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Sunday, October 6, 2024 |
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Royal Academy of Arts opens exhibition of works by Swiss artist Jean-Etienne Liotard |
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Jean-Etienne Liotard, Woman on a Sofa Reading, 1748-1752. Oil on canvas, 50 x 60 cm. Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence. Photo Gabinetto Fotografico dell'Ex Soprintendenza Speciale per il Patrimonio Storico, Artistico ed Etnoantropologico e per il Polo Museale della città di Firenze.
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LONDON.- This exhibition is devoted to the idiosyncratic Swiss artist Jean-Etienne Liotard (1702-1789), who attained international recognition as one of the most highly accomplished portraitists of eighteenth-century Enlightenment Europe. Jean-Etienne Liotard brings together over 70 works, providing a unique opportunity to view a wide selection of the artists exceptional oeuvre in pastel, as well as oil paintings, drawings and miniatures from public and private collections in Europe and the UK, many of which have rarely been seen in public.
Born in Geneva, Liotard was a peripatetic and cosmopolitan artist who worked in Constantinople, major European capitals and several royal courts. He was a master of pastel that few could emulate, creating compellingly realistic portraits and capturing the fashions of the day on a variety of scales from miniatures to full-length portraits. Although Liotard gained a considerable reputation in his lifetime, he is little known today.
The exhibition is arranged in six sections. The Artist and his Family brings together a group of selfportraits, including Self-portrait Laughing, c. 1770 (Musée dart et dhistoire, Geneva), as well as portraits of family members including his wife Marie Fargues and his eldest son, Jean-Etienne. Some of the self-portraits present Liotard in his distinctive Oriental guise of Turkish kaftan, long beard, and Moravian fur hat, which he adopted in Constantinople and for which he became well known earning him the sobriquet in London of The Turk.
Orientalism focuses on Liotards four-year sojourn in Constantinople. This was made possible by The Hon. William Ponsonby (the future Lord Bessborough), whom Liotard had met in Rome and who invited the artist to accompany him to the city in 1738. His time in the capital of the Turkish Empire not only provided him with his own Turkish brand, but also subject matter for works which were to contribute to the novel taste for Orientalism. It was there that he also undertook commissions from British and other European residents as well as making records of indigenous dress and customs. Highlights of the section include Laura Tarsi, c. 1741 (Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge).
Liotard followed new markets for portraiture around Europe, commanding enviably high prices. He travelled to London on two occasions, 1753-55 and 1772-74, where he received numerous portrait commissions from members of British Society, including the royal family and in 1773 and 1774 he exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts. A central theme of his long career was his enduring associations with major British patrons and collectors who commissioned portraits from him when they were passing through Paris and Geneva. Brilliantly executed, society portraits include those of Sir Everard Fawkener and his wife, Harriet Churchill; the formidable Katherine Furness, Countess of Guilford; The Marchioness of Hartington; William Constable, friend of Jean-Jacques Rousseau; the great actor David Garrick; and the son of the 2nd Earl of Bute, Lord Mountstuart.
In 1743 in Vienna, on his return from Constantinople, which had included ten months at the Moldavian court at Jassy, Liotard received an introduction to Maria Theresa, the future Empress of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, establishing a relationship which would last over three decades. This resulted in a series of portraits of the family including one of the young Archduchess Marie-Antoinette of Austria, 1762 (Cabinet darts graphiques des Musées d'art et d'histoire, Geneva). A selection of these Royal Portraits, in delicately handled chalks, are complemented by pastel portraits made of the French royal family in Paris, 1749-51, and of the British royal family, the result of a commission from Augusta, Princess of Wales in 1753.
In 1757 Liotard settled in Geneva where he found himself in demand for portraits of Genevan high society. Although some of these communicate the dominant Calvinist character of the city, with their soberly attired sitters, they celebrate the prosperous members of the citys professional elite. Continental Society portraits include the pendant portraits of the banker Isaac-Louis de Thelusson and his wife Julie de Thellusson-Ployard, both 1760 (Museum Oskar Reinhart, Winterthur).
Although primarily known for his portraits, Liotard created a small number of Still Lifes, Genre Scenes and Trompe LOeil works. Still-life: Tea Set, c. 1770-83 (The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles), feature in this section alongside the trompe loeil painting showing a partial portrait of Maria Theresa of Austria, 1762-3 (Private Collection), which was discovered in 2014 and has never been seen in public before.
Jean-Etienne Liotard was born in Geneva in 1702 to French Huguenots who had fled to Geneva after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685. Between 1715 and 1720 Liotard served a four month apprenticeship with the Genevan miniaturist Daniel Gardelle (1679-1753). In 1723 he moved to Paris to be apprenticed to the miniaturist and engraver Jean-Baptiste Massé (1687-1767) for three years. In 1735 Liotard travelled to Italy and in Rome he was introduced to the Stuart court in exile, where he made portraits and miniatures including one of Bonnie Prince Charlie, the Young Pretender. He also met The Hon. William Ponsonby, who invited Liotard to accompany him to Constantinople. In 1743 he went to Vienna. He was resident in Paris from 1746-53. In 1756 he married Marie Fargues (17281782), the daughter of a French Huguenot merchant based in Amsterdam, and then established himself in Geneva from 1757. He returned to London in late 1772, receiving important commissions and exhibiting at the Royal Academy of Arts. From 1779 Liotard devoted much of his time to engraving and writing and from 1782 he concentrated on still-life compositions. Liotard died in Geneva in 1789.
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