James Tissot
French, 1836-1902 (active England)

Foreign Visitors at the Louvre, n.d.
oil on canvas
29 x 19 1/2 in.

SBMA, Gift of The Estate of Barbara Darlington Dupee
2015.32.1



James Tissot, 1865, self-portrait, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

“I hear Tissot has an exhibition—have you seen it? It all comes down to the degree of life and passion that an artist manages to put into his figures. So long as they really live, a figure of a lady by Alfred Stevens, say, or some Tissots are also really magnificent.”
- Vincent to Theo, May 4 and May 5, 1885

“Our industrial and artistic creations can perish, our morals and our fashions can fall into obscurity, but a picture by M. Tissot will be enough for archaeologists of the future to reconstitute our epoch.” - L’Artiste, 1869, in a review of Tissot’s painting, "Young Ladies Looking at Japanese Objects, exhibited at the Paris Salon"


RESEARCH PAPER

In the high ceilinged dark hall named for the Emperor Augustus, visitors are dressed in fashionable Victorian garb as formal as the grand setting. Large marble columns soar up the middle of the hall to the painted domed ceiling. But these are not what capture our attention. Rather, a demure face stares out of the frame with an air of subtle defiance. She stands wasp-waisted wearing a pale cream dress/coat that sinuously echoes the draping of the Empress Livia’s robe posed behind her. This is Kathleen Newton, who was Tissot’s muse, model, and mistress, a beautiful divorcee of Irish descent with two children. She was his Galatea, she who was milk-white.

She holds up gold lorgnette eyeglasses in her gloved right hand, circled with fur and bright gold bangles. She is not looking at the art, and boldly looking at us, as if refusing to hide from the scandal of her position. Two aristocratic men in supremely confident poses are admiring the antiquities. Their faces full of pride and appreciation of the great treasures that have been looted from ancient sites described in the bright white guidebook that one of them holds in his hand. Miss Newton and her companions are surrounded by Roman busts, reliefs, and full length sculptures. Through the arched doorway, two men stand by a large statue of Augustus.

The three principal figures are crowded in the right side of the painting. The overall colors are rich and somber except for the light in the window behind Augustus, which causes bright splashes on the gallery’s marble floor. There are also the delicate skin tones on Miss Newton’s face and the backlit contour of her elegant dress. It is a superbly painted, realistically depicted “moment”, much like the genre paintings of the Dutch masters. Tissot utilized windows as a backdrop in many of his works demonstrating remarkable control of light and shadow. Despite such beautifully executed details as found in the older man’s bearded face and the carefully trimmed sideburns of the younger man, Tissot also employs Impressionist techniques. We note the treatment of the ceiling; the columns and the loose brush strokes of the marble floors. The cropping of the figures suggests the influence of Japanese woodblock prints that were so admired by the Impressionists. The black triangle of shoes set in a larger triangle on the lower right is another example of the influence of Japanese techniques.

“Foreign Visitors at the Louvre” also shows Tissot’s mastery of composition and chiaroscuro. The calculated rhyming between the fashionably attired Miss Newton, and the sculpture of the Empress Livia reveals Victorian society’s greed for antiquities and the allure of the tightly corseted beautiful woman.

While studying at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris in 1856, Tissot was greatly influenced by Ingre’s neo-classical style. He made friends with Whistler, Manet and Degas and was invited to show in their first Exhibition, but he remained true to the conventional academic style taught at his art school.

Born in the French west coast port city of Nantes in 1836, his father was a successful drapery maker and his mother was a milliner. His perfect rendering of women’s clothing may well be attributed to this early exposure to fabrics and couture. He was enormously successful as a Parisian society painter. Baudelaire called him “Le Peintre de la Vie Moderne” ["The painter of modern life"]. (K.Lochman)

In the turmoil following the 1871 Franco Prussian War and the subsequent civil unrest, Tissot fled to London to avoid arrest, even anglicizing his name from Jacques to James, for he had sympathized with the Commune, the ill-fated temporary government erected by socialist revolutionaries. In London he became the greatest society painter of the Nouveau Riche, turning out endless scenes of fashionable women. His success aroused much jealousy among his Impressionist colleagues in France who viewed his art as shallow, painted photographs of high fashion. In 1877 John Ruskin, the art critic wrote “Most of them are, unhappily mere colored photos of vulgar society.” (M.Wentworth)

Tissot lived seven blissful years with Kathleen Newton until her death from consumption. He returned to Paris broken-hearted. It is thought this work was painted after her death in 1881. His loving rendering of Kathleen make it a fine complement to SBMA collection; Wm. Merritt Chase’s adoring portrait of his wife Alice, “Lady in Pink”, academic comparisons of facial detail in Bouguereau’s “Mademoiselle Hoskier”, and dramatic contrast, the dark moodiness of Breton’s interior of “Le Pardon” is a perfect counter to the elegance of the visitors at the Louvre.

After Newton’s death Tissot became interested in spiritualism. From then on he devoted most of his artistic energies to religious subjects including enormous biblical illustration projects. Tissot’s art sank into obscurity after his own death in 1902. In the 1960’s there was a revival of interest in this “artistic hybrid suspended between the French and English schools and their respective avant-garde academic movements” (M.Wentworth).
Tissot’s “particular form of modernity focused on complicated relationships… rendered in a highly detailed style that appeals to both the psychological and aesthetic tastes of our own era” (N.R. Marshall).

Prepared for the SBMA Docent Council by Josie Martins, July 2014


Bibliography

Forster, Patricia A., “James Tissot”, monograph, SBMA Docent, 1998

Joseph, James Jacques, “Tissot”, monograph, Paul Ripley, Art Renewal Center Museum
www.artrenewal.org

Lochman, K., “Seductive Surfaces-The Art of Tissot”, Yale University Press, 1999

Marshall and Warne, “Victorian Life/Modern Love”, The American Federation of Arts, New York, 1999.

Misfeldt, Willard, “Grove Dictionary of Art”, Oxford University Press, 1996

Santa Barbara Museum of Art, “James Tissot”, SBMA INFORM #1745, 1/22/98.

Santa Barbara Museum of Art Calendar, Jan-March 2014

Wentworth, Michael J., “Tissot”, Minneapolis Institute of Arts, 1978.

Wikipedia.org/wikijames-Tissot#mediaviewer/file

Wood, Christopher, “Victorian Painting”, Bullfinch Press, 2000.

SBMA CURATORIAL LABELS

It may be surprising, but in the same time frame that the thirty-two-year-old Van Gogh was sketching the working-class weavers to whom he had access while living with his parents in the vicarage at Nuenen, he was still able to express admiration for the exquisite work of the likes of Tissot. Tissot specialized in lavishly meticulous images of beautiful women (his favorite model was his mistress, Kathleen Newton, pictured here), portrayed as if caught in the urban fabric as sumptuous spectacles for our delectation. In this masterpiece of its kind, Tissot uses the cropping inspired either by photography or just as likely, Japanese prints, interests which he shared with his good friend, Edgar Degas. It is likely that Tissot’s recurrent interest in the theme of spectatorship at the Louvre was inspired by Degas’ famous series of etchings, "Mary Cassatt at the Louvre".

- Through Vincent's Eyes, 2022

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