Joseph Stevens, birth name Edouard Joseph Léopold Stevens (26 November 1816 – 2 August 1892)[1] was a Belgian animalier painter and engraver. He is mainly known for his paintings with dogs as the principal subject. This included dog portraits, dogs interacting among themselves or with their masters and dog markets. From depicting sentimental scenes in a Romanticist manner his art developed towards a more Realist rendering of dogs living on the street or working for travelling entertainers. He won the admiration of the French realist painter Courbet for these efforts. He was a pioneer of Realism in Belgian art. He further painted horses and singeries, scenes with monkeys engaging in human activities.[2] A few marines by his hand are also known.[3]
Life
He was born in Brussels on 26 November 1816 as the son of Jean François Léopold Stevens (1791–1837) and Catherine Victorine DUFOY (1797–1875).[4][5] His father had originally served in the armies of the French Empire and the Kingdom of the United Netherlands. The Stevens family was well-off and passionate about art. Father Stevens was an art collector, with a particular interest in Théodore Géricault.-He wished his sons to embark on an artistic career.[2]
Joseph's younger brothers also became involved in the art world: Alfred . (1823 – 1906) became a prominent painter of scenes with elegant women and Arthur (1825 – 1890) became an art critic and art dealer.[2] Joseph first studied at the college established by the Italian Pietro Gaggia in Brussels.[5] studied drawing at the Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts of Brussels and followed courses with the animaliers Louis Robbe and Eugène Verboeckhoven.[2] Initially he was more interested in a military career and enjoyed horse riding and physical exercise. Only after marrying on 3 December 1845 in Saint-Josse-ten-Noode the Irishwoman Marie Graham, originally from Cavan in Ireland, did he become more serious about his artistic career.[1][5]
Largely self-taught, he finished his training in Paris, without enrolling in a school, and frequented the studio of Alexandre-Gabriel Decamps, as well as painters of the Barbizon School and of the "Groupe du Restaurant du Havre" including Thomas Couture, Eugène Isabey, Théodore Rousseau and others. He exhibited at the Brussels Salon from 1842.
In 1852 he joined his two brothers in Paris where he lived for several years, dividing his time between the worldliness of the Imperial Court, in particular the Jardin des Tuileries, and the Bohemianism of café life. Reportedly, he rode every morning on horseback in the Bois de Boulogne, where he came into contact with Empress Eugénie, wife of Emperor Napoleon III. When Eugénie later decided to take art classes, Stevens became her tutor. Eugénie became his patroness and thanks to her he was allowed to paint in the saddlery of the Emperor in the Bois de Boulogne. Here he made many drawings of horses which he exhibited in Amsterdam in 1854, and later in Dijon in 1858.
In Paris he became acquainted with Charles Baudelaire, whom he met again in Brussels in 1864. The poet dedicated to him the piece Les Bons Chiens ("Good Dogs"), the penultimate work, preceding Épilogue, in the collection Petits poèmes en prose. Dogs were Stevens' primary subject matter.[6]
In 1868, he was one of the founding members of the Société Libre des Beaux-Arts in Brussels.[2] It was an artistic circle formed in 1868 by Belgian artists to react against academicism and to advance Realism in painting as well as artistic freedom. The society was active until 1876, by which time the aesthetic values it espoused had found acceptance at the official Salon.[7] It played a formative role in establishing avant-gardism in Belgium.[8] Stevens finally returned to live in Brussels in 1869.
His work attracted many patrons, notably Henri Van Cutsem. The Belgian King Leopold II also bought paintings of his. He received many distinctions during his career including:
- Medal 2nd class of the Paris Salon of 1852.
- the Medal 2nd class of the Universal Exhibitionof Paris of 1855.
- the Medal recall - Paris - 1857.
- the Medal 2nd class of the Paris Salon of 11861.
- Chevalier of the Order of Leopold of Belgium in 1861.
- Chevalier of the Imperial Order of the Légion d'Honneur in 1861.
- Officer of the Order of Leopold of Belgium in 1866.
- the Medal of the Universal Exhibition of Vienna in 1873.
- the Medal of Honor at the London Salon in 1875.[9]
Despite (or perhaps because of) his success, he fell prey to alcoholism in his later years and was no longer able to paint. He died on 2 August 1892 in Ixelles and was buried in Zaventem.[5]
The French painter Ernest Meissonier painted his portrait.[5]
Works
Stevens is known for his paintings with domestic animals, mainly dogs, monkeys and horses. Dogs were his principal subject. He made dog portraits and created scenes of dogs interacting among themselves, with other animals or with their masters and dog markets.[2] He further painted singeries, scenes with monkeys engaging in human activities.[2] A few marines by his hand are also known.
He initially depicted dogs in sentimental scenes with a Romanticist flavour. His art developed towards a more Realist rendering of dogs living on the street or working for travelling entertainers.[2] A similar turn towards Realism could be witnessed in other Belgian painters, such as his brother Alfred, Charles de Groux and Gustave Léonard de Jonghe.[10][11] A breakthrough piece was his 1848 painting entitled Morning in Brussels. It showed stray dogs searching for food in the gutters and garbage dumps. In the background, barely visible, are two silhouettes of women, probably two beggars, who clearly share a fate similar to that of the dogs.[10]
With this work he was a pioneer of Realism in Belgian art. This new style was in line with experiments already underway in France. Stevens continued creating metaphorical scenes in which usually dogs, sometimes a few horses or a monkey, evoke the plight of the wretched. These works can be seen as a half-hearted attempt at creating social realist art without the conviction to fully commit to the cause of the downtrodden. His palette, which was dominated by browns and blacks broken by a few flashes of light, gives a muted atmosphere to the realist scenes. It was only in the work of Constantin Meunier that the social realist intention in Belgian painting came fully into its own. Stevens could not free himself of his initial bourgeois sentimentalism as is evident in his 1848 painting Alone in the world (Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium).[10]
This realism, of which he was one of the pioneers, attracted the interest from the 1850s of predominantly French critics and intellectuals, particularly Baudelaire and also Léon Cladel, who was inspired by Stevens' paintings to write Léon Cladel et sa kyrielle de chiens (1885).
Museum holdings
- Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp
- Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium (RMFAB)
- Belfius Art Collection
- Museum of Fine Arts, Ghent
- Musée des beaux-arts de Marseille: At the door
- Musée d'Orsay: The punishment of Tantalus
- Mu.ZEE (Kunstmuseum aan zee), Ostend
- Musée des beaux-arts de Rouen: A dog's job
Gallery
- Rental of horses and donkeys (Museum of Fine Arts Ghent)
- Misfortune of a travelling actor (Hermitage)
- Dog of a travelling entertainer
- The undertaker
- Dog
- The punishment of Tantalus (Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp)
- The Dog Market in Paris (RMFAB)
- The Dog and the Fly (RMFAB)
- Enemies (Hermitage)
- Rough seas under glowing skies
Notes and references
- 1 2 Edouard Joseph Léopold Stevens at the Belgian State Archives
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 STEVENS, Joseph Edouard in Dictionnaire des peintres belges
- ↑ Joseph Stevens, Rough seas under glowing skies at Artcurial
- ↑ Jean François Léopold Stevens at geneanet
- 1 2 3 4 5 A. B.-V. Stevens, Edouard Joseph Léopold at Revue encyclopédique, Librairie Larousse, 1892, p. 1599-1600
- ↑ Robert L. Delevoy, Les Stevens on the website Encyclopædia Universalis
- ↑ Arto: Aperçus historiques Archived 2009-12-17 at the Wayback Machine
- ↑ Julius Kaplan, entry on "Société Libre des Beaux-Arts", in The Grove Dictionary of Art. From Renaissance to Impressionism: Styles and Movements in Western Art, 1400–1900 (St. Martin's Press, 2000), p. 343.
- ↑ Inghuem, A. de; Lemaire, Henry; Stevens, Joseph, Joseph Stevens : Souvenirs anecdotiques, Brussels, G. van Oest & cie. 1905. p. 12
- 1 2 3 Bruno Fornari, Le réalisme en Belgique, in: En nature La Société libre des Beaux-Arts D’Artan à Whistle, cat. Exp. Namur 2013, p. 15-27
- ↑ Jean-Philippe Huys and Dominique Marechal, Realism: From Living Art to Free Art, in: Howe, Jeffery W., (editor), Courbet : mapping realism : paintings from the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium and American collections by Courbet, Gustave, 1819-1877, McMullen Museum of Art; Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, 2013, p. 24-25
Further reading
- Berko, P. & V., 1981 (?): Dictionary of Belgian painters born between 1750 & 1875. Laconti
- Fierens, Paul, 1931: Joseph Stevens. Éditions des cahiers de Belgique
- Vanzype, Gustave, 1936: Les frères Stevens. Bruxelles: Nouvelle Société d'édition
- Verlant, Ernest, 1978: Dictionnaire des artistes belges de 1830 à 1970. Bruxelles: Arto
External links
- Media related to Joseph Stevens at Wikimedia Commons