DAUMIER, Honoré - b. 1808 Marseille, d. 1879 Valmondois - WGA

DAUMIER, Honoré

(b. 1808 Marseille, d. 1879 Valmondois)

French caricaturist, painter, and sculptor. In his lifetime he was known chiefly as a political and social satirist, but since his death recognition of his qualities as a painter has grown. In 1830, after learning the still fairly new process of lithography, he began to contribute political cartoons to the antigovernment weekly Caricature. He was an ardent Republican and was sentenced to six months’ imprisonment in 1832 for his attacks on Louis-Philippe, whom he represented as ‘Gargantua swallowing bags of gold extorted from the people’. On the suppression of political satire in 1835 he began to work for Charivari and turned to satire of social life, but at the time of the 1848 revolution he returned to political subjects. He is said to have made more than 4,000 lithographs, wishing each time that the one he had just made could be his last. In the last years of his life he was almost blind and was saved from destitution by Corot.

Daumier’s paintings were probably done for the most part fairly late in his career. Although he was accepted four times by the Salon, he never exhibited his paintings otherwise and they remained practically unknown up to the time of an exhibition held at Durand-Ruel’s gallery in 1878, the year before his death. The paintings are in the main a documentation of contemporary life and manners with satirical overtones, although he also did a number featuring Don Quixote as a larger-than-life hero. His technique was remarkably broad and free. As a sculptor he specialized in caricature heads and figures, and these too are in a very spontaneous style. In particular he created the memorable figure of ‘Ratapoil’ (meaning ‘skinned rat’), who embodied the sinister agents of the government of Louis-Philippe. (A similar political type in his graphic art was ‘Robert Macaire’, who personified the unscrupulous profiteer and swindler.)

In the directness of his vision and the lack of sentimentality with which he depicts current social life Daumier belongs to the Realist school of which Courbet was the chief representative. As a caricaturist he stands head and shoulders above all others of the 19th century. He had the gift of expressing the whole character of a man through physiognomy, and the essence of his satire lay in his power to interpret mental folly in terms of physical absurdity. Although he never made a commercial success of his art, he was appreciated by the discriminating and numbered among his friends and admirers Delacroix, Corot, Forain, and Baudelaire. Degas was among the artists who collected his works.

A Disgruntled Litigant
A Disgruntled Litigant by

A Disgruntled Litigant

Burden
Burden by
Charles Philipon
Charles Philipon by

Charles Philipon

The magazines Daumier worked for, La Caricature and Le Charivari, had been founded by Charles Philipon in 1831 and 1832, exploiting the relative press freedom that existed early in the July monarchy. The climate had since changed, and by 1835 Daumier had to deal with aggressive censorship. This did not prevent him building a huge following for his lithograph cartoons, which mocked the emerging bourgeois capitalism of the time. To aid him in drawing its typical characters he turned to sculpture, modelling a series of small exaggerated busts in unbaked painted clay. Probably made from his ‘almost divine’ memory rather than surreptitiously from life, as has sometimes been claimed, these can be positively diabolical, occasionally absurd. Even his friends were not exempt. Philipon with his porcine snout seems both probing and benign, as if deserving Baudelaire’s paradoxical verdict on Daumier himself: ‘The energy with which he paints evil and its works proves the beauty of his heart.’

Charles Philipon
Charles Philipon by

Charles Philipon

Crispin and Scapin
Crispin and Scapin by

Crispin and Scapin

Don Quixote and Sancho Panza
Don Quixote and Sancho Panza by

Don Quixote and Sancho Panza

Miguel de Cervantes’s novel Don Quixote became popular in France between 1768 and 1773 through numerous French translations. Jean-Honor� Fragonard, who in so many ways was the key painter to shape Daumier’s art, had planned to illustrate one of these editions of Don Quixote. For Daumier, Cervantes’s antihero Don Quixote personifies life’s folly and grandeur. The skeletal old knight astride his nag Rocinante, followed by his faithful squire Sancho Panza, offers a trenchant image of antiquated values, maintained to the despair of a loving, realistic companion, as retraced along Cervantes’s penetrating lines.

Family on the Barricades in 1848
Family on the Barricades in 1848 by

Family on the Barricades in 1848

Daumier, a commited republican, was inspired by the 1848 Revolution which unseated Louis Philippe and led to the Second Republic.

Guizot or the Bore
Guizot or the Bore by

Guizot or the Bore

The busts of the Parliamentarians was commissioned in 1832 by Charles Philipon, the director of La Caricature, and executed during actual sittings of the Chambre des D�put�s. These busts mark a total break with the tradition of the neoclassical portrait.Helped by acute powers of observation and a remarkably expressive talent as a draughtsman and modeller, Daumier tried to reveal the deep truth of his models through an uncompromising image enhanced by exaggeration and polychromy..

Intermission at the Comédie Française
Intermission at the Comédie Française by

Intermission at the Comédie Française

Jean-Auguste Chevandier de Valdrome, Parliamentarian (The Fool)
Jean-Auguste Chevandier de Valdrome, Parliamentarian (The Fool) by

Jean-Auguste Chevandier de Valdrome, Parliamentarian (The Fool)

Laundress on the Quai d'Anjou
Laundress on the Quai d'Anjou by

Laundress on the Quai d'Anjou

Laurent Cunin, Politician (The Angry Man)
Laurent Cunin, Politician (The Angry Man) by

Laurent Cunin, Politician (The Angry Man)

Load (Washerwoman)
Load (Washerwoman) by

Load (Washerwoman)

Daumier often painted urban labourers under the Second Empire. There are several versions on the theme of the washerwoman. Two of them - one treauured in the National Gallery in Prague and one from the Collection of Gerstenberg/Scharf, Berlin, now in Hermitage, St. Petersburg are very similar.

Mother
Mother by

Mother

By painting of faceless mother with faceless children Daumier express his attitude towards the society and its historical moment. Mother could be interpreted as a metaphor of social injustice but also as embodiment of dignity of poor.

Ratapoil (front view)
Ratapoil (front view) by

Ratapoil (front view)

Daumier’s sculptures evince a liking for caricature, but he used it as a political weapon. The plaster of Ratapoil, “a synthesis of the shady agent, of the indefatigable auxiliary of Napoleonic propaganda,” was hidden throughout the Second Empire and only reappeared in 1878, but it immediately served as point of departure for caricatures which appeared in the satirical journals of the period.

Ratapoil (rear view)
Ratapoil (rear view) by

Ratapoil (rear view)

Daumier’s sculptures evince a liking for caricature, but he used it as a political weapon. The plaster of Ratapoil, “a synthesis of the shady agent, of the indefatigable auxiliary of Napoleonic propaganda,” was hidden throughout the Second Empire and only reappeared in 1878, but it immediately served as point of departure for caricatures which appeared in the satirical journals of the period.

Rue Transnonain, April 15, 1834
Rue Transnonain, April 15, 1834 by

Rue Transnonain, April 15, 1834

Violence erupted in the streets of Paris in 1834 in response to a new wave of laws issued by King Louis Philippe to limit freedoms of association and expression. Barricades were hastily thrown up in working-class quarters of the capital and smashed by government troops the next day. On the rue Transnonain in the Marais, a riot squad entered a building believed to be the source of shots that had killed an officer, and the troops gunned down a dozen occupants.

Scene from a Comedy
Scene from a Comedy by

Scene from a Comedy

The Drama
The Drama by

The Drama

This is an incisive work with the emphasis on the lighting. Daumier used the same subject in an 1864 lithograph.

The Emigrants
The Emigrants by

The Emigrants

Daumier is best known as a caricaturist, but worked in other media as well, in which he appears as both a Romantic and a Realist. The theme of The Emigrants, which he treated in paintings and sculptures several times over the course of the years, first attracted him during the period of bourgeois reaction which, at the end of the year 1848, followed the February Revolution and caused the death and deportation of thousands of Republicans. Two bas-relief sketches, cast in plaster from the clay models, remain timeless symbols of suffering.

The Republic
The Republic by
The Third-class Carriage
The Third-class Carriage by

The Third-class Carriage

In 1843 Daumier began to depict groups of people in public conveyances and waiting rooms, and for more than two decades he treated these themes in lithographs, watercolours, and oil paintings. His characterizations of travelers document the period in the mid-19th century when the cities of France and their inhabitants were undergoing the immense changes brought about by industrialization. A lifelong social critic, Daumier was able to infuse his renderings of contemporary life with a broad significance that touched on the inner character of mankind.

The Uprising
The Uprising by
The Washerwoman
The Washerwoman by

The Washerwoman

Wandering Saltimbanques
Wandering Saltimbanques by

Wandering Saltimbanques

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