Renoir: Father and Son/Painting and Cinema
Barnes Foundation,
Philadelphia, PA.
May 6, 2018 -
September 3, 2018
Reviewed by Ed Voves
Photos by Anne Lloyd
If Jean Renoir had not
been shot by a German soldier in April 1915, the new exhibit at the Barnes
Foundation in Philadelphia most likely would not have been presented. This may
seem to be a heartless remark. Renoir himself, in the extraordinary book he
later wrote, acknowledged his "debt" to the Bavarian
sharpshooter who fired the nearly fatal bullet.
As a result of his brush
with death, Renoir received six months home leave to recuperate. During this
"time-off" from World War I, Renoir spent many delightful and
inspired hours talking to his elderly father, the great Impressionist
painter, Pierre-Auguste Renoir.
Old men forget; yet all shall be forgot,
But he'll remember, with advantages,
What feats he did that day.
So Shakespeare wrote in Henry V, Act IV, Scene iii.
So Shakespeare wrote in Henry V, Act IV, Scene iii.
Despite being crippled by rheumatoid arthritis and confined to a wheelchair, Pierre-Auguste Renoir did not forget. He remembered the details of his amazing life and the pivotal role he played in the rise of Impressionism.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Detail of Photo of Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Jean Renoir
Original Photo was taken by Pierre Bonnard, c. 1916
These memories he recounted to his son, a wounded soldier of the Great War. At the end of his long career as one of the pioneering directors of French cinema, Jean Renoir produced an extraordinary recollection of his own, Renoir, My Father, published in 1962.
The Barnes exhibit recreates the lifelong process by which the younger Renoir came to terms with the creative legacy of the elder. The debt he owed his father was considerable.
The Barnes exhibit recreates the lifelong process by which the younger Renoir came to terms with the creative legacy of the elder. The debt he owed his father was considerable.
Jean Renoir is quoted as
saying that “I have spent my life trying to determine the extent of the
influence of my father upon me.”
This influence was a
matter of inspiration, not emulation. Rather than be stunted by the mighty-oak
shadow of his father, Jean Renoir did not try his hand as a painter. Rather, he grew in stature as an artist in his own
right, a master of a different medium, film making.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Gallery view of the Renoir: Father and Son exhibition
Painting at left is Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s Les Baigneuses (The Bathers), 1919
This father-son partnership is illustrated from the very first display of the Barnes exhibit. This is a video excerpt of Jean Renoir's 1936 film Partie de campagne (A Day in the Country). Based on a short story by Guy de Maupassant (who was a friend of Pierre-Auguste Renoir) it tells the story of an innocent Sunday excursion which becomes the occasion for seduction.
The key scene - the
subject of the Barnes video loop - shows a beautiful young woman,
Henriette Dufour (played by Sylvia Bataille), swaying back-and-forth on a
swing. Two debonair sportsmen spy her from the window of a country inn where they
are having lunch. Their appetites quickly shift from scrambled eggs with
tarragon to Henriette on the swing.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Film
frame from Jean Renoir’s A Day in the Country, 1936/1946, Courtesy of the Criterion Collection & Janus Films
Fifty years before Jean
Renoir filmed A Day in the Country, Pierre-Auguste Renoir had painted The Swing.
Here a young woman stands on a swing, accompanied by two admiring men and an
adoring little girl. One of the men looks out from the picture and, meeting our gaze, draws us into the sun-dappled grove. There we join him, his companions and the beribboned beauty in a truly magical moment.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Detail views of Renoir's The Swing (1876)
In a tremendous coup, the Barnes secured the loan of this iconic work of art for the Renoir: Father and Son exhibit. As a result, visitors to the exhibition can move but a few feet from viewing a masterpiece of French cinema to studying an icon of Impressionism.
The points of contrast
between the film scene and the painting are as important and fascinating as
the similarities. When Jean Renoir filmed A Day in the Country during the summer
of 1936, France was in the midst of the left-wing Popular Front agitation which
contributed to the disaster of 1940. The film is a wistful look backward at what
appears to be a more balanced and relaxed way of life.
In 1876, when
Pierre-Auguste Renoir painted The Swing, France was beginning to recover from
the disastrous war with Germany in 1870-71. The idyllic scene promotes a
feeling of recuperation as a nation. This was to prove a short-lived interval. The collapse in 1882 of a fraudulent investment bank triggered a nation-wide "panic." Durand-Ruel, the agent for Renoir and his fellow Impressionists was only saved from bankruptcy by American sales. This financial disaster was quickly followed by political instability climaxing in the Dreyfus Affair.
The era of the Impressionists was thus much like the tumultuous 1930's when Jean Renoir was making his classic films. How fitting then was the fate of A Day in the Country which was not released until 1946 because of production difficulties and the outbreak of World War Two.
The era of the Impressionists was thus much like the tumultuous 1930's when Jean Renoir was making his classic films. How fitting then was the fate of A Day in the Country which was not released until 1946 because of production difficulties and the outbreak of World War Two.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Sylvie Patry, Consulting Curator of the Barnes Foundation
By Jean's birth in 1894, Pierre-Auguste Renoir spent most of his time in the south of France in order to cope with the physical challenges imposed by arthritis. Unable to travel or even grasp his paint brushes to execute fine details on commissioned portraits, Renoir painted what was close at hand - local young women posing as models and his children, especially young Jean.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Gallery view of Renoir: Father and Son
A series of portraits of Jean shows him growing from an infant to a handsome adolescent posing in hunting gear. Pierre-Auguste Renoir was a great admirer of eighteenth century art. By dressing Jean as Pierrot, Renoir acknowledged the great artist Jean-Antoine Watteau (1684-1721), whose wonderful painting of Pierrot has long been one of the highlights of the Louvre.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Detail of Renoir’s The White Pierrot, 1901/1902
As Jean Renoir matured into a capable, cultured young man, he searched for his own artistic medium on which to devote his talents. At first, he tried his hand at ceramics and the results are astonishing. Dr. Albert Barnes, who was a devoted collector of his father's paintings, purchased forty pieces of Jean's hand-painted ceramic ware.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018), Earthenware Vase by Jean Renoir, 1922
These relatively unknown works are a highlight of the Barnes exhibit. Most are painted in a vibrant French country motif. This exquisite vase, however, evokes the Arcadia-like atmosphere which the crippled Pierre-Auguste sought to convey in his final paintings.
Creating hand-crafted ceramics is a hard way to make a living. By a unique chain of events, Jean Renoir became involved in the French film industry. During the 1920's, he began directing silent films, followed in the 1930's by his "talkies." Renoir's classic trilogy, A Day in the Country (1936/1946), Grand Illusions (1937) and The Rules of the Game (1939) raised cinema to a level that has seldom been surpassed.
A number of the costumes from Jean Renoir's films are displayed in the Barnes exhibit. One of the dresses has an incredible, indeed exaggerated, trailing skirt. This is a reproduction of a costume from Renoir's silent film version of Emil Zola's Nana (1926). I don't know if it was by chance or by design but when my wife, Anne, took a picture of the "train" of this dress, reflections of a railroad sequence from Renoir's The Human Beast (1938) glimmered on the display case. It was another magical moment in an enchanting exhibition.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Costume (reproduction) from Jean Renoir's Nana
The most magical moment in the exhibition came when I viewed a film clip of Pierre-Auguste Renoir with the art dealer, Ambroise Vollard. I had seen this clip once, years ago, in an exhibit devoted to Vollard's amazing career. Now, once again seeing the aged Renoir, clearly in pain, yet bursting with creative vigor, I was able to appreciate the film sequence even more.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Film frame from Pierre-Auguste Renoir: Painter, 1920 Silent Film produced by Gaumont Actualities
This life force, what the French during the World War I era called elan vital,was the great gift which the elder Renoir gave to his wounded son during his six months of convalescence. It lasted Jean Renoir a lifetime, during which he shared this gift with the world.
In an extraordinary passage from Renoir, My Father, Jean Renoir described his father's elan vital:
Renoir's conception of life as a state of being rather than an undertaking seems to me an essential explanation of his character, of his art. I should add that this attitude was a joyous one, and that each stage of his life was for him marked by amazing discoveries. He looked at the world with continual astonishment, a feeling of surprise which he made no effort to hide. I saw my father suffer absolute martyrdom, but never saw him looking bored.
You too will enjoy many moments of joy, astonishment and inspiration at the Barnes Foundation exhibit, Renoir: Father and Son/Painting and Cinema. And if you follow the example of Jean Renoir, the creative force, the elan vital, that is present in the exhibition galleries will inspire you as well.
***
Text: Copyright of Ed Voves, all rights reserved
Photos courtesy of the Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia. PA, and Anne Lloyd
Introductory Image:
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (French, 1841-1919) La balançoire (The Swing), 1876. Oil on canvas. H. 92 ; L. 73 cm Musée d'Orsay, Paris. Gustave Caillebotte Bequest, 1894. © Musée d'Orsay
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Detail of photo, Auguste and Jean Renoir, taken by Pierre Bonnard, c. 1916. Original photo in
the collection of the Musée d'Orsay, Paris.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Gallery view of the Renoir: Father and
Son/Painting and Cinema exhibit at the Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia PA.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Film frame from Jean Renoir’s Partie de Campagne (A Day in the Country), 1936/1946. Produced
by Les Films du Pantheon. Courtesy of the Criterion Collection and Janus Films.
Anne Lloyd, Photo
(2018) Detail views of Pierre-Auguste
Renoir’s La balançoire (The Swing), 1876.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Sylvie Patry, Consulting Curator of the Barnes
Foundation at the press preview of the Renoir: Father and Son/Painting and
Cinema exhibit.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Gallery view of the Renoir: Father and
Son/Painting and Cinema exhibit at the Barnes Foundation.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Detail views of Pierre-Auguste Renoir’s The White
Pierrot, 1901-02. Oil on canvas. 79.1 × 61.9 cm Collection of the
Detroit Institute of Arts
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Vase by
Jean Renoir, 1922. Earthenware with polychrome decoration over tin-glaze. The
Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia, PA.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Gallery view of the Renoir: Father and
Son/Painting and Cinema exhibit, showing a reproduction of a costume from
the 1926 film, Nana, directed by Jean
Renoir.
Anne Lloyd, Photo (2018) Film frame from Pierre-Auguste Renoir: artiste-peinture (Pierre-Auguste
Renoir: Painter), 1920. Produced by Gaumont Actualities. Distributed by Gaumont
Pathé Archives.
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