Online Encyclopedia

COROT

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 189 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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COROT  ,

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JEAN-
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BAPTISTE CAMILLE (1796-1875), French landscape painter, was born in Paris, in a house on the Quai by the rue du Bac, now demolished, on the 26th of
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July 1796 . His
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family were well-to-do bourgeois
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people, and whatever may have been the experience of some of his
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artistic colleagues, he never, throughout his
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life, felt the want of
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money . He was educated at
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Rouen and was afterwards apprenticed to a draper, but hated commercial life and despised what he called its " business tricks," yet he faithfully remained in it until he was twenty-six, when his
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father at last consented to his adopting the profession of
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art . Corot learned little from his masters . He visited Italy on three occasions: two of his
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Roman studies are now in the Louvre . He was a
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regular contributor to the
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Salon during his lifetime, and in 1846 was " decorated " with the
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cross of the Legion of Honour . He was promoted to be officer in 1867 . His many friends considered nevertheless that he was officially neglected, and in 1874, only a short time before his
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death, they presented him with a gold medal . He died in Paris, on the 22nd of
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February 1875, and was buried at Pere Lachaise . Of the painters classed in the
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Barbizon school it is probable that Corot will live the longest, and will continue to occupy the highest position . His art is more individual than Rousseau's, whose
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works are more strictly traditional; more poetic than that of Daubigny, who is, however, Corot's greatest contemporary
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rival; and in every sense more beautiful than J . F .

Millet, who thought more of stern truth than of aesthetic feeling . Corot's works are somewhat arbitrarily divided into periods, but the point of division is never certain, as he often completed a picture years after it had been begun . In his first style he painted traditionally and " tight "—that is to say, with minute exactness, clear outlines, and with absolute definition of
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objects throughout . After his fiftieth
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year his methods changed to breadth of tone and an approach to poetic power, and about twenty years later, say from x865 onwards, his manner of
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painting became full of " mystery " and
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poetry . In the last ten rears of his
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work he became the Pere Corot of the artistic circles of Paris, in which he was regarded with
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personal affection, and he was acknowledged as one of the five or six greatest landscape painters the
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world has ever seen, along with Hobbema, Claude, Turner and Constable . During the last few years of his life he earned large sums by his pictures, which became greatly sought after . In 1871 he gave £2000 for the poor of Paris (where he remained during the siege), and his continued charity was long the subject of remark . Besides landscapes, of which he painted several
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hundred, Corot produced a number of figure pictures which are much prized . These were mostly studio pieces, executed probably with a view to keep his hand in with severe
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drawing, rather than with the intention of producing pictures . Yet many of them are
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fine in composition, and in all cases the colour is remarkable for its strength and purity . Corot also executed a few etchings and pencil sketches . In his landscape pictures Corot was more traditional in his method of work than is usually believed .

If even his latest

tree-painting and arrangement are compared with such a Claude as that which hangs in the Bridgewater gallery, it will be observed how similar is Corot's method and also how masterly are his results . The works of Corot are scattered over France and the Nether-lands,
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Great Britain and
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America . The following may be considered as the first
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half-dozen : " Une Matinee " (185o), now in the Louvre; "
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Macbeth " (1859), in the Wallace collection; " Le
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Lac " (1861) ; " L'Arbre brise " (x865); " Pastorale—Souvenir d'Italie " (1873), in the
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Glasgow Corporation Art Gallery ; " Biblis " (1875) . Corot had a number of followers who called themselves his pupils . The best known are Boudin, Lepine, Chintreuil, Francais and Le Roux .

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