Julien Le Blant

Julien Le Blant
Born March 30, 1851(1851-03-30)
Paris, France
Died February 28, 1936(1936-02-28) (aged 84)
Paris, France
Field Oil Painting, Watercolor painting, Pen and Ink Drawing
Movement Paris Salon, Genre Painting
Awards Legion of Honor, 1885; Bronze Medal, Salon, 1878; Silver Medal, Salon, 1880; Gold Medal Exposition, Universelle, 1889

Julien Le Blant (born in Paris, March, 30, 1851, died in Paris, February 28, 1936) was a French painter of military subjects who specialized in the scenes of the Vendee Wars of 1793–1799 that occurred during the French Revolution.[1] Because he came from a family from the Bas-Poitou, part of the old province of Poitou, Le Blant was descended from the French "Blancs" who had opposed the French Revolution and was thus in sympathy with those who rose up and formed the Grand Catholic Army of the Vendee and he spent his artistic career commemorating the events of the rebellion in large works that were exhibited in the annual Paris Salon.[2] Le Blant was a much honored painter and he won a Bronze Medal at the Salon in 1878, a Silver Medal in 1880 and a Gold Medal at the 1889 Exposition Universelle, the Paris World's Fair that commemorated the centennial of the beginning of the French Revolution.[3] Le Blant was also a prolific illustrator, contributing more than five hundred illustratons to dozens of books.[4] Le Blant's last major accomplishment was a large series of drawings, watercolors and paintings of French soldiers on their way home from and departing to the front during the First World War.[5] His work is in a number of public collections, but primarily in France because the subjects he specialized in did not command great popularity abroad.[6]

Contents

Biography

Childhood and Training

Le Blant was born in 1851, the first son of Edmond-Frederic Le Blant (1818–1897) and Marie Louise Gasparine Lemaire Le Blant. His father was trained as an attorney, but he became a famous biblical archaeologist.[7] His mother died soon after giving birth to her son and Juilen was raised by a stepmother.[8] According to family accounts, Julien was a difficult child. He was educated at the lycée Bonaparte and by the Dominicans at d'Arcueil. He studied in the atelier of Ernst-Joseph-Angleton Girard (1813–1898), who was in turn a student or "élève" of d'Isabey.[9] Le Blant made his debut at the Paris Salon in 1874 with "Assassinat de Lepellier Saint Fargeau". From the beginning of his career he focused on military subjects and on scenes of the French Revolution. This was in great contrast to the works of other military painters of the time who usually portrayed the glories of the subsequent Napoleonic Wars.[10] French painters of the time we obsessed with realism and so Le Blant collected uniforms, muskets and peasant's clothing to have his models that posed for him wear. His work was popular and he was sought after both as a painter and an illustrator. While his large works were in oil, he also developed a reputation for his watercolors. In addition to his scenes of military campaigns and armies, he also painted maritime subjects, but warships rather than scenes of commerce.[11]

Julien Le Blant and The Vendée

From the beginning of his career, Le Blant was focused on memorializing the revolt that occurred against the French Revolution in the Vendée. This campaign against Revolutionary authority began in 1973 and ended in 1796 with the capture and execution of the last of its major leaders. Le Blant portrayed the leaders and occurrences of "La Vendée in virtually all of his major works.[12] The Vendée revolt is one of the most controversial subjects in French history.[13] A series of new edicts from the Revolutionary government in Paris is credited with setting off the revolt. These included an increase in taxation, conscription [14] and a number of anti-clerical measures that the deeply religious people of the region resisted.[15] The Revolutionary troops were spread thin in the region and as the revolt widened, the hastily-formed Catholic Army of the Vendee managed to capture a number of towns and win a series of pitched battles.[16] Eventually, through superior numbers and equipment, the forces of the Revolution defeated the rebels and the campaign to put down the revolt became notoriously savage. While there were atrocities on both sides, the government in Paris wanted the rebellion to be put down savagely in order to discourage further revolts against its authority and it was. The most modern academic estimates are that about a quarter of the population - men, women and children - were killed by the troops of the Revolutionary and their sympathizers.[17]

Le Blant's sympathies were clearly were with the counter-revolutionaries who rose up and fought against the French Revolution on behalf of the Royalty and Catholic Church. His first great Salon painting, exhibited when he was twenty-seven, was "Mort du général d’Elbée" or "The Death of General d’Elbée." In this work Le Blant depicted the wounded general's execution. General d’Elbée (1752–1794) had been mortally wounded and so after his capture, he was carried out to be executed on his chair and his wife and family suffered the same fate. "The Execution of General Charette" or "L'Exécution du Général Charette" depicted the fate of another one of the Catholic Army's leaders, François de Charette (1763–1796).[18] "Henri de la Rochejacquelin" was a large work that portrayed one of the first leaders of the revolt, the nobleman Henri de la Rochejacquelin (1772–1794).[19] Le Blants's "Un Chouan" was a depiction of an anonymous counter-revolutionary from the Vendée who came to become known colloquially as Les Chouans. This work came to symbolize the peasants in the revolt and it was reproduced widely in the 19th century and its still used on book covers on the Vendée rebellion today.[20]

Salons, Exhibitions, Honors

In the 1878 Salon he won a Bronze Medal for "Mort du général d’Elbée" ("The Death of General d'Elbée). In 1880 he was a Silver Medal for "Le Bataillon carré" ("The Battalion Square") which was also awarded a Gold Medal at the Exposition Universelle (1889) (The Paris Worlds Fair). He was made a Knight of the Legion of Honor by the French Government in December 1885 (Chevalier de la Légion d'Honneur).[21] Le Blant's works were chosen to represent France in the Chicago World's Fair, formally known as the World's Columbian Exposition, in 1893. In the official catalog for the Exposition, his work was contrasted against the works of Paul-Louis-Narcisse Grolleron (1848–1901): "Grolleron and Le Blant are in better taste, though they approach their subjects from very different points of view. The former renders a good dramatic incident in a serious and well-considered composition, soberly and rather better painted than usual; the latter brings a sly touch of sarcasm and humor. His ‘Retour du Regiment’ – from the heroic army of the Sambre-et-Meuse we will suppose shows the grimy, ragged and ferocious battalion drawn up for inspection in the public square and idly reviewed by a supercilious crowd of dandies, muscadins and incroyables, each with the dernier cri de la mode and each more absurd than his neighbor. The warriors scowl darkly under this complacent observation, and there are signs of an outbreak by one or two of the older moustaches.” [22]

Illustration career

In 1885, Julien Le Blant embarked on a second career as an illustrator and he was active illustrating books until his death.[23] The first book that he illustrated was on the military, written by Alfred de Vigny and LeBlant contributed a frontispiece and six engravings.[24] In 1886 he illustrated the George Sand novel Mauprat [25] and Le Chevalier des Touches .[26] Le Blant did more than sixty drawings for the notebooks of Captain Coignet, which is considered a classic account of the Napoleonic Wars.[27] When editors required illustrations of the Vendee campaigns, Le Blant was commissioned to do the illustrations. His works were used as the basis for a series of engravings in Honore Balzac's book, Les Chouans which was translated and published in English in 1889.[28] He did 161 illustrations for Alexandre Dumas Le Chevalier de Maison Rouge, a profusely illustrated limited edition book [29] For illustrations, he would do original compositions for the book and then an engraver would reproduce his works for publication. His illustrations could be pen & ink, a medium he was particularly adept at, in watercolor or in oil.[30] Then, once the book project was complete, it was Le Blant's practice to sell off the illustrations at the Hotel Drouot auction house.[31] His illustrations for Les Chouans were sold this was in 1891, "Enfant Perdu de Toudouze" in 1894 and "Cahiers Du Capitaine Coignet" in 1896. He was considered a consummate draftsman and he worked extensively in pen & ink and watercolor for the books he illustrated. His last illustration project came in 1924, It was an American book of poetry, In the Hills, written by the wealthy Baltimore art patron and Peace Activist Theodore Marburg (1862–1946).[32]

Le Bataillon carré, Le Blant's Gold Medal Painting

Le Blant's most famous work is said to be "Le Bataillon carré" a large work that won medals in the Paris Salon of 1880, where it won a Silver Medal [33] and the Paris World's Fair of 1889, where it was awarded a Gold Medal. It was purchased by the National Gallery of Australia in New South Wales and then deaccessioned, when Academic and Salon pictures were unpopular. This painting depicts a group of counter revolutionaries, who were referred to as "les blancs" ("the whites") ambushing the troops of the French Revolution. armed with scythes and pitchforks. This skirmish took place near the medieval stronghold of Fougères that was part of the old Duchy of Brittany. In the center of the composition, the troops of the Revolutionary Army have formed themselves into a defensive square and at the bottom, another group of peasants is rushing to attack.[34] William Walton described the work in his book on the paintings of the Exposition Universelle: “One of the most promising of the manor-born members of the family is M. Julien Le Blant who like Giradet, has a great affection for the incidents of the Civil War in La Vendée, of unhappy memory. Two of the most important works that he devoted to this historical theme appeared in the Exposition, and of the most famous of the two, we give a photogravure. Le Bataillon Carré first appeared in the Salon of 1880, and it is one of the best of the battle-pieces of the whole Exposition. Nothing could be finer in its line than this epic presentation of the imperturbable square battalion of “the blues” making face in all directions against the fierce rush of the stout-hearted peasants, who died for the priests and the king.” [35] Today, "Le Bataillon carré" it is in the collection of the Harold B. Lee Library at Brigham Young University, in Provo, Utah, framed in a huge molding the replicates the original 19th-century frame.[36]

Pastoral Life and Watercolors

Julien Le Blant also worked extensively in the watercolor medium. He was elected to the select membership of the Society of French Watercolorists (Société D'Aquarellistes Francais) and exhibited his work in their annual salons, beginning with the 1885 exhibition.[37] He also painted pastoral subjects and landscapes during his vacations, which were spent in Corrèze, near Brive-la-Gaillarde. Corrèze is a département, in the region of Limousin, in South-Central France.

Depictions of World War I Soldiers

When World War I broke out and rapidly turned into a stalemate, with trench lines across France, Julien Le Blant wanted to go to the front in order to paint daily life for the soldiers. Although there was a combat art program at that time for the French Army and newspaper and magazine illustrators were drawing and painting infantry combat, because of his age, which was then sixty-three, Le Blant was not allowed to go to the front. Instead, he decided to draw and paint the soldiers as they arrived and departed from the Gare de l'Est (West Station) in Paris. The neighborhood around the station was full of soldiers and Le Blant drew and painted the French and French Colonial army from life, throughout the war. He also painted the soldiers at their barracks in Reuilly, Vincenne, where they awaited departure for the front. This large body of work shows the French "Polius at rest in a wide range of moods and postures.[38] After the war, in 1919, these works were assembled into a large exhibition at Galerie Georges Petit. While the works were admired, it was said that the war-weariness of the public resulted in few sales and Le Blant's large body of work depicting the soldiers of the "Great War" was forgotten.

Gallery of Le Blant's Major Works

See also

Notable Works by Julien LeBlant

Public Collections with Works by Le Blant

Illustrated Works

Notes

  1. ^ The New International Encyclopæeia, New York (1909) p. 61
  2. ^ Virtually all his Salon works were of Vendee subjects, see list of museum holdings.
  3. ^ Perkins, p. 44 also Benezit and other standard references have his awards.
  4. ^ Morseburg, Jeffrey, Julien Le Blant
  5. ^ These are the subject of a current exhibition in Switzerland.
  6. ^ List of museums below, gathered from online searches
  7. ^ See the Edmond-Frederic Le Blant entry on English Wikipedia.
  8. ^ Formaz essay Julien Le Blant in French translated by ArtnHistory
  9. ^ Perkins,Cyclopedia of Painters and Paintings,1913, p. 44
  10. ^ Works by Ernst Messionier, Edouard Detaille and other painters who glorified Napoleon's campaigns.
  11. ^ See "Diner de l'équipage" reproduced below
  12. ^ See list of paintings below.
  13. ^ Sophie Masson, Remembering the Vendée, "Quadrant" magazine Australia, (1996) (Online)
  14. ^ The infamous "Levée en masse" and the first large conscription occurred on February 14, 1783.
  15. ^ 1. August 4, 1789, tithes were abolished. 2.November 2, 1789, Catholic Church property held for purposes of church revenue nationalized. 3. February 13, 1790, monastic vows forbidden, ecclesiastical orders, congregations dissolved, excepting those devoted to teaching children and nursing the sick. 4. April 19, 1790, administration of all remaining church property was transferred to the State.
  16. ^ See Wikipedia article on the subject.
  17. ^ Francois Furet, The French Revolution, 1770–1814: 1770–1814 Blackwell Publishing, France (1996)
  18. ^ See Wikipedia article on de Charette
  19. ^ See Wikipedia article on de la Rochejacquelin.
  20. ^ Reproduced below.
  21. ^ Perkins, p. 44
  22. ^ World's Columbian Exposition Catalog Online
  23. ^ Morseburg, Julien Le Blant
  24. ^ de Vigny, Alfred, Servitude et grandeur militaires Paris, [Jouaust] Librairie des bibliophiles, collection "Bibliothèque artistique moderne"
  25. ^ 1886 Mauprat (George Sand) Paris : A. Quantin, 1886
  26. ^ d'Aurevilly, Barbey, Le Chevalier des Touches, Paris, 1886
  27. ^ Les cahiers du Capitaine Coignet (Loredan Larchey)
  28. ^ Balzac, Honore, Les Chouans, Paris: Edition Hachette
  29. ^ Dumas, Alexandre,1894 Le Chevalier de Maison Rouge, Paris, Emile Testard, 2 volumes, book had 161 engravings
  30. ^ Recent French exhibition featured such works, the book plates are also signed with the name of a "grave" or an engraver.
  31. ^ Hotel Drouot records are available online for artist's estate sales
  32. ^ Marburg, Theodore, In the Hills: Poems by Theodore Marburg, G.P. Putnam's Sons, New York, 1924
  33. ^ Merson, Oliver, ed. Salon de 1880, Société des Artistes Françaises et Société Nationale Des Beaux-Arts, Paris: Librairie D’Art, 1880.
  34. ^ Morseburg,Jeffrey, "Le Batallion Care", BYU Lee Library Essay p.1
  35. ^ Walton, Chefs-d'oeuvre de la Exposition Universelle 1889, comprehensive book on paintings at the Paris World's Fair
  36. ^ Morseburg, Lee Library Essay
  37. ^ See Société D'Aquarellistes Francais, Ouvrage d'art publi avec le concours artistique de tous les sociétaires, entries in annual exhibitions
  38. ^ The translation for the colloquial term of affection for front-line soldiers literally means "the hairy ones", "real men" with hair on their chest and of course on their chins from long days under fire.

References

External links