Georges Clairin

Georges Clairin depicted by Paul Mathey

Georges Jules Victor Clairin (11 September 1843, Paris Pouldu, Clohars-Carnoët 2 September 1919) was a French Orientalist painter and illustrator. He was influenced by Eastern imagery Moorish architecture, and visited North Africa many times, in particular Morocco and Egypt. In Paris he led the life of a socialite, and befriended the glamorous actress Sarah Bernhardt, his friend for 50 years, and is today best known for his 'in costume' and informal intimate portraits of her.[1]

Life

Georges Clairin

Clairin was apprenticed in the workshops of Isidore Pils and François-Édouard Picot. In 1861 he entered the École des beaux-arts de Paris,[1] and in 1866 first displayed his work. He travelled to Spain with Henri Regnault and to Italy with François Flameng and Jean-Léon Gérôme. He met the Catalan painter Marià Fortuny in Morocco and they visited Tétouan together.[2] In 1895, he travelled to Egypt with the composer Camille Saint-Saëns.

He is best known for his portraits of Sarah Bernhardt, with whom he had a long friendship and whom he depicted in costume for a number of her roles, includingh as the queen in Ruy Blas (1879), Mélisande in La Princesse Lointaine (1895 and 1899), Cleopatra (1900), Theodora (1902) and Saint Teresa of Ávila; he also showed her in less formal poses. Clairin painted many ceilings, among them the foyers of the Opéra Garnier (1874) and the Le Trident, the theatre of Cherbourg.

He was the uncle of the painter Pierre-Eugène Clairin.

Portrait de Sarah Bernhardt (1876), musée du Petit Palais

Portrait of Sarah Bernhardt, 1876

Clairin's 1876 portrait of Sarah Bernhardt drew praise. Théodore Véron said of it:

The portrait of Mademoiselle Sarah Bernhardt is assuredly one of the most prominent of the Salon, as much for the originality of its composition as for the splendour of its colour.[3][4]
Monsieur Clarin shows us her wrapped in a long robe of white satin with a trailing train, she is resting on a luxurious divan of pink satin and leaning on a cushion of the same material draped in gold; to her right and in the depths of this Oriental apartment is a Venetian mirror surrounded by purple velvet curtains; to her left a tropical plant lowers its green leaves over the meditating actress and sculptress; at here feet a yellow hound of a large breed rests on its long legs and stretches out its proud and aristocratic head.[4][5]

Emile Zola found that: "Mademoiselle Sarah Bernhardt isn't pretty but she has fine intelligent features and Clairin has been able to give her a smooth little face and vulgar sensuality like Cabanel would paint."[6]

Works


Notes and references

  1. 1 2 "Georges-Jules-Victor Clairin". M.S. Rau Antiques, New Orleans. Retrieved 7 June 2014
  2. Lynne Thornton (1985), www.acr-edition.com, ed., La Femme dans la peinture orientaliste, p. 264, ISBN 2867700116, p. 232.
  3. Le portrait de Mme Sara Bernhardt est assurément une des œuvres les plus saillantes du Salon, tant par l'originalité de la composition que par la splendeur du coloris
  4. 1 2 Théodore Véron (1876). Le salon de 1876 : mémorial de l'art et des artistes de mon temps. Poitiers.
  5. M. Clairin nous la représente enveloppée dans un long peignoir de satin blanc à queue traînante, elle est étendue sur un riche divan de satin rosé, et accoudée sur un coussin de même étoffe chamarrée d'or ; à sa droite et dans le fond de cet appartement tout oriental, est une glace de Venise entourée de rideaux de velours violet ; à sa gauche une plante tropicale abaisse ses larges feuilles vertes sur l'actrice et sculpteur en méditation ; à ses pieds, un lévrier jaune de grande race repose sur ses longues pattes et allonge sa tête fière et aristocratique
  6. Mlle Sarah Bernhard n'est pas jolie, mais elle a des traits fins et intelligents dont Clairin n'a su faire qu'un minois régulier et vulgairement sensuel tel que le peindrait un Cabanel "( Salon de 1876)

Bibliography

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