GLEYRE, Charles-Gabriel - b. 1806 Chevilly, d. 1874 Paris - WGA

GLEYRE, Charles-Gabriel

(b. 1806 Chevilly, d. 1874 Paris)

Swiss painter, active mainly in Paris, where he enjoyed a successful career, particularly with anecdotal scenes, sometimes in an antique setting, and portraits. He was a renowned teacher and when Delaroche closed down his teaching studio in 1843, the majority of his students transferred to Gleyre. He taught Whistler and several of the impressionists - Bazille, Monet, Renoir, and Sisley - and although his own paintings were conventional, he encouraged open-air painting. Renoir, however, said that his main strength as a teacher was that he left his pupils ‘pretty much to their own devices’. Gleyre closed his studio in 1864 because of an eye ailment.

Egyptian Temple
Egyptian Temple by

Egyptian Temple

Gleyre handled Oriental themes as well as his antique Neoclassical subjects. Numerous watercolours document his travels and depict ruined Egyptian temples. This painting is a faithful rendering of detail in a realistic depiction of the state of Egyptian ruins.

Evening or Lost Illusions
Evening or Lost Illusions by

Evening or Lost Illusions

The painting Evening was exhibited at the Salon of 1843, and his contemporaries added the appropriate subtitle, as a reference to the novel by Honor� de Balzac, ‘Les Illusions perdues’, which had appeared that year.

Gleyre’s painting is a dreamlike representation of a vision he had on the bank of the Nile in 1835, as his diary shows. He depicts himself as a weary singer, whose lyre has slipped from his hand, as he no longer find words.

The Queen of Sheba
The Queen of Sheba by

The Queen of Sheba

Gleyre handled Oriental themes as well as his antique Neoclassical subjects. Numerous watercolours document his travels and depict ruined Egyptian temples. In adventurous compilations of oriental components he succeeded in intensifying the fairy-tale element into historic imaginative depictions, as in the Queen of Sheba, which is fantastic and theatrical in both colouring and scenery.

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