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ROPS

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Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 719 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ROPS  , F$LICIEN (1833–1898), Belgian painter, designer and engraver, was

born at Namur, in Belgium, on the 7th of
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July 1833; he spent his childhood in that
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town, and afterwards in Brussels, where he composed in 1856, for his friends at the university, the Almanach Crocodilien, his first piece of
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work . He also brought out two Salons
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Illustres, and collaborated on the
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Crocodile, a
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magazine produced by the students . The humour shown in his contributions attracted the attention of publishers, who offered him work . He designed, among other things, frontispieces for Poulet-Malassis, and afterwards for Gay and Douce . In 1859 he began to contribute to a satirical journal in Brussels called Uylenspiegel, a sort of
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Charivari . The issue, limited unfortunately to two years, included his finest litho-graphs . About 1862 he went to Paris and worked at Jacque-mart's . He subsequently returned to Brussels, where he founded the short-lived International Society of Etchers . In 1865 he brought out his famous " Buveuse d'
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Absinthe," which placed him in the foremost rank of Belgian engravers; and in 1871 the " Dame au
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Pantin." After 1874 Rops resided in Paris . His talent, which commanded attention by its novel methods of expression, and had been stimulated by travels in Hungary, Holland and Norway, whence he brought back characteristic sketches, now took a soaring
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flight . To say nothing of the six
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hundred
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original engravings enumerated in Ramiro's Catalogue of Rops' Engraved Work (Paris, Conquet, 1887), and one hundred and eighty from lithographs (Ramiro's Catalogue of Rops' Lithographs, Paris, Conquet, 1891), besides a large number of oil-paintings in the manner of Courbet, and of pencil or pen-and-ink drawings, he executed several very remarkable
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water-colour pictures, among which are " Le Scandale," 1876; " Une Attrapade," 1877 (now in the Brussels Museum); a " Tentation de St Antoine," 1878; and " Pornocrates," 1878 . Most of these have been engraved and printed in colours by Bertrand .

From 188o to 1890 he devoted himself principally to illustrating books:

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Les Rimes de joie, by Theo Hannon; Le
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Vice supreme and Curieuse, by J . Madan; and Les Diaboliques, by
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Barbey d'Aurevilly; L'Amante du Christ, by R . Darzens; and Zadig, by Voltaire; and the poems of Stephane Mallarme have frontispieces due to his fertile and powerful
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imagination . Before this he had illustrated the Legendes Flamandes, by Ch . Decoster; Jeune France, by Th . Gautier; and brought out a
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volume of Cent Croquis pour rejouir les Honnetes Gens . His last piece of work, an advertisement of an
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exhibition, was done in November 1896 . Rops died on the 23rd of August 1898, at Essonnes, Seine-et-
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Oise, on the estate he had
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purchased, where he lived in
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complete retirement with his
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family . Scorning display, Rops almost always opposed any exhibition of his
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works . However, he consented to join the
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Art Society of the " XX.," formed at Brussels in 1884, as their revolutionary views were in harmony with the independence of his spirit . After his
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death, in 1899, the Libre Esthetique, which in 1894 had succeeded the "XX.," arranged a retrospective exhibition, which included about fifty paintings and drawings by Rops . Rops was a Chevalier of the Legion of Honour .

He excelled in these three methods of

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artistic expression; but his engraved work is the most important, .both as to mastery of technique and originality of ideas, though in all his talent was exceedingly versatile . Hardly any artist of the 19th century equalled him in the use of the dry-point and soft
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varnish . By his assured handling and admirable draughtsmanship, as well as the variety of his sometimes wildly fantastic conceptions, he made his place among the
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great artists of his time . " Giving his figures a character of grace which never lapses into limpness," says his biographer, E . Ramiro, " he has analysed and perpetuated the human form in all the elegance and development impressed on it by
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modern
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civilization." In 1896 La Plume (Paris) devoted a
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special number to this artist, fully illustrated, by which the public were made aware how many of his works are unsuitable for display in the
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drawing-
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room or boudoir . E . Deman, the publisher at Brussels, brought out a volume in 1897 with the title, Felicien Rops et son oeuvre—papers by various writers . We may also mention a study of Felicien Rops, by
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Eugene Demolder (Paris, Princebourde, 1894), and another by the same writer in Trois Contemporains (E Deman, 1901); Les Ropsiaques, by
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Pierre Gaume, brought out in
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London, 1898; and the admirable
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notice by T . K . Huysmans in his volume called Certains . (0 .

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