day,'' considered his masterpiece, was begun in 1876, and finished early in 1877. It shared the spotlight with [[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]]'s ''Ball at the Moulin de la Galette,'' now in the [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris, and [[Claude Monet]]'s series of the Saint-Lazare train station at the Impressionist exhibition of 1877. It's massive size, almost 7 feet by 10 feet, drew a great deal of attention.<ref>Artic.edu, [http://www.artic.edu/artexplorer/search.php?tab=2&resource=412 Caillebotte's Modern Aesthetic.] Retrieved August 22, 2007.</ref>
  
Caillebotte's painting career slowed dramatically in the 1890s, when he stopped making large canvases and showing his work.  He acquired a property at Petit Gennevilliers, on the banks of the Seine near Argenteuil, in 1881, and moved there permanently in 1888. He devoted himself to gardening and to building and racing yachts, and spent much time with his brother, Martial, and his friend Renoir, who often came to stay at Petit GennevilliersIt is alleged by many sources that before his death, he had an affair with a much younger woman, Emilie Schlauch, but this can not be confirmed or denied based on the historical evidence that has been left to us. Caillebotte died prematurely, while working in his garden at Petit Gennevilliers in 1894 of [[pulmonary]] congestion, and was interred in the [[Père Lachaise|Père Lachaise Cemetery]] in Paris.
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His dramatic views of modern Paris street scenes reflect the beginnings of a burgeoning bourgeoisie that changed the face of the city by tearing up old Parisian quarters and installing new thoroughfares, buildings, bridges and railroads. He was equally adept at evoking the lower classes feelings of urban isolation as well as the elegance of the upper classes.<ref>Elenore Welles, [http://artscenecal.com/ArticlesFile/Archive/Articles1995/Articles0795/Caillebotte.html Gustave Caillebotte.] Retrieved August 22, 2007.</ref>
  
For many years, Caillebotte's reputation as a painter was superseded by his reputation as a supporter of the arts. Seventy years after his death, however, art historians began reevaluating his artistic contributions.
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His original style can be classified more as the [[Realism]] of [[Jean-Francois Millet]] and [[Gustave Courbet]], as well his contemporary [[Edgar Degas]]. His paintings began creating quite a stir among the Parisian elite who frequented the exhibitions. They were shocked at the lower-class subjects depicted in Caillebotte's paintings, a well as the calm and serene activities that Caillebotte's subjects were seen participating in.  
  
==Caillebotte's Collection==
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Caillebotte's style brought something new to the world of art, and many critics claim it was his interest in [[photography]] that led to his unique perspective. Several of his paintings showed a tilted ground, cropped pictures, and paintings that looked as if one had "zoomed in" on the subject matter. A large number of his paintings also show a very high vantage point, as if they were painted out on a balcony looking down. The most famous of these paintings are ''Vue des toits, effet de neige,'' 1878, and ''Boulevard vu d'en haut,'' 1880.
  
In his will, Caillebotte donated a large collection to the French government. This collection included sixty-eight paintings by various artists: [[Camille Pissarro]] (nineteen), [[Claude Monet]] (fourteen), [[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]] (ten), [[Alfred Sisley]] (nine), [[Edgar Degas]] (seven), [[Paul Cézanne]] (five), and [[Édouard Manet]] (four).
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Caillebotte's work turned more toward Impressionism when he moved to the house at ''Petit Gennevilliers'' on the [[Seine river]], opposite Argenteuil, where so many impressionist painters lived and painted. He was also a serious student of marine engineering and this interest in water sports and in Impressionism resulted in two early works, ''Swimming'' and ''Fishing.'' In 1882, his ''Sailing Boats at Argenteuil'' and ''The Basin at Argenteuil'' were his best Impressionistic efforts.<ref>Muriel Julius, [http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G1-18571055.html Gustave Caillebotte—Painter of a New Paris.] Retrieved August 23, 2007.</ref>
  
At the time of Caillebotte's death, the Impressionists were still largely condemned by the art establishment in France, which was dominated by [[Academic art]] and specifically the [[Académie des beaux-arts]]. Because of this, Caillebotte realised that the cultural treasures in his collection would likely disappear into "attics" and "provincial museums".  He therefore stipulated that they must be displayed in the [[Luxembourg Palace]] (devoted to the work of living artists), and then in the [[Louvre]].
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In total, Caillebotte painted over 500 works, but his remarkable abilities went largely ignored because most of his paintings were owned privately by family and friends and were neither exhibited nor reproduced until the later part of the twentieth century, except for the retrospective following his death twelve years later. As his works were rarely seen and without any reproductions in general circulation, they were largely forgotten when histories of Impressionism were written.
  
Unfortunately, the French government would not agree to these terms.  In February [[1896]], they finally negotiated terms with Renoir, who was the will's executor, under which they took thirty-eight of the paintings to the Luxembourg. The remaining twenty-nine paintings (one was taken by Renoir in payment for his services as executor) were offered to the French government twice more, in [[1904]] and [[1908]], and were both times refused. When the government finally attempted to claim them in [[1928]], the bequest was repudiated by the widow of Caillebotte's son. Most of the remaining works were purchased by [[Albert C. Barnes]], and are now held by the [[Barnes Foundation of Philadelphia]].
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==Death==
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During the 1890s Caillebotte's painting career slowed dramatically because of his decision to stop painting large canvases and exhibiting his work. As a result he turned his attention to [[gardening]], yacht building, and racing.
  
Forty of Caillebotte's own works are now held by the [[Musée d'Orsay]]. His ''L'Homme au balcon, boulevard Haussmann'', painted in [[1880]], sold for more than [[United States dollar|$]]14.3 million in 2000.
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Caillebotte died suddenly in his garden at Petit Gennevilliers in 1894. [[Autopsy]] results said that the cause of death was a [[pulmonary]] congestion. Caillebotte was buried in the famous [[Père Lachaise|Père Lachaise Cemetery]] in Paris.
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==Legacy==
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As he had no need to sell his paintings, he kept most of them and eventually passed them on to his brother and his brother's descendents. After Caillebotte's death, his brother Martial and his  friend [[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]] were put in charge of his will. He made a donation of his collection, in his will written in 1876, in these terms:
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<blockquote>I give to the French State the paintings which I have; nevertheless, since I want that this donation be accepted and in such a manner that the paintings go neither in an attic nor in a province museum, but well in the [[Luxembourg Museum]] and later in the [[Louvre]] Museum, it is necessary that a certain time passes before execution of this clause until the public, I do not say understand, but admit this new painting. This time may be twenty years at the maximum. Until then, my brother Martial, and at his defect another of my heirs, will preserve them. I request Renoir to be my executor.<ref>Impressionniste.net, [http://www.impressionniste.net/caillebotte_gustave.htm Impressionism]. Retrieved August 23, 2007. </ref>
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</blockquote>
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Caillebotte's collection consisted of sixty-eight paintings by various artists: [[Camille Pissarro]] (nineteen), [[Claude Monet]] (fourteen), [[Pierre-Auguste Renoir]] (ten), [[Alfred Sisley]] (nine), [[Edgar Degas]] (seven), [[Paul Cézanne]] (five), and [[Édouard Manet]] (four). This collection was reluctantly accepted by the state because at the time of his death, the Impressionists were shunned and condemned by the art establishment in France. Caillebotte understood this, and thus the stipulation that the paintings could not go into attics and provincial museums.
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In 1897, a room named after Caillebotte opened in the [[Luxembourg Palace]] and displayed the first exhibition of Impressionist paintings ever in a French museum. It contained 38 of the paintings that Caillebotte had left to the state. The other twenty-nine paintings (with one going to Renoir as payment for his services) were offered to the French government in 1904, and then in 1908, and both times the French refused to take them. In 1928, the government decided that they now wanted the paintings and attempted to claim them, however this time they were refused. Most of the remaining works were bought by [[Albert C. Barnes]], and are now held by the [[Barnes Foundation of Philadelphia]].
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Forty of Caillebotte's own works are now held by the [[Musée d'Orsay]]. His ''L'Homme au balcon, boulevard Haussmann,'' painted in 1880, sold for more than $14.3 million in 2000.
  
 
==Works by Caillebotte==
 
==Works by Caillebotte==
*''The Floor Scrapers'', 1875, [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris
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*''The Floor Scrapers,'' 1875, [[Musée d'Orsay]], Paris
*''Young Man at his Window'', 1875, Private Collection
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*''Young Man at his Window,'' 1875, Private Collection
*''Yerres River, Effect of Rain'', 1875, Indiana University Art Museum, Bloomington
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*''Yerres River, Effect of Rain,'' 1875, Indiana University Art Museum, Bloomington
*''The Park of the Caillebotte Property at Yerres'', 1875, Private Collection
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*''The Park of the Caillebotte Property at Yerres,'' 1875, Private Collection
*''Young Man at the Piano'', 1876, Private Collection
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*''Young Man at the Piano,'' 1876, Private Collection
*''Le Pont de L'Europe'', 1876, Musée du Petit Palais, Geneva
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*''Le Pont de L'Europe,'' 1876, Musée du Petit Palais, Geneva
 
*''Le Pont de L'Europe (Variant)'', 1876-1877, [[Kimbell Art Museum]], Fort Worth
 
*''Le Pont de L'Europe (Variant)'', 1876-1877, [[Kimbell Art Museum]], Fort Worth
*''Portraits in the Country'', 1876, Musée Baron Gérard, Bayeux
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*''Portraits in the Country,'' 1876, Musée Baron Gérard, Bayeux
*''House Painters'', 1877, Private Collection
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*''House Painters,'' 1877, Private Collection
*''Paris Street; Rainy Day'', 1877, [[The Art Institute of Chicago]]
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*''Paris Street; Rainy Day,'' 1877, [[The Art Institute of Chicago]]
*''Rowers'', 1877, Private Collection
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*''Rowers,'' 1877, Private Collection
*''Portrait of Madame Martial Caillebotte'', 1877, Private Collection
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*''Portrait of Madame Martial Caillebotte,'' 1877, Private Collection
*''Madame Boissière Knitting'', 1877, [[The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston]]
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*''Madame Boissière Knitting,'' 1877, [[The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston]]
*''Rower in a Top Hat'', 1877-1878, Private Collection
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*''Rower in a Top Hat,'' 1877-1878, Private Collection
*''The Orange Trees'', 1878, [[The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston]]
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*''The Orange Trees,'' 1878, [[The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston]]
*''Interior, Woman at the Window'', 1880, Private Collection
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*''Interior, Woman at the Window,'' 1880, Private Collection
*''In a Café'', 1880, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Rouen
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*''In a Café,'' 1880, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Rouen
*''Nu au Divan'', 1882, [[Minneapolis Institute of Arts]]
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*''Nu au Divan,'' 1882, [[Minneapolis Institute of Arts]]
  
==Bibliography==
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==Notes==
*Berhaut, Marie.  ''Gustave Caillebotte: Catalogue raisonné des peintures et pastels''.  Paris: Wildenstein Institute, 1994.
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<references/>
  
*Broude, Norma, Ed. ''Gustave Caillebotte and the Fashioning of Identity in Impressionist Paris''. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Rutgers University Press, 2002.
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==References==
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*Caillebotte, Gustave and Norma Broude. ''Gustave Caillebotte and the Fashioning of Identity in Impressionist Paris''. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2002. ISBN 0813530172
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*Darragon, Eric. ''Gustave Caillebotte''. Vaduz: Bonfini, 1994. ISBN 056800244X
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*Distel, Anne. ''Gustave Caillebotte, Urban Impressionist''. Paris: Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1995. ISBN 0789200414
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*Varnedoe, Kirk.  ''Gustave Caillebotte''.  New Haven: Yale University Press, 1987. ISBN 0300037228
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*Wittmer, Pierre.  ''Caillebotte and His Garden at Yerres''.  New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1991. ISBN 0810931672
  
*Distel, Anne.  ''Gustave Caillebotte: The Unknown Impressionist''.  London: The Royal Academy of Arts, London, 1996.
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==External links==
 
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All links retrieved July 21, 2017.
*Varnedoe, Kirk.  ''Gustave Caillebotte''.  New Haven: Yale University Press, 1987. ISBN 0-300-03722-8
 
  
*Wittmer, Pierre. ''Caillebotte and His Garden at Yerres''. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1991.
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* [http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/caillebotte/ "Caillebotte, Gustave"], ''WebMuseum, Paris''.
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* Kirk Varnedoe, The Museum of Modern Art,[http://artchive.com/artchive/C/caillebotte.html "Gustave Caillebotte"], ''The Artchive''.
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* [http://www.artcyclopedia.com/artists/caillebotte_gustave.html Gustave Caillebotte] ''Artcyclopedia.com''.
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* Welles, Elenore [http://artscenecal.com/ArticlesFile/Archive/Articles1995/Articles0795/Caillebotte.html Gustave Caillebotte] ''Artscenecal.com''.
  
==External links==
 
{{Commons|Gustave Caillebotte|Gustave Caillebotte}}
 
{{Impressionists}}
 
  
* [http://www.ibiblio.org/wm/paint/auth/caillebotte/ Caillebotte at WebMuseum]
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[[Category:Biography]]
* [http://artchive.com/artchive/C/caillebotte.html Caillebotte at The Artchive]
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[[category:art]]
* [http://cgfa.sunsite.dk/c/index.html#caillebotte Cailebotte at CGFA]
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[[category:artists]]
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[[category:art, music, literature, sports and leisure]]
  
[[Category:History and biography]]
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{{Credit|132588189}}

Latest revision as of 01:24, 27 July 2023

Gustave Caillebotte

Gustave Caillebotte (August 19, 1848 – February 21, 1894), was a wealthy and generous French painter. Caillebotte originally sought a career as a lawyer, but his youthful interest in painting led him to study under Léon Bonnat. Caillebotte soon became a friend and a major patron of the group of artists known as Impressionists.

While Caillebotte's own style belongs to the school of Realism, he also shared certain traits of the Impressionists. He is best known for his paintings of urban Paris. These paintings were quite controversial for their banal and often lower-class subjects as well as the cropping and "zooming in" techniques he employed as a result of his interest in photography.

Caillebotte used his wealth to become something of a renaissance man as he collected the art of his contemporaries and stamps (his collection is now in the British Museum), as well as became an expert in orchid horticulture, yacht building, and even textile design.

Early life and career

Gustave Caillebotte was born to a life of privilege and wealth on August 19, 1848. His father, Martial Caillebotte (1799-1874), inherited the family fortune and became the proprietor of the Caillebotte family textile industry. Martial Caillebotte also held the esteemed position of judge at the Seine's Tribunal de Commerce. Martial Caillebotte was married and widowed twice in his younger years. His third marriage to Céleste Daufresne (1819-1878) resulted in three sons. Gustave was the first born, followed by René (1851-1876) and Martial (1853-1910).

The Caillebotte family home was located on one of the most famous streets in Paris, the rue du Faubourg-Saint-Denis. The family occupied a home there until 1866, when Martial decided to build a home on rue de Miromesnil in Paris. At this time, the Caillebotte family began vacationing during the summer months in the small town of Yerres. Yerres is 12 miles south of Paris, and located near a beautiful river and relaxing countryside. The beauty and serene charm of Yerres was the inspiration to Caillebotte's beginnings in drawing and painting. He found many subjects along the river, including birds, animals, trees, and flowers. Caillebotte was also prone to depicting his parents and brothers and their daily domestic activities. His painting, Young Man at His Window, 1875, shows René in the family home on rue de Miromesnil; in The Orange Trees, 1878, Caillebotte painted Martial Jr. along with his cousin Zoë in the garden at Yerres, and Portraits in the Country, 1875, includes Caillebotte's mother, his aunt, cousin, and a family friend.[1]

Even though he showed an inclination towards art, Caillebotte earned a law degree in 1868, and a license to practice law in 1870. Before he was able to start practicing law, Caillebotte was drafted for the Franco-Prussian war. He served in the Garde Nationale Mobile de la Seine. After the war Caillebotte began visiting the studio of painter Léon Bonnat, where he began to seriously study painting and began to meet and befriended several artists including Edgar Degas and Giuseppe de Nittis. As a result he attended (but did not participate in) the first Impressionist exhibition of 1874.

Artistic career

In 1874, Gustave Caillebotte made the acquaintance of several up and coming artists including Edgar Degas, Claude Monet, and Pierre-Auguste Renoir. He loved their art and admired their talent. He was also very interested in the new style of painting that the group was introducing in Paris, a style that created a movement known as Impressionism. Upon meeting the artists, Caillebotte helped them to organize and fund their first major group exhibition in Paris. Caillebotte, the only one with any serious financial means, would become a main patron and supporter of the group, as well as becoming a member with his own art. He constantly bought paintings of his friends for high prices and supported the expenses of their exhibitions for the next six years. The group expanded to include Camille Pissarro, Paul Cezanne, Alfred Sisley, and Berthe Morisot.

In 1876 Caillebotte decided to showcase several of his paintings, instead of working behind the scenes. Upon the death of his father in 1874, followed by that of his mother in 1878, Caillebotte received a sizable inheritance that gave him the freedom of painting without the pressure and need to sell his work for money. The year before Caillebotte's this exhibition he tried submitting work to the Official Salon in Paris, but was refused entry. As a result he entered the same painting, The Floor Scrapers in this exhibition and gained some attention.

Caillebotte's Paris Street; Rainy Day, considered his masterpiece, was begun in 1876, and finished early in 1877. It shared the spotlight with Pierre-Auguste Renoir's Ball at the Moulin de la Galette, now in the Musée d'Orsay, Paris, and Claude Monet's series of the Saint-Lazare train station at the Impressionist exhibition of 1877. It's massive size, almost 7 feet by 10 feet, drew a great deal of attention.[2]

His dramatic views of modern Paris street scenes reflect the beginnings of a burgeoning bourgeoisie that changed the face of the city by tearing up old Parisian quarters and installing new thoroughfares, buildings, bridges and railroads. He was equally adept at evoking the lower classes feelings of urban isolation as well as the elegance of the upper classes.[3]

His original style can be classified more as the Realism of Jean-Francois Millet and Gustave Courbet, as well his contemporary Edgar Degas. His paintings began creating quite a stir among the Parisian elite who frequented the exhibitions. They were shocked at the lower-class subjects depicted in Caillebotte's paintings, a well as the calm and serene activities that Caillebotte's subjects were seen participating in.

Caillebotte's style brought something new to the world of art, and many critics claim it was his interest in photography that led to his unique perspective. Several of his paintings showed a tilted ground, cropped pictures, and paintings that looked as if one had "zoomed in" on the subject matter. A large number of his paintings also show a very high vantage point, as if they were painted out on a balcony looking down. The most famous of these paintings are Vue des toits, effet de neige, 1878, and Boulevard vu d'en haut, 1880.

Caillebotte's work turned more toward Impressionism when he moved to the house at Petit Gennevilliers on the Seine river, opposite Argenteuil, where so many impressionist painters lived and painted. He was also a serious student of marine engineering and this interest in water sports and in Impressionism resulted in two early works, Swimming and Fishing. In 1882, his Sailing Boats at Argenteuil and The Basin at Argenteuil were his best Impressionistic efforts.[4]

In total, Caillebotte painted over 500 works, but his remarkable abilities went largely ignored because most of his paintings were owned privately by family and friends and were neither exhibited nor reproduced until the later part of the twentieth century, except for the retrospective following his death twelve years later. As his works were rarely seen and without any reproductions in general circulation, they were largely forgotten when histories of Impressionism were written.

Death

During the 1890s Caillebotte's painting career slowed dramatically because of his decision to stop painting large canvases and exhibiting his work. As a result he turned his attention to gardening, yacht building, and racing.

Caillebotte died suddenly in his garden at Petit Gennevilliers in 1894. Autopsy results said that the cause of death was a pulmonary congestion. Caillebotte was buried in the famous Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris.

Legacy

As he had no need to sell his paintings, he kept most of them and eventually passed them on to his brother and his brother's descendents. After Caillebotte's death, his brother Martial and his friend Pierre-Auguste Renoir were put in charge of his will. He made a donation of his collection, in his will written in 1876, in these terms:

I give to the French State the paintings which I have; nevertheless, since I want that this donation be accepted and in such a manner that the paintings go neither in an attic nor in a province museum, but well in the Luxembourg Museum and later in the Louvre Museum, it is necessary that a certain time passes before execution of this clause until the public, I do not say understand, but admit this new painting. This time may be twenty years at the maximum. Until then, my brother Martial, and at his defect another of my heirs, will preserve them. I request Renoir to be my executor.[5]

Caillebotte's collection consisted of sixty-eight paintings by various artists: Camille Pissarro (nineteen), Claude Monet (fourteen), Pierre-Auguste Renoir (ten), Alfred Sisley (nine), Edgar Degas (seven), Paul Cézanne (five), and Édouard Manet (four). This collection was reluctantly accepted by the state because at the time of his death, the Impressionists were shunned and condemned by the art establishment in France. Caillebotte understood this, and thus the stipulation that the paintings could not go into attics and provincial museums.

In 1897, a room named after Caillebotte opened in the Luxembourg Palace and displayed the first exhibition of Impressionist paintings ever in a French museum. It contained 38 of the paintings that Caillebotte had left to the state. The other twenty-nine paintings (with one going to Renoir as payment for his services) were offered to the French government in 1904, and then in 1908, and both times the French refused to take them. In 1928, the government decided that they now wanted the paintings and attempted to claim them, however this time they were refused. Most of the remaining works were bought by Albert C. Barnes, and are now held by the Barnes Foundation of Philadelphia.

Forty of Caillebotte's own works are now held by the Musée d'Orsay. His L'Homme au balcon, boulevard Haussmann, painted in 1880, sold for more than $14.3 million in 2000.

Works by Caillebotte

  • The Floor Scrapers, 1875, Musée d'Orsay, Paris
  • Young Man at his Window, 1875, Private Collection
  • Yerres River, Effect of Rain, 1875, Indiana University Art Museum, Bloomington
  • The Park of the Caillebotte Property at Yerres, 1875, Private Collection
  • Young Man at the Piano, 1876, Private Collection
  • Le Pont de L'Europe, 1876, Musée du Petit Palais, Geneva
  • Le Pont de L'Europe (Variant), 1876-1877, Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth
  • Portraits in the Country, 1876, Musée Baron Gérard, Bayeux
  • House Painters, 1877, Private Collection
  • Paris Street; Rainy Day, 1877, The Art Institute of Chicago
  • Rowers, 1877, Private Collection
  • Portrait of Madame Martial Caillebotte, 1877, Private Collection
  • Madame Boissière Knitting, 1877, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
  • Rower in a Top Hat, 1877-1878, Private Collection
  • The Orange Trees, 1878, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
  • Interior, Woman at the Window, 1880, Private Collection
  • In a Café, 1880, Musée des Beaux-Arts, Rouen
  • Nu au Divan, 1882, Minneapolis Institute of Arts

Notes

  1. Answers.com, Gustave Caillebotte.
  2. Artic.edu, Caillebotte's Modern Aesthetic. Retrieved August 22, 2007.
  3. Elenore Welles, Gustave Caillebotte. Retrieved August 22, 2007.
  4. Muriel Julius, Gustave Caillebotte—Painter of a New Paris. Retrieved August 23, 2007.
  5. Impressionniste.net, Impressionism. Retrieved August 23, 2007.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Caillebotte, Gustave and Norma Broude. Gustave Caillebotte and the Fashioning of Identity in Impressionist Paris. New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2002. ISBN 0813530172
  • Darragon, Eric. Gustave Caillebotte. Vaduz: Bonfini, 1994. ISBN 056800244X
  • Distel, Anne. Gustave Caillebotte, Urban Impressionist. Paris: Réunion des Musées Nationaux, 1995. ISBN 0789200414
  • Varnedoe, Kirk. Gustave Caillebotte. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1987. ISBN 0300037228
  • Wittmer, Pierre. Caillebotte and His Garden at Yerres. New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1991. ISBN 0810931672

External links

All links retrieved July 21, 2017.

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