Georges Rouault Biography
Georges Rouault
(1871-1958) was born in a working-class suburb
of Paris. Encouraged by his grandfather, he began drawing as a child and was
apprenticed to a stained-glass maker at the age of fourteen. In his spare time, he
attended classes at the École Nationale des Arts Décoratifs, and frequented the
Louvre. At age twenty, Rouault began studying at the École des Beaux-Arts under
Gustave Moreau (1826-98) who also taught Henri Matisse and Albert Marquet. Shortly
after Moreau died and bequeathed his estate to the City of Paris, Rouault was
made the curator of the new Musée Gustave Moreau.
In 1902 Georges Rouault helped to found the Salon d'Automne where he
exhibited his work along with the Fauves and Indépendants, two groups of
artists not included in the official Salon of the French Royal Academy. Rouault
was thirty-eight when he had his first solo exhibition in Paris. Rouault received
major recognition for his work in 1937, when his paintings were displayed in
conjunction with the Paris World's Fair.
Rouault, a devout Catholic, painted images of Christ, along with
prostitutes, lawyers, judges and clowns as part of a commentary on
the corruption of society. He believed in the teaching of the Gospel
and stated that his "only ambition is to be able to paint a Christ so
moving that those who see Him will be converted."
The art dealer Ambroise Vollard (1865-1939) commissioned Rouault
to produce prints for a two volume edition. For this project, entitled
Miserere et Guerre, Rouault was to create a hundred images which would
appear with text by the poet André Suarès. Rouault started the series
in 1914 and continued working on it through World War I and again from
1922 until 1927. Vollard became Rouault's sole agent and employer after 1916. Vollard
and his family retained control of the images until 1948, at which time Rouault
prevailed in court and then published his collection of prints as a single
volume entitled Miserere.
To create this series, the artist had his preliminary drawings
photographically transferred onto copper plates using a process known
as heliogravure. Rouault then reworked each plate using a variety of
intaglio printmaking techniques. The term intaglio means "to cut in" and refers
to aquatint, drypoint, and etching processes. Each of these techniques
used by Rouault involves incising or engraving a metal plate either
chemically or with a drypoint instrument such as an etching
needle or burrin. Both aquatinting and etching require use
of an acid-resistant material called a ground and an acid bath
which pits the surface. In some instances Rouault made as
many as fifteen successive impressions
or states of a single image before being satisfied.
Many of the themes found in Georges Rouault's paintings are repeated
in the Miserere series. In the first part of the series, the sufferings
of Christ are interwoven with those of Man. By contrast, the second part
of the series entitled Guerre includes more images of death, but ends
with the idea of resurrection and Man's salvation through the sacrifice
of Christ. Georges Rouault revealed for many the relevance of
Christianity during what has been called the "post-Christian" era.
If you are interested in buying, selling or consigning an original woodcut, lithograph or etching by
the artist, Georges Rouault, please feel free to contact the Georgetown Frame Shoppe. We also have a large collection of
original art, etchings, lithographs,
posters, aquatints, and linocut prints, series and suites by artists
such as Marc Chagall, Pierre Auguste Renoir, Joan Miro, Andy Warhol, Pablo Picasso,
Henri Matisse and many other celebrated American and French modern
impressionist artists of the nineteeth and twentieth centuries.
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