Félix Fénéon

Félix Fénéon, c. 1900

Félix Fénéon (22 June 1861, Turin, Italy – 29 February 1944, Châtenay-Malabry) was a Parisian anarchist and art critic during the late 19th century. He coined the term "Neo-Impressionism" in 1886 to identify a group of artists led by Georges Seurat, and ardently promoted them.

The Fénéon Prize was established in 1949 by his wife based on proceeds from the sale of his art collection.

Life

Felix Fénéon was a prominent literary stylist, art critic, and anarchist born in Turin, Italy in 1861.[1] He was later raised in Burgundy, presumably because his father was a travelling salesman. After placing first in the competitive exams for jobs, Fénéon moved to Paris to work for the War Office where he achieved the rank of chief clerk.[1] During his time in the war office he edited many works, including those of Rimbaud and Lautréamont, as well as helped to advance the fledgling pointillist movement under Georges Seurat.[2] He was also a regular at Mallarmé’s salons on Tuesday evenings as well as active in anarchist circles.[1]

Paul Signac, Portrait of Félix Fénéon, 1890, Museum of Modern Art, New York City

Fénéon, ironically, worked 13 years at the War Office while remaining heavily active in supporting anarchist circles and movements.[3] In March 1892 French police talked about Fénéon as an 'active Anarchist', and they had him shadowed.[2] In 1894 Fénéon was arrested on suspicion of conspiracy because of an anarchist bombing of the Foyot restaurant, a popular haunt of politicians.[2] He was also suspected of connection with the assassination of the French President, Sadi Carnot, by an Italian anarchist[2] He and twenty-nine others were arrested under charges of conspiracy in what became known as the "Trial of Thirty". Fénéon was acquitted with many of the original thirty.[1] However, the trial was a high point in publicity for Fénéon, normally behind the scenes, as he championed his wit to the amusement of the jury. Of the courtroom scene, Julian Barnes writes, "When the presiding judge put it to him that he had been spotted talking to a known anarchist behind a gas lamp, he replied coolly: Can you tell me, Monsieur le Président, which side of a gas lamp is its behind?"[3]

After the trial, Fénéon became even more illusive. In 1890, the Neo-Impressionist Paul Signac asked to produce a portrait of the lauded critic. Fénéon refused several times before agreeing, only if Signac produced a full face effigy. Signac naturally refused, painting instead a famous profile of Fénéon with characteristic goatee, a picture that largely became a symbol of the spawning movement many variations. Fénéon, though displeased, hung the picture on his wall until Signac’s death 45 years later.[3]

Aside from Novels in Three Lines that first appeared as clippings in the Parisian Le Matins in 1906 and later as a collection, only because his mistress Camille Pateel had collected them in an album, Fénéon published only a 43-page monograph in Les Impressionists (1886). When asked to produce Les Nouvelles en Trois Lignes as a collection, Fénéon famously replied with an angry "I aspire only to silence".[3] As Luc Sante points out, Fénéon, one might say, is invisibly famous, having affected so much without being recognizable to many.

Félix Fénéon by Félix Vallotton (1898)

Fénéon’s lawyer offered him a post at La Revue Blanche after the trial and his subsequent expulsion from the War Office, however, he worked for that magazine until 1903. In that time, he went on to promote the works of Seurat and Signac through the magazine. He organized the first retrospective of Seurat’s work in 1900.[2] Seurat is known for a number of works, most significantly La Grande Jatte. Hajo Düchting, the author of Seurat, The Master of Pointillism notes that "Actually he (Fénéon) was the only critic who proved capable of articulating an appreciation of Seurat's picture, and the new method of painting it exemplified, in words notable for their objective tone".[4]

After La Revue Blanche failed, Fénéon went to work for the liberal paper Le Matin, where he anonymously composed daily news "filler", what the French call "faits-divers" or "sundry events", of three lines each. His authorship was not revealed until the 1940s.[2] In these he captured the complex subtleties of French daily life. The following examples highlight the wit of such a critic of the mundane:

After his post at Le Matin , Fénéon directed the Galerie Bernheim-Jeune and became increasingly involved with Neo-Impressionism, especially the art of Georges Seurat.[2] He was the director of the gallery from 1906 to 1925. Before the his retirement from the gallery, he is reported to have told a friend that he was "ready for idleness", and then he abruptly quit at the age of 63.[2]

Works

References

External links

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