Charles-Joseph Traviès de Villers
Charles-Joseph Traviès de Villers | |
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Born | Wülflingen, Switzerland | 21 February 1804
Died | 13 August 1859 Paris, France | (aged 55)
Occupations |
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Charles-Joseph Traviès de Villers, also known simply as Traviès, (21 February 1804 – 13 August 1859) was a Swiss-born French painter, lithographer, and caricaturist whose work appeared regularly in Le Charivari and La Caricature. His Panthéon Musical was one of the most famous and widely reproduced musical caricatures of the 19th century. His younger brother was the painter and illustrator Édouard Traviès.[2][3]
Life and career
Traviès was born in
By the late 1820s he had become a popular caricaturist enjoying particular success with his collections Tableau de Paris and Galerie des Épicuriens. He then joined
During this time Traviès also became involved in early socialist movements, an interest which he maintained throughout his life. He was first attracted to
Following the assassination attempt on Louis Philippe in July 1835, a law was passed on 9 September 1835 forbidding political caricatures and articles critical of the king. In light of the subsequent fines and imprisonments imposed on the press for violations of this law, Traviès, like many of his colleagues, turned his attention to satirizing French customs and culture. He also provided illustrations for Balzac's
He is the prince of the unfortunate. His muse is a nymph of the suburbs, pale and melancholy. [...] Traviès has a deep feeling for the joys and sorrows of the common people. He knows the scoundrel thoroughly, and he loves him with tender charity. For this reason his Scènes Bachiques will remain a remarkable work.[9]
When Baudelaire wrote these words in 1857 he observed that Traviès had been inexplicably "missing from the scene" for quite a while. After 1845 Traviès had worked more and more sporadically. The last fourteen years of his life were marked by depression and illness. However, he exhibited portraits in the 1848 and 1855 Paris Salons and finally managed to complete his religious painting Christ et la Samaritaine which was exhibited in the 1853 Salon and bought by the French government. He died in his Paris apartment on 13 August 1859 at the age of 55. According to contemporary obituaries, he died in poverty lying on a straw bed.[10][5][6]
Works
Portraits and paintings
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Armand Barbès en Prison
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Elisa Julian
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Christ et la Samaritaine (detail)
Armand Barbès en Prison, drawn by Traviès in 1835, is the only known portrayal of Armand Barbès in prison. It depicts him alone in his cell in Sainte-Pélagie where he was held from 1834 to 1835, the first of his many imprisonments. The drawing conveys a sense of melancholy and isolation with deep shadows and only the subject's face illuminated.[11] Traviès's lithograph portrait of the opera singer Elisa Julian, published in the journal La Sylphide in 1840 and exhibited at the Paris Salons of 1848 and 1855, was particularly admired by the writer Alfred Deberle. During the late 1830s Traviès also produced lithograph portraits of the composer Ferdinand Hérold and statesman Dupont de l'Eure as well as Galerie des Illustrations Scientifiques, a series of portraits of prominent French doctors and scientists which were published in Charivari and separately as prints by Maison Aubert.[8]
The art critic
Notes
References
- ^ ISBN 0899510752
- ^ Bellier de La Chavignerie, Émile and Auvray, Louis (1885). Dictionnaire général des artistes de l'École française depuis l'origine des arts du dessin jusqu'à nos jours, Vol. 2, p. 588. Librairie Renouard (in French)
- ISBN 0374983372
- ^ ISBN 9788896055762(in Italian)
- ^ a b c Deberle, Alfred (15 September 1859). "C. J. Traviès". L'Orchestre, p. 2 (in French)
- ^ a b Vapereau, Gustave (1870). "Traviès de Villers (Charles-Joseph)". Dictionnaire universel des contemporains, Vol. 2, p. 1682. Hachette et Cie (in French)
- ISBN 0191543047
- ^ a b Beraldi, Henri (1885). Les graveurs du 19e siècle; guide de l'amateur d'estampes modernes, Vol. XII, pp. 142-153. L. Conquet (in French)
- ^ Baudelaire, Charles (1 October 1857). "Quelques caricaturistes français". Le Présent, pp. 93–95 (in French)
- ^ "A. D." (29 September 1860). "Causerie artistique". La Lumière, 10e Année, No 39, pp. 154–155 (in French).
- ^ Albigès, Luce-Marie (November 2004). "Armand Barbès prisonnier au Mont-Saint-Michel (1839-1843)". L'Histoire par l'image. Retrieved 26 May 2017 (in French).
- ^ Champfleury (1885). Histoire de la caricature moderne, pp. 219–238. E. Dentu (in French)
- ^ Base Palissy: Le Christ et la Samaritaine, Reference PM30000875 PM30000875 Le Christ et la Samaritaine, Reference PM30000875, Ministère français de la Culture. (in French)
- ^ Ferment, Claude (February 1982). "Le Caricaturiste Travies: La Vie et l'oeuvre d'un 'Prince du Guignon'" Gazette des Beaux-Arts pp. 63-78
- ^ Musée Carnavalet. Le Café des Aveugles, au Palais-Royal. Retrieved 26 May 2017 (in French).
Further reading
- Maurice, Arthur Bartlett, and Cooper, Frederic Taber (1904). History of the Nineteenth Century in Caricature, pp. 91–93. Dodd, Mead and Co.
External links
Media related to Charles Joseph Traviès de Villers at Wikimedia Commons
- Works by Charles-Joseph Traviès de Villers in the Paris Musées collections (in French)
- Works by Charles-Joseph Traviès de Villers in the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco collections