Académie Carmen

Last updated • 5 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
"He never had a more ardent lot of followers than the girl students; they adored him." (1906) by Cyrus Cuneo Cuneo, Carmen.jpg
"He never had a more ardent lot of followers than the girl students; they adored him." (1906) by Cyrus Cuneo

Académie Carmen, also known as Whistler's School, [1] was a short-lived Parisian art school founded by James McNeill Whistler. It operated from 1898 to 1901.

Contents

History

The school opened in October 1898 in a large house and stable at No. 6 Passage Stanislas, near the Rue Notre Dame du Champs. [2] The business side of the school was handled by Whistler's former model Carmen Rossi, for whom the school was named, and her musician husband. [3] The number of students was limited to forty, most of whom were women. [2] More than half of them were American, "with several also coming from England, Ireland, and Scotland." [4] Instructors for the first year were Whistler (painting) and American sculptor Frederick William MacMonnies (life drawing). [5] Whistler taught without pay as a "visiting professor," and appeared once a week to offer criticism. [6]

Initially, all the students met in a single class. [2] Whistler made his first appearance at the beginning of the second week, and, at his insistence, the students were separated into women's and men's classes. [2] Experienced students were appointed teaching assistants. The women's class was led by Irish painter Inez Eleanor Bate for the length of the school's tenure. [7] The men's class was led by a series of assistantsAmerican painter Earl Stetson Crawford, [8] Czech painter Alphonse Mucha, [9] Italian painter Cyrus Cuneo, and lastly, American painter Clifford Addams. [6] With a dearth of sculpture students, MacMonnies left after the first year. [2]

In a 1906 magazine article, Cuneo described Whistler's eccentricities, his inability to communicate effectively as a teacher, and his strong favoritism toward the women's class: [3] "Instead of sitting down in the usual French fashion and giving each pupil in turn a clear and matter-of-fact criticism, Whistler airily picked his way amongst the easels, glancing here and there, ignoring some canvases altogether, greeting others with 'Yesyes.' " [3] "Whistler's methods and manner confused the average students who came, but his faith in his system was as great as the students' unbelief." [2] Despite the prestige of his fame and reputation, many of the students dropped out. [2] The frustration of the male students was expressed in a poem Whistler found scrawled on a wall of the men's studio:

I bought a palette just like his,
His colours and his brush.
The devil of it is, you see,
I did not buy his touch.
[2]

The frustration turned to resentment in the second year. Whistler's apprentice Inez Eleanor Bate recalled: "[A]t the latter part of the season he often refused to criticize in the men's class at all. He would call sometimes on Sunday mornings [when the school was empty], and take out and place upon easels the various studies that had been done by the men the previous week, and often he would declare that nothing interested him among them and that he should not criticize that week, that he could not face the 'blankness' of the atelier." [2] By the third year, the men's life class was cancelled due to lack of students. [2]

Whistler was not always in good health, which may have accounted for many of his absences. His doctors recommended convalescence in a warmer climate, and he sent New Year's greetings for 1901 to the students from Corsica. [2] The school continued to struggle, and descended into quarrels and mistrust. [3] "In the end, the want of confidence in him, his illness, and his absence broke up the school." [2] Whistler announced its closing in a letter sent from Corsica, and read aloud to the students on April 6, 1901. [6]

Whistler's hopes of establishing an art school in London under the management of apprentices Inez Eleanor Bate and Clifford Addams, who married in 1900, were defeated by his continued poor health. [2] He died in London on July 17, 1903, at age 69.

Students

Inez Eleanor Bate (1906), by Clifford Addams Inez Eleanor Bate 1913.jpg
Inez Eleanor Bate (1906), by Clifford Addams

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alphonse Mucha</span> Czech painter, illustrator and graphic artist (1860–1939)

Alfons Maria Mucha, known internationally as Alphonse Mucha, was a Czech painter, illustrator, and graphic artist, living in Paris during the Art Nouveau period, best known for his distinctly stylized and decorative theatrical posters, particularly those of Sarah Bernhardt. He produced illustrations, advertisements, decorative panels, as well as designs, which became among the best-known images of the period.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frederick William MacMonnies</span> American-French sculptor and painter

Frederick William MacMonnies was the best known expatriate American sculptor of the Beaux-Arts school, as successful and lauded in France as he was in the United States. He was also a highly accomplished painter and portraitist. He was born in Brooklyn Heights, Brooklyn, New York and died in New York City.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Foote</span> American painter (1872–1968)

Mary Foote (1872–1968) was an American painter and producer of notes of Carl Jung's seminars. As an artist, she lived and worked in New York's Washington Square, Paris and Peking. From 1928 to the 1950s she lived in Zurich and created and published notes of Carl Jung's seminars until World War II. She returned to the United States in the 1950s and spent her later years in Connecticut, where she died.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Frederick Carl Frieseke</span> American painter

Frederick Carl Frieseke was an American Impressionist painter who spent most of his life as an expatriate in France. An influential member of the Giverny art colony, his paintings often concentrated on various effects of dappled sunlight. He is especially known for painting complete naked white European adolescent or young adult women with untanned very white and very pale skin with the very white pale skin of a white European person who hasn't had any sun for several months and also lightened the skin with lead- and arsenic based cosmetics, both indoors and out.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alson S. Clark</span> American painter

Alson Skinner Clark was an American Impressionist painter best remembered for his landscapes. He was also a photographer, plein aire painter, art educator and muralist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Janet Scudder</span> American sculptor

Janet Scudder, born Netta Deweze Frazee Scudder, was an American sculptor and painter from Terre Haute, Indiana, who is best known for her memorial sculptures, bas-relief portraiture, and portrait medallions, as well as her garden sculptures and fountains. Her first major commission was the design for the seal of the New York Bar Association around 1896. Scudder's Frog Fountain (1901) led to the series of sculptures and fountains for which she is best known. Later commissions included a Congressional Gold Medal honoring Domício da Gama and a commemorative medal for Indiana's centennial in 1916. Scudder also displayed her work at numerous national and international exhibitions in the United States and in Europe from the late 1890s to the late 1930s. Scudder's autobiography, Modeling My Life, was published in 1925.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard E. Miller</span> American painter

Richard E. Miller was an American Impressionist painter and a member of the Giverny Colony of American Impressionists. Miller was primarily a figurative painter, known for his paintings of women posing languidly in interiors or outdoor settings. Miller grew up in St. Louis, studied in Paris, and then settled in Giverny. Upon his return to America, he settled briefly in Pasadena, California and then in the art colony of Provincetown, Massachusetts, where he remained for the rest of his life. Miller was a member of the National Academy of Design in New York and an award-winning painter in his era, honored in both France and Italy, and a winner of France's Legion of Honor. Over the past several decades, he has been the subject of a retrospective exhibition and his work has been reproduced extensively in exhibition catalogs and featured in a number of books on American Impressionism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Decorative Impressionism</span>

Decorative Impressionism is an art historical term that is credited to the art writer Christian Brinton, who first used it in 1911. Brinton titled an article on the American expatriate painter Frederick Carl Frieseke, one of the members of the famous Giverny Colony of American Impressionists, "The Decorative Impressionist."

Edmund H. Wuerpel was an American painter, longtime educator, and second director of the St. Louis School and Museum of Fine Arts, part of Washington University in St. Louis. In his years of training in Paris, Wuerpel became a friend of painter James Abbott McNeill Whistler who helped spread the influence of the "Tonal School" in the Midwest. In a parallel career Wuerpel also played an important role in the development of Orthodontics, collaborating with the "first great teacher of orthodontia" Edward Angle and lecturing in the Midwest and western United States on aesthetics and Orthodontics.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Harrington Mann</span>

Harrington Mann was a Scottish portrait artist and decorative painter. He was a member of the Glasgow Boys movement in the 1880s.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eleanor Sophia Smith</span> American composer and music educator

Eleanor Sophia Smith was an American composer and music educator. She was one of the founders of Chicago's Hull House Music School, and headed its music department from 1893 to 1936.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ellen Emmet Rand</span> American painter

Ellen Emmet Rand was a painter and illustrator. She specialized in portraits, painting over 500 works during her career including portraits of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, artist Augustus Saint-Gaudens, and her cousins Henry James and William James. Rand studied at the Cowles Art School in Boston and the Art Students League in New York City and produced illustrations for Vogue Magazine and Harper's Weekly before traveling to England and then France to study with sculptor Frederick William MacMonnies. The William Benton Museum of Art at the University of Connecticut owns the largest collection of her painted works and the University of Connecticut, as well as the Archives of American Art within the Smithsonian Institution both have collections of her papers, photographs, and drawings.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mabel Conkling</span> American sculptor

Mabel Harris Conkling was an American sculptor, and president of the National Association of Women Painters and Sculptors from 1926 to 1928.

Louise Eleanor Bachman Zaring was an American Impressionist painter, noted particularly for her vivid use of color.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Académie Vitti</span> Former art school in Paris, France

The Académie Vitti was an art school in Paris, France. It was founded and operated by a family of Italian artists' models from the Valle di Comino to the south of Rome. The academy was progressive in its support for women artists, and gained a high reputation. Teachers included Paul Gauguin and Frederick William MacMonnies.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cyrus Cuneo</span> American painter and illustrator who settled in London

Cyrus Cincinato Cuneo, known as Ciro, was an American-born English visual artist, best known for painting.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fannie Eliza Duvall</span> American painter

Fannie Eliza Duvall American painter, born in Port Byron, New York and active in the United States and France.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Clifford Addams</span> American painter and etcher

Clifford Isaac Addams was an American painter and etcher, and a protégé of James McNeill Whistler.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alice Randall Marsh</span>

Alice Randall Marsh (1869-1929) was an American miniature painter and wife of fellow artist Frederick Dana Marsh (1872–1961).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Otto Henry Bacher</span> American artist

Otto Henry Bacher was an American artist; primarily known for his etchings and illustrations. He also painted oils in a variety of genres.

References

  1. Reynolds, Siân (June 2000). "Running away to paris: expatriate women artists of the 1900 generation, from Scotland and points south". Women's History Review. 9 (2): 327–344. doi: 10.1080/09612020000200249 . ISSN   0961-2025.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Elizabeth R. & Joseph Pennell, "The Académie Carmen," in The Life of James McNeill Whistler (Philadelphia: J. B. Lippincott Company, 1911), pp. 373-88.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Cyrus Cuneo, "Whistler's Academy of Painting, Some Parisian Recollections," The Pall Mall Magazine, vol. 38, no. 163 (November 1906), pp. 531-40.
  4. Mary Augusta Mullikin, "Whister's Teachings," The Boston Evening Transcript, March 17, 1904.
  5. Frederic William MacMonnies, from The Correspondence of James McNeill Whistler.
  6. 1 2 3 Robyn Asleson, "The Idol and His Apprentices: Whistler and the Académie Carmen of Paris," in Linda Merrill, et al., After Whistler: The Artist and His Influence on American Painting (Atlanta, GA: High Museum of Art, 2003), pp. 74-84.
  7. Inez Eleanor Addams, from The Correspondence of James McNeill Whistler.
  8. Earl Stetson Crawford, from The Correspondence of James McNeill Whistler.
  9. Alphonse Mucha: Master of Art Nouveau, exhibition catalogue, (Glen Falls, NY: The Hyde Collection, January 2018).
  10. William Leonard, John; Marquis, Albert Nelson (1914). Who's Who in America, Volume 8. A.N. Marquis. p. 869.