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Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson (1767–1824)
Self Portrait


































 
© Oak Park Journal

THE  BRILLIANT  AND  PROVOCATIVE  WORKS 
OF  GIRODET

COME  TO  CHICAGO  IN  NEW  ART  INSTITUTE  EXHIBITION

Girodet: Romantic Rebel on View February 11–April 30, 2006

Louvre Hit Makes Chicago its First North American Stop 

Visitors to the Art Institute of Chicago will have a rare opportunity to view the imaginative, unconventional, and provocative works of the late 18th-century French painter Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson (1767–1824) when his first retrospective opens here February 11, 2006.  Girodet: Romantic Rebel, which is on view in the museum’s Regenstein Hall through April 30, 2006, covers more than 35 years of the remarkable career of this artist, bringing together more than 100 paintings and drawings from public and private collections worldwide. This once-in-a-lifetime exhibition sheds light on one of the most intriguing artists of the French Revolutionary era.

Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson (French 1767-1824 ).
The Spirits of French Heroes Welcomed by Ossian into Odin's Paradise , 1801. Oil on canvas; 192 x 182 cm ( 75 3/4 x 72 1/2 in. ). Musée national du châteaux de Malmaison , Rueil-Malmaison, MM. 40.47.6955.

            Girodet: Romantic Rebel was initiated by the Cleveland Museum
of Art and organized by the Musée du Louvre and the Réunion des musées nationaux, Paris, in collaboration with the Art Institute of Chicago, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, in cooperation with the Musée du Girodet, Montargis.
The exhibition comes to the Art Institute following a highly successful run at the Musée du Louvre, Paris, September 19, 2005–January 2, 2006.  After its Chicago showing, Girodet: Romantic Rebel will travel to the Metropolitan Museum
of Art, New York, where it will be on view May 22–August 27, 2006; and the Montreal Museum of Fine Art, October 12, 2006–January 21, 2007.

            Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson, or Girodet as he is commonly referred to, was much admired in his own time, although he is not especially well known to the American public.  Girodet was a painter of genius, but also a rebel bent on confounding expectations. His preference for the bizarre, his ambiguous eroticism, his literary sophistication, not to mention the mysteries surrounding his life and relations, have remained a source of fascination or bewilderment. Girodet created a painting style very much his own—combining intellectual refinement and sensuality.

Girodet’s career was profoundly shaped by the dramatic social and political upheaval brought about by the French Revolution. A rebellious pupil of Jacques-Louis David, Girodet early on developed his own idiosyncratic style. David’s Neoclassicism, the prevalent artistic movement of this period, was intended in its antique subjects and rigid style to invoke the stoic ideals of Republican or Imperial Rome. The young Girodet approached such subjects and worked in this manner on propagandistic history paintings. After a period of study and practice in Rome, Girodet broke free of his teacher’s influence, creating highly imaginative compositions that he hoped would surpass David in their intensity of artistic expression. As he veered away from orthodox classicism, Girodet made his subjects increasingly evocative and dreamlike, sometimes adding a strange, erotic charge. Increasingly he explored themes of a more Romantic nature, taking up literary subjects that involved the irrational and the exotic. He executed pictures representing the legends of Ossian (a fanciful Nordic myth contrived by contemporary writer James MacPherson) and the tragic story of the American Indian woman Atala, based on the eponymous novel by his friend, Romantic writer François-René Chateaubriand.



 Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson (French 1767-1824). Pygmalion and Galatea , 1813-1819. Oil on canvas; 253 x 202 cm (99 5/8 x 79 1/2 in.). Musée du Louvre, Paintings Department, Paris, RF. 2002-4 .

The exhibition features a broad range of Girodet’s work beginning with paintings and drawings from his student years that emulate his master’s Neoclassical model and those that signal his break from David, notably the daring, seductive mythological painting Sleep of Endymion (1791).  The show also presents his fanciful painting Ossian Receiving the Ghosts of French Heroes (1801) and related drawings.  The artist’s oriental fantasies, replete with exotic costumes and dynamic imagery, culminated in his spectacular Revolt of Cairo (1810), a depiction of a mameluke rebellion in Cairo during Napoleon’s Egyptian campaign in 1798. Two related works from the Art Institute’s collection will be featured to evoke this major work: a beautiful sketch for the Revolt of Cairo, indicative of Girodet’s fascination with the fervor of the Muslim insurrection, and a Portrait of Katchef Dahouth, a Christian Mameluke. Girodet’s admiration for the courage and passion of the Egyptian Mamelukes caused him to portray them with an impassioned dynamism that would strongly influence Eugène Delacroix and other French Romantic artists.  Highlighted in the exhibition are Girodet’s lesser-known but immense talents as a draftsperson.  A wide selection of his preparatory drawings for paintings and his highly finished sheets for book illustrations—such as Virgil’s Aeneid and Racine’s Phaedre—are featured.

            Girodet: Romantic Rebel is organized by Sylvain Bellenger, chief curator of the National Patrimony, the Institut National d'Histoire de l'Art, Paris. Curators for the Chicago presentation of the exhibition are Douglas W. Druick, Prince Trust Curator of Prints and Drawings and Searle Curator of European Painting; Larry Feinberg, Patrick G. and Shirley W. Ryan Curator of European Painting; and Jay A. Clarke, associate curator of prints and drawings.     

Girodet: Romantic Rebel is accompanied by an extensive scholarly catalogue published by Gallimard that includes several essays by leading authorities and catalogue entries on each work. It is available at the Museum Shop and online at www.artinstituteshop.org.

 


Girodet: Romantic Rebel is made possible by the Old Masters Society of the Art Institute of Chicago and through generous contributions from Marilynn Alsdorf; Lynda, Scott, Jonathan, and Lindsey Canel; Alexandra and John Nichols; and Shirley W. and Patrick G. Ryan. Additional support has been provided by The Rhoades Foundation/Julius Lewis Exhibition Fund.  The exhibition catalogue is made possible by The Isaacson Draper Foundation and The Florence Gould Foundation. Additional support for the catalogue has been provided by the Getty Research Institute and the Getty Grant Program.  This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.


SPECIAL  PROGRAMS  ACCOMPANY  GIRODET:  ROMANTIC  REBEL

 

Performances and Lectures Highlight Major Exhibition of French Artist

Girodet: Romantic Rebel, the first retrospective in the United States devoted to gifted French painter Anne-Louis Girodet de Roussy-Trioson (1767–1824), assembles more than 100 seminal works (about 60 paintings and 40 drawings), demonstrating the artist’s impressive range—from mythological subjects to portraits and representations of Napoleon’s military triumphs. Accompanying this fascinating exhibition are a variety of educational programs for visitors of all ages.  Highlights include a lecture series on art of the Romantic era; weekday gallery talks on the exhibition; and hands-on art activities in the Kraft Education Center for the whole family.

            Programs are free with suggested museum admission unless otherwise noted. Tuesdays are free to all. Members receive free admission all year long.  For program information, please contact the Department of Museum Education at (312) 443-3680.

GIRODET: ROMANTIC REBEL RELATED EVENTS

Lectures:

Lecture: “Strokes of the Pen and Blows of the Brush: Girodet and the Journalistic Discourse under Napoleon I”

Andrew Shelton, Ohio State University

Thursday, February 16, 6:00 p.m.

<>Fullerton Hall
 

Exhibition Overview

Saturday, February 18, noon

Gallery 100

 

Exhibition Overview

Tuesday, March 14, noon

<>Gallery 100
 

Lecture: “Girodet and France’s Empire”

Thursday, April 13, 6:00 p.m.

Darcy Grimalso Grigsby, University of California–Berkeley

Price Auditorium
 

Exhibition Overview

Saturday, April 22, noon

Gallery 100
 

Lecture Series: “The Age of Romanticism”

Fridays, January 27­–February 17, 11:00 a.m.–12:15 p.m.

Price Auditorium 

January 27: Tradition and Revolution: From the Enlightenment to Napoleon

February 3: Pilgrimage to the Past: Neoclassical and Neo-Gothic [EAIL 0203]

February 10: Sensual Temptation: Music and the Exotic [EAIL 0210]

February 17: Forces of Nature: The Picturesque and the Sublime [EAIL 0217]

Series tickets: Members, $48; public, $64, students, $40

Individual lecture tickets: Members, $14; public, $18; students, $12

For tickets, call (312) 575 8000, go to any ticket counter in the museum, or purchase online at: < http://www.ticketmaster.com/venue/270337>.  When ordering please mention event code EAILAGER, or the individual event codes listed above.

Dinner and Lecture: “Girodet at Brasserie Jo”

Tuesday, February 21, 6:30 p.m.

Brasserie Jo, 59 W. Hubbard St., Chicago

Enjoy a special presentation on Girodet: Romantic Rebel, along with a three-course menu designed by Chef/proprietor J. Joho.  Wine paired with menu.

$59.00++

To sign up: call Brasserie Jo: (312) 595-0800, ask to speak with Jennifer Kozy.

 

Reading and Discussion:

“French Revelations: Painter/Poet Girodet”

Thursday, March 2, 6:00 p.m.

Fullerton Hall

Members and students, $10; public, $15

For tickets, call (312) 575 8000, go to any ticket counter in the museum, or purchase online at  <http://www.ticketmaster.com/venue/270337>.  When ordering please mention event code: EAIJ0302

Yannick Mercoyrol, cultural attaché to the Consulate General of France, presents highlights of Girodet’s literary work in combination with a review of his most notable paintings. Singers from the Lyric Opera Center of American Artists offer parlor songs. A viewing of the exhibition follows.

Symposium: “Girodet”

Saturday, April 22, 10:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m.

Price Auditorium

An international panel of distinguished scholars offers fresh insights into the art
of Girodet and his times.  The speakers will explore the reflections of political
and social developments in Girodet's work, and artistic ferment at the nexus of Classical Revival and the burgeoning Romantic movement.

<>Music and Performance:
 

Voices: “Eugène Delacroix”

Tuesday, February 16, noon

Fullerton Hall
 

Concert: “Beethoven and Girodet”

Sunday, April 30, 2:00 p.m.

* For tickets, call the Chicago Symphony Orchestra at (312) 294-3000.

Family Programs:

Drawing in the Galleries: “Figure”

March 5 or 12

10:30–11:30 a.m.

Ages 6–8 with an adult

 

March 5

2:00–3:30 p.m.

Ages 9 and up

 

This program is free, but registration is required. Call (312) 857-7161 to register.

The techniques explored in this drawing class focus on the figure.  Families will visit the exhibition as well as the permanent collection to study different interpretations of the figure.  Participants then complete a variety of figure drawing activities.

Girodet: Romantic Rebel is made possible by the Old Masters Society of the Art Institute of Chicago and through generous contributions from Marilynn Alsdorf; Lynda, Scott, Jonathan, and Lindsey Canel; Alexandra and John Nichols; and Shirley W. and Patrick G. Ryan. Additional support has been provided by The Rhoades Foundation/Julius Lewis Exhibition Fund.  The exhibition catalogue is made possible by The Isaacson Draper Foundation and The Florence Gould Foundation. Additional support for the catalogue has been provided by the Getty Research Institute and the Getty Grant Program.  This exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.


The Art Institute of Chicago is a museum in Chicago's Grant Park.

Museum Hours:  10:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday;

10:30 a.m.–8:00 p.m. Thursday; 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Saturday, Sunday. 
Closed Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day.  Regular suggested admission:  Adults, $12.00; children, students, and seniors, $7.00; members always free. Ford Free Tuesdays a free to all, except for certain special exhibitions that may require full or extra admission fee.  City of Chicago residents with Chicago Public Library cards can borrow a "Check Us Out" card from any library branch for free general admission to the nine members of Museums in the Park, including The Art Institute of Chicago.  To reach the Art Institute on the World Wide Web, contact us at:  http://www.artic.edu/aic 

The Art Institute of Chicago is a museum in Chicago’s Grant Park, located across from Millennium Park.






© Oak Park Journal
published by Suburban Journals of  Chicago Inc.


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Creator

Name: Girodet-Trioson, Anne-Louis

Date of birth: 1767-01-05

Location of birth:
Montargis (Loiret)

Date of death: 1824-12-09

Location of death: Paris