Rosa Bonheur (1822–1899), born in rural Bordeaux, soon moved with her family to Paris. But her father left his wife and 4 children to live with a Christian utopian sect which promoted the equality of women and workers. Bonheur’s mother taught piano and sewing to earn money, but died when Rosa was young. The family struggled so artist-dad Raymond came home. He strongly urged Rosa to be independence in her art career.
Note the timing. Bonheur began sketching farm animals before primary school! From her days in a squishy Bordeaux flat, she assembled a small zoo, exercised in the local park. Later in Paris, she got permission to regularly sketch in a city abattoir. So her animals really looked alive, almost with their stink coming off the canvas.
Her personal art preferences luckily synchronised with France’s contemporary style. With the rise of the bourgeoisie instead of a cultivated aristocracy, smaller paintings of every-day subjects rather than grand mythological or religious scenes, were in demand! Artists looking for quick financial security turned to landscapes and animal paintings! Bonheur was already a master!
She continued her art education as a teenager, copying paintings at the Louvre with dad and studying living animal anatomy. At 19 she exhibited paintings of rabbits, goats and sheep at the 1841 Paris Salon, not attracting enough attention. But the young artist had established herself in French culture by 1845. See a lively landscape with farm animals, Ploughing in Nivernais/Nevers (1849), for example.
1849, Wiki
An upcoming exhibition at Musée d'Orsay Paris will be the first full show dedicated to Bonheur. See for example an early Bonheur masterpiece Ploughing that showed two teams of oxen turning the soil one autumn afternoon. The animals were monumental, yet each muscle showed the precision of a biology diagram. Kathryn Hughes wrote that the scene was bathed in a light just like C17th Dutch art, especially Bonheur’s favourite animalier, Dutchman Paulus Potter (1625–54). But I still prefer Bonheur.
This trailblazing French woman became the darling of the English art scene. She spent her days in abattoirs and fields studying her animals, and by her early 30s, she had become famous over the Channel. Her trip to England allowed Rosa to meet the President of the Royal Academy & other British notables including John Ruskin & animalier Edwin Landseer. Even Queen Victoria attended a private viewing of the equestrian scene during Rosa’s visit.
The Horse Fair (1852-55), in Metropolitan Museum of Art, is Bonheur’s best-known painting. Praised as one of the world’s greatest animal picture, it was reproduced and sold as a print across Britain. Her pastoral pictures eg The Highland Shepherd (1859) often depicted shepherds and farmers wearing old working clothes.
Bonheur became the first woman to win France’s Legion of Honour in 1865, presented by Napoleon III’s wife Empress Eugénie who understood that genius had no gender. Her successes meant that Bonheur could financially support herself and the women she loved eg her partner Nathalie Micas for 40+ years.
Remember Linda Nochlin’s 1971 essay Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists? Nochlin acknowledged Bonheur’s great talent by pointing out the relevant circumstances, renewing attention on Bonheur, 70+ years after her death. Nochlin regarded Bonheur’s relationship with Micas as a companionable, platonic union. This arrangement for wonderful for women who, pre-contraception, wished to avoid the burden of childcare. Later writers described the artist’s relationship with Micas as gay, and also emphasised Bonheur’s ties to artist-lover Anna Klumpke (1856–1942).
The Franco-Prussian war (1870–1), siege, Commune and a shared sense of powerlessness encouraged Rosa to think about fierce animal predators. Lions and tigers obsessed her, even though she saw that these powerful, majestic creatures had the potential to destroy nature. In 1872, she painted Couching Lion, showing a majestic cat reclining against a steep backdrop, head raised.
By the mid-1870s, Bonheur’s creativity drew widespread interest. Powerful cats now became Rosa’s main purpose but she was still anxious about lions. Rosa knew she could calm a raging bull and pacify a startled pony. But Algerian lions were unfamiliar; she had no experience of how lions reacted. Caged lions could be readily observed, but that would been unacceptable. So with her friend Nathalie, Rosa agreed to visit Château de Saint-Leu. Courageous Nathalie’s marched up to the free-roaming lioness and ran her hand along the creature’s back. No problem; Rosa was awestruck. From then on, trips to Saint-Leu permitted Rosa to study the lioness’s unique physical and temperamental design.
Bonheur, Sheep by the Sea, 1865
National Museum of Women in the Arts, Wash DC
Lawyer Katherine Brault bought Bonheur’s chateau in 2017 and is converting it into the Musée de l'atelier Rosa Bonheur, with substantial French government financial support. In the meantime the famous Musée d’Orsay will host an exhibition of Bonheur’s seen and unseen works during Oct 2022-Jan 2023. See Bonheur’s hidden sides eg her passion for opera.
National Museum of Women in the Arts, Wash DC
In her life, Bonheur’s realistic paintings of horses, oxen, lions and other animals won widespread fame. Even after her death in 1899, the French artist, her sketches & preparatory drawings sold for an unprecedented price. But her work fell out of favour in her homeland with the rise of Impressionism, Abstract Art and art photography. Of course Bonheur still dedicated her life to her career, living by her own rules, dressing in men’s clothes, smoking cigars, living with female partners and by insisting on independence. Sadly she has only enjoyed a resurgence of attention recently.
Lawyer Katherine Brault bought Bonheur’s chateau in 2017 and is converting it into the Musée de l'atelier Rosa Bonheur, with substantial French government financial support. In the meantime the famous Musée d’Orsay will host an exhibition of Bonheur’s seen and unseen works during Oct 2022-Jan 2023. See Bonheur’s hidden sides eg her passion for opera.
1898, Metrop Museum of Art,
Wiki
14 comments:
How strange was Bonheur's relationship with Buffalo Bill? What did they have in common?
Student
It seems very strange, yes, but here is what the Smithsonian said:
A room where Bonheur did the initial studies for her paintings had a glass-doored armoire with an authentic costume of Rocky Bear, Chief of the Oglala Sioux tribe, given to her by William Buffalo Bill Cody. She befriended him when he performed his Wild West show in Paris during the Universal Exposition in 1889. Bonheur visited Buffalo Bill in his encampment, and she sketched the Native Americans who'd travelled with him to France. He came to see her at her chateau, where she painted him seated on his white horse; the painting hangs today in the Whitney Western Art Museum in Cody, Wyoming.
It was tricky for all women then, not just for Rosa Bonheur. So what made Bonheur more talented, more determined, less easily brushed aside? Even though she couldn't get into art school, at least she wasn't married off at 18, having a baby every second year.
Joe
Hard to know how much the active support from Rosa's artist/art teacher father (Raymond Bonheur) made a difference. Her mother died young and the three siblings went to live elsewhere, so Rosa got all of her father's attention. She might have been a bit of a wild child, but her father didn't even complain when Rosa wore men's clothing.
Once Rosa saw animal paintings in her future, her dad set up a flat where Rosa could keep smallish domestic animals eg chickens. And he never forced her into marriage.
Boa tarde minha querida amiga. Os trabalhos de Rosa são maravilhosos. Parabéns pelo seu excelente trabalho e matéria. Uma ótimo sábado.
Luiz
agreed. A talented artist and a confident one. I hope you get to see the exhibition at Musée d'Orsay Paris or somewhere closer.
Anna Klumpke (1856-1942) was born in San Francisco. She studied art, copying the masters at a museum in Luxembourg before going to Paris. Her first work entered into the Salon won her a prize for the outstanding student, allowing her to continue to exhibit in the Salon. She admired and was inspired by the work of Rosa Bonheur and was determined to meet her.
Klumpke communicated by letters for ten years with Bonheur and finally wrote to her inquiring about painting her portrait, asking only for a few sittings. Bonheur responded and invited her to come and stay at her home to complete the painting. Although they were 34 years apart in age, after they met they developed a close relationship and she moved in with Bonheur. They both entered into a formal contract about their personal and professional arrangements; Klumpke painted portraits of Bonheur and wrote her biography. Bonheur built a studio for Klumpke on her estate. After Bonheur died, her entire estate was left to Klumpke, who established the Bonheur museum and art school and wrote a book about her life together.
Humanities Library, LibreTexts
Many thanks. I knew of Anna Klumpke's relationship with Rosa Bonheur but I had no idea that she had an impressive oeuvre of her own. So I have added the famous 1898 Portrait onto the post.
Rosa Bonheur's attraction to animal painting seems rather odd. However, she did it well, and that brought her fame and financial possibilities which was important for a woman artist in those days.
I like her portrait by Anna Klumpke. She looks dignified in it.
DUTA
I had assumed that Rosa Bonheur didn't do religious themes, elegant family portraits or royal histories because she had no access to the Royal Academy or to wealthy patrons. But now I believe that from the earliest days of self teaching and father support, Rosa loved spending quality time with animals of all sizes. She wrote "I became an animal painter because I loved to move among animals. I would study an animal and draw it in the position it took, and when it changed to another position I would draw that". Even in the muddy fields.
You are correct about the financial possibilities. Bonheur purchased her Château de By in 1860 using the RECORD proceeds from a sale to the Met of "The Horse Fair".
Hi Hels - she sounds an amazing woman and artist ... I'd love to visit the exhibition ... but won't be able to. Beautiful artworks ... thank you - Hilary
Hilary
I would love to fly out and visit the exhibition too... but that isn't going to happen anytime soon :( So I found the best images reproduced in books, available in our state and university libraries.
eg
1.Art is a Tyrant: The Unconventional Life of Rosa Bonheur by Catherine Hewitt, 2021
2.Rosa Bonheur, Painter of Animals by Olive M. Price, 1972
3.A Storm of Horses: The Story of Artist Rosa Bonheur by Ruth Sanderson, 2022.
Bom dia. Obrigado pela visita e carinho. Aproveito para desejar um excelente mês de agosto com muita paz e saúde.
Luiz
Bonheur's paintings are very different from the art works you show in your excellent blog.
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