L'art pompier

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Leonidas at Thermopylae by Jacques-Louis David, 1814 Leonidas en las Termopilas, por Jacques-Louis David.jpg
Leonidas at Thermopylae by Jacques-Louis David, 1814
French fireman helmet, 1825-1850 Casque a cimier et chenille 1825 1850 06865.jpg
French fireman helmet, 1825–1850

Art pompier (literally 'fireman art') and style pompier are derisive late-19th century French terms for large 'official' academic art paintings of the time, especially historical or allegorical ones. The terms derive from the helmets with horse-hair tails, worn at the time by French firemen, which are similar to the Attic helmets often worn in such works by allegorical personifications, classical warriors, or Napoleonic cavalry. [1] It also suggests half-puns in French with pompéien ('from Pompeii') and pompeux ('pompous'). [2] [3] This type of art was seen by those who used the term as the epitome of the values of the bourgeoisie, and as insincere and overblown.

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L'art pompier (a term supporters mostly avoid) has enjoyed something of a critical revival in the last twenty years, partly caused by the new Musée d'Orsay in Paris, where it is displayed on more equal terms with the Impressionists and Realist painters of the period. [4]

The Manifeste Pompier ('Fireman Manifesto') by Louis-Marie Lécharny was published in Paris in 1990. He also wrote L'art Pompier (1998).

William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Paul-Jacques-Aimé Baudry, Alfred Agache, Alexandre Cabanel, Joseph-Noël Sylvestre and Thomas Couture are among the classic artists of this genre.

Notes

  1. Harding, p. 7, quoting the definition of Pompier in the Dictionnaire Larousse
  2. Lécharny 1998, p. 14
  3. Bonafoux 2012, p. 238–239
  4. Harding, p. 14–22

References