Online Encyclopedia

ALEXANDRE GABRIEL DECAMPS (1803–1860)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 909 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALEXANDRE GABRIEL DECAMPS (1803–1860)  , French painter, was born in Paris on the 3rd of March 1803 . In his youth he travelled in the East, and reproduced
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Oriental
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life and scenery with a bold fidelity to nature that made his
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works the
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puzzle of conventional critics . His powers, however, soon came to be recognized, and he was ranked along with Delacroix and
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Vernet as one of the leaders of the French school . At the Paris
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Exhibition of 1855 he received the
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grand or council medal . Most of his life was passed in the neighbourhood of Paris . He was passionately fond of animals, especially
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dogs, and indulged in all kinds of field sports . He died on the 22nd of August 186o in consequehce of being thrown from a vicious horse while hunting at
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Fontainebleau . The style of Decamps was characteristically and intensely French . It was marked by vivid dramatic conception, by a manipulation bold and rapid, sometimes even to roughness, and especially by
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original and startling use of decided contrasts of colour and of
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light and shade . His subjects embraced an unusually wide range . He availed himself of his travels in the East in dealing with scenes from Scripture
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history, which he was probably the first of
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European painters to represent with their true and natural
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local background . Of this class were his " Joseph sold by his Brethren," " Moses taken from the Nile," and his scenes from the life of Samson, nine vigorous sketches in
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charcoal and white .

Perhaps the most impressive of his

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historical pictures is his " Defeat of the
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Cimbri," representing with wonderful skill the conflict between a
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horde of barbarians and a disciplined army . Decamps produced a number of genre pictures, chiefly of scenes from French and Algerine domestic life, the most marked feature of which is humour . The same characteristic attaches to most of his numerous animal paintings . He painted dogs, horses, &c., with
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great fidelity and sympathy; but his favourite subject was monkeys, which he depicted in various studies and sketches with a
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grotesque humour that could scarcely be surpassed . Probably the best known of all his works is " The
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Monkey Connoisseurs," a
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clever satire of the
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jury of the French Academy of
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Painting, which had rejected several of his earlier works on account of their divergence from any known standard . The pictures and sketches of Decamps were first made familiar to the
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English public through the lithographs of
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Eugene le Rour . See Moreau's Decamps et son oeuvre (Paris, 1869) .

End of Article: ALEXANDRE GABRIEL DECAMPS (1803–1860)
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