Born: 1844
Died: 1910
Gender: Male
Nationality: French
"It has been for M. Rousseau as for all innovators. He proceeds
from himself alone, he has the merit, rare today, of being absolutely
personal... what an obsession, what a nightmare! What a powerful
impression of insurmountable sadness! One would have to be of bad faith
to dare to pretend that the man capable of suggesting ideas like these
is not an artist." Louis Roy in the Mercure de France (1895).
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Henri Rousseau was born in Laval (Mayenne),
where his father owned a tin-ware shop. The business went into
liquidation in 1852 and the family moved to Couptrain, while Rousseau
remained with relations in Laval to finish his education. In 1863,
working for a solicitor, Rousseau and two friends began unsuccessfully
pilfering small sums of money from the company, leading to a month's
imprisonment in 1864. The next five years were spent serving in the army
with a discharge to support his mother after the death of her husband in
1869. After another brief tour of duty in the Franco-Prussian war,
Rousseau, now married, found a job with the Paris Customs Office in 1871
and remained there for 22 years eventually giving rise to his nickname
'Le Douanier'.
Painting in his spare time, Rousseau had
the first of many exhibitions in 1886 at the Salon des Indépendents. In
1893 he decided to devote all his time to painting and | became known as
one of the greatest 'naïve artists', a term applied to painters with no
formal expertise, working with bright colours, and with an innocent
perspective. He painted many landscapes and portraits throughout his
career, one of his most famous works being a literal combination of the
two, 'Myself. Portrait-Landscape' (1890). But he is probably best known
for his jungle scenes, the first being 'Tiger in a Tropical Storm
(Surprised!)' (1891) and the last 'The Dream' (1910). He claimed these
images were inspired by his time in the army serving in Mexico but it is
more likely that zoos and illustrated books were his sources.
Rousseau produced a vast range of
paintings in his lifetime from the elegant 'Avenue in the Parc de
Saint-Cloud' (c.1908) to the grotesque 'Boy on the Rocks' (c.1894-1895).
His untrained eye gave him a freshness of vision and his vivid
imagination gave rise to some fantastic scenes. His attention to detail
was also very precise even when working on a large scale. What
characterises Rousseau and perhaps all the 'naïve painters' or
'primitives' was the real urge for self-expression and the fulfilment
that is evident in the paintings they produced. Another characteristic
of this 'group' was poverty and so Rousseau died penniless, was buried
in a pauper's grave and it was only later that his paintings began to
achieve a reputation. |