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{{Short description|French painter and educator (1833–1922)}}{{Infobox artist
[[Image:Léon Bonat - Autoportrait.jpg|thumb|220px|Léon Bonnat, self-portrait.]]
| name = Léon Bonnat
'''Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat''' ([[20 June]] [[1833]] – [[September 8]], [[1922]]) was a [[France|French]] [[Painting|painter]].
| image = Léon Bonnat - Autoportrait.jpg
| image_size = 220px
| caption = Self-portrait ({{Circa|1855}})
| birth_name = Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat
| birth_date = 20 June 1833
| birth_place = [[Bayonne]], France
| death_date = {{Death date and age|df=yes|1922|9|8|1833|6|30}}
| death_place = [[Monchy-Saint-Éloi]], France
| nationality = French
| known_for = Painter
| training =
| movement =
| notable_works =
| patrons =
| awards =
}}
'''Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat''' (20 June 1833 – 8 September 1922) was a French painter, Grand Officer of the [[Légion d'honneur]], art collector and professor at the [[Ecole des Beaux Arts]].


==Early life==
He was born in [[Bayonne]], but from 1846 to 1853 he lived in [[Madrid]], [[Spain]], where his father owned a bookshop.<ref>http://www.artfact.com/features/viewArtist.cfm?1=1&searchType=artist&artistRef=O2WDUSDC7W ArtFact. Retrieved November 27, 2006.</ref> In Madrid he received his artistic training under [[Raimundo de Madrazo y Garreta|Madrazo]].
Bonnat was born in [[Bayonne]], but from 1846 to 1853 he lived in [[Madrid]], where his father owned a bookshop.<ref>[http://www.artfact.com/features/viewArtist.cfm?1=1&searchType=artist&artistRef=O2WDUSDC7W Artfact.com]. Retrieved 27 November 2006.</ref> While tending his father's shop, he copied engravings of works by the Old Masters, developing a passion for drawing. In Madrid he received his artistic training under [[Raimundo de Madrazo y Garreta|Madrazo]].
He later worked in [[Paris]], where he became known as a leading portraitist. His many portraits show the influence of [[Diego Velázquez|Velázquez]] and the Spanish realists. He won a medal of honor at Paris in 1869, where he became one of the leading artists of his day. Bonnat went on to become a professor at the [[Ecole des Beaux Arts]] in 1882. In May 1905 he succeeded [[Paul Dubois]] as director.
He later worked in [[Paris]], where he became known as a leading portraitist, never without a commission. His many portraits show the influence of [[Diego Velázquez|Velázquez]], [[Jusepe de Ribera]] and other Spanish masters, as well as [[Titian]] and [[Anthony van Dyck|Van Dyke]], whose works he studied in the Prado, which placed him at the forefront of painting in France in the 1850s, opposing neoclassicism and academicism. Following the period in Spain, Bonnat worked the studios of the history painters [[Hippolyte Delaroche|Paul Delaroche]] and [[Leon Cogniet]] (1854) in Paris. Despite repeated attempts, he failed to win the {{lang|fr|[[prix de Rome]]|italic=no}}, finally receiving only a second prize. However, a scholarship from his native Bayonne and support from the Personnaz family allowed him to spend three years in Rome (1858–60) independently where he and [[Antonin Personnaz]] became lifetime friends. During his stay in Rome, he also became friends with [[Edgar Degas]], [[Gustave Moreau]], [[Jean-Jacques Henner]] and the sculptor [[Henri Chapu]].
hi mate hows it going?
His vivid portrait-painting is his most characteristic work, but his subject pictures, such as the ''Martyrdom of St Denis in the Pantheon'', are also famous.


==Career==
Some of Bonnat's more notable students include: [[Gustave Caillebotte]], [[Marc Aurèle de Foy Suzor-Coté|Suzor-Coté]], [[Georges Braque]],[[Raoul Dufy]], [[Marius Vasselon]], [[Fred Barnard]], [[Aloysius O'Kelly]], and [[Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec]].<ref>http://wwar.com/masters/b/bonnat-leon.html World Wide Arts Resources. Retrieved November 27, 2006.</ref>
Bonnat won a medal of honour in Paris in 1869, going on to become one of the leading artists of his day. Bonnat went on to win the Grand Officer of the [[Légion d'honneur]] and became a professor at the [[Ecole des Beaux Arts]] in 1882. Bonnat was quite popular with American students in Paris. In addition to his native French, he spoke Spanish and Italian and knew English well, to the relief of many monolingual Americans. In May 1905 he succeeded [[Paul Dubois (sculptor)|Paul Dubois]] as director of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Julius Kaplan characterised Bonnat as "a liberal teacher who stressed simplicity in art above high academic finish, as well as overall effect rather than detail."<ref>[[Julius Kaplan]], "Leon Bonnat", ''The Dictionary of Art'', Volume IV, New York: Grove, 1996, {{ISBN|978-1-884446-00-9}}, p.&nbsp;329.</ref> Bonnat's emphasis on overall effect on the one hand, and rigorous drawing on the other, put him in a middle position with respect to the [[Impressionists]] and academic painters like his friend [[Jean-Léon Gérôme]]. In 1917, Bonnat was elected into the [[National Academy of Design]] as an Honorary Corresponding member.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nationalacademy.org/academy/national-academicians/ |title=National Academicians &#124; National Academy &#124; National Academy Museum |access-date=4 March 2016 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160314023614/http://www.nationalacademy.org/academy/national-academicians/ |archive-date=14 March 2016 }}</ref>

==Paintings==
[[File:Bonnat01.jpg|thumb|230px|''The Resurrection of Lazarus'' by Bonnat in 1857]]
Bonnat's vivid portraits of contemporary celebrities are his most characteristic works, but his most important works are arguably his powerful religious paintings, such as his ''Christ on the Cross'' (now in the collection of the [[Musée du Petit Palais]] in Paris, but not currently on display), ''Job'' (in the [[Musée Bonnat]]), ''St Vincent Taking the Place of Two Galley Slaves'' (at the church of Saint-Nicholas des Champs in Paris), and the large ''Martyrdom of St Denis'' for the Pantheon in Paris. However, he received few commissions for religious and historical paintings, and most of his output consists of portraits. He also produced [[genre painting]]s of Italian peasants, and a small number of [[Orientalism|Orientalist]] scenes.

The writers [[Émile Zola]] and [[Théophile Gautier]] were among Bonnat's supporters. Gautier hailed him as "the antithesis of [[Bouguereau]]," because of the stark naturalism and lack of surface finish that characterize Bonnat's work. Bonnat was an [[Academic painting|academic painter]]. He was a member of the Institute, one of the only 14 painters who had administrative power over the Academy des Beaux Arts and thereby the Ecole des Beaux Arts. He had friends and connections among the independent artists of his time as well, such as [[Edgar Degas]], whom he met during his stay in Rome and who painted two portraits of Bonnat, and [[Édouard Manet]], who shared his predilection for Spanish painting. He taught together with [[Pierre Puvis de Chavannes]] in the private atelier he ran before becoming professor at the École. He supported [[Auguste Rodin]]'s candidacy for the Institut, and defended [[Gustave Courbet]]'s submissions to the salon.

==Teacher==
As a teacher he encouraged freedom of expression and execution. He recommended traveling to Madrid to visit the Prado Museum, and introduced in Paris the tendency paint in the Spanish way, which influenced the evolution of French painting.

Some of Bonnat's more notable students include: [[John Singer Sargent]], [[Stanhope Forbes]], [[Gustave Caillebotte]], [[Prince Eugen, Duke of Närke]], [[Gustaf Cederström]], [[Laurits Tuxen]], [[P. S. Krøyer]], [[Marc Aurèle de Foy Suzor-Coté|Suzor-Coté]], [[Robert Harris (painter)|Robert Harris]], [[Alfred Philippe Roll]], [[Georges Braque]], [[Thomas Eakins]], [[Raoul Dufy]], [[Jean Béraud]], [[Franklin Brownell]], [[Marius Vasselon]], [[Hubert-Denis Etcheverry]], [[Fred Barnard]], [[Louis Béroud]], [[Paul de la Boulaye]], [[Aloysius O'Kelly]], [[Erik Werenskiold]], [[Graciano Mendilaharzu]], [[Edvard Munch]], [[Alphonse Osbert]], [[Henry Siddons Mowbray]], [[Francis Petrus Paulus]], [[Charles Sprague Pearce]], [[Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec]], [[Manuel Cusí y Ferret]], [[Hyakutake Kaneyuki]], [[Nils Forsberg]], [[Walter Tyndale]], [[Émile-Louis Foubert]], and [[Harry Watrous]].<ref>[http://wwar.com/masters/b/bonnat-leon.html World Wide Arts Resources.] {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20120720212142/http://wwar.com/masters/b/bonnat-leon.html |date=20 July 2012 }} Retrieved 27 November 2006.</ref>

==Later years==
[[File:Léon Bonnat, Alfred Roll, 1918.jpg|thumb|Bonnat painting a portrait of [[Alfred Philippe Roll|Alfred Roll]], 1918]]
In his last years his painting evolved, from the influence of seventeenth-century painters and Goya, towards a more modern freedom of execution, scratching the brush and using the spatula, as well as a more colorful color gamut, as can be seen in his ''Self-portrait'' of the Prado Museum.
In a gesture of gratitude for the help he had been provided in his youth and with the assistance of Antonin Personnaz, Bonnat built a museum in his native city of Bayonne, the [[Musée Bonnat]]. Most of the works in the museum are from the personal collections of Bonnat and Personnaz, amassed over a lifetime of travelling around Europe. It includes an exceptionally fine collection of Old Master drawings from [[Leonardo da Vinci]] and [[Michelangelo]] to [[Ingres]] and [[Géricault]]. Bonnat died on 8 September 1922 at [[Monchy-Saint-Éloi]], and was buried at the Cimitiére Saint-Etienne, Bayonne.

==Personal life==
Bonnat never married, and lived for much of his life with his mother and sister in the [[Place Vintimille]] (renamed Place Adolphe-Max in 1940).<ref>[https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F00616F93A5D1A7A93C0AB1782D85F468285F9 New York Times]</ref>
== Honours ==
* 1904: Member of the [[Royal Academy of Science, Letters and Fine Arts of Belgium]].<ref>Index biographique des membres et associés de l'Académie royale de Belgique (1769–2005).</ref>

==Criticisms==
"We wonder why [[Diego Velázquez|Velázquez]]'s infant has fake shoulders and why the head doesn't join properly...And how good it looks. While a head by Bonnat joins actual shoulders...And how bad it looks!"
– [[Paul Gauguin]] (from ''Ramblings of a Wannabe Painter'' Publication 2017, David Zwirner Books)

==Gallery==
<gallery class="center" widths="200px" heights="200px" perrow="4" align="center">
File:Léon Bonnat - Giotto gardant les chèvres.JPG|''Giotto gardant les chèvres'' (1850) [[Musée Bonnat]]
File:Léon_Bonnat_-_Une_paysanne_égyptienne_et_son_enfant.jpg|''An Egyptian Peasant Woman and Her Child'' (1869–1870) [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]
File:An Arab Sheik Bonnat.jpg|''An Arab Sheik'' (c. 1870) [[Walters Art Museum]]
File:Léon Bonnat - Fille romaine à la fontaine.jpg|''Fille romaine à la fontaine'' (1875) [[Metropolitan Museum of Art]]
File:Bonnat02.jpg|''Job'' (1880)
File:Leon Bonnat - The Crucifixion.jpg|''Christ on the Cross'' (1880)
File:Léon Bonnat - Portrait of William T Walters - Walters 37758.jpg|''[[William Thompson Walters]]'' (1883) [[Walters Art Museum]]
File:Portrait of Barye with a Wax Model of Seated Lion Bonnat.jpg|''Portrait of [[Antoine-Louis Barye]] with a Wax Model of Seated Lion'' (1868) [[Walters Art Museum]]
File:Self Portrait Leon Bonnatt.jpg|''Self-portrait'' dedicated to [[William Thompson Walters|William Walters]] (1885) [[Walters Art Museum]]
File:Rose Caron dans le rôle de Salammbo.jpg|[[Rose Caron]] in the role of [[Salammbo]]
File:Bonnat08.jpg|A circa 1865 portrait of sculptor [[Antoine-Louis Barye]]
<!-- File:Léon Bonnat - Portrait of George Aloysius Lucas - Walters 37759.jpg|''George Aloysius Lucas'' (1885) [[Walters Art Museum]]File:Émile Boeswillwald, peinture par Léon Bonnat.jpg|Portrait of the architect [[Émile Boeswillwald]] (1890) -->
</gallery>

==See also==
[[Image:Tombe léon bonnat saint etienne bayonne.jpg|thumb|right|His grave in Bayonne.]]
*[[Musée Bonnat]]


==References==
==References==
*{{EB1911|wstitle=Bonnat, Léon Joseph Florentin}}
*{{1911}}


==Footnotes==
==Footnotes==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


{{commonscat|Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat}}
{{Commons category|Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat}}

{{ACArt}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Bonnat, Leon}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bonnat, Leon}}
[[Category:1833 births]]
[[Category:1833 births]]
[[Category:1922 deaths]]
[[Category:1922 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Pyrénées-Atlantiques]]
[[Category:People from Bayonne]]
[[Category:French painters]]
[[Category:19th-century French painters]]
[[Category:Portrait artists]]
[[Category:19th-century French male artists]]
[[Category:French male painters]]

[[Category:20th-century French painters]]
{{France-painter-stub}}
[[Category:20th-century French male artists]]

[[Category:French portrait painters]]
[[bg:Леон Бона]]
[[ca:Léon Bonnat]]
[[Category:Academic art]]
[[Category:Prix de Rome for painting]]
[[cs:Léon Bonnat]]
[[Category:Academic staff of the École des Beaux-Arts]]
[[da:Léon Bonnat]]
[[Category:Grand Officers of the Legion of Honour]]
[[de:Léon Bonnat]]
[[Category:Members of the Royal Academy of Belgium]]
[[es:Léon Bonnat]]
[[Category:Honorary members of the Royal Academy]]
[[eu:Leon Bonnat]]
[[Category:Recipients of the Pour le Mérite (civil class)]]
[[fr:Léon Bonnat]]
[[gl:Léon Bonnat]]
[[it:Léon Bonnat]]
[[ja:レオン・ボナ]]
[[sv:Léon Bonnat]]

Latest revision as of 22:23, 12 September 2024

Léon Bonnat
Self-portrait (c. 1855)
Born
Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat

20 June 1833
Bayonne, France
Died8 September 1922(1922-09-08) (aged 89)
NationalityFrench
Known forPainter

Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat (20 June 1833 – 8 September 1922) was a French painter, Grand Officer of the Légion d'honneur, art collector and professor at the Ecole des Beaux Arts.

Early life

[edit]

Bonnat was born in Bayonne, but from 1846 to 1853 he lived in Madrid, where his father owned a bookshop.[1] While tending his father's shop, he copied engravings of works by the Old Masters, developing a passion for drawing. In Madrid he received his artistic training under Madrazo. He later worked in Paris, where he became known as a leading portraitist, never without a commission. His many portraits show the influence of Velázquez, Jusepe de Ribera and other Spanish masters, as well as Titian and Van Dyke, whose works he studied in the Prado, which placed him at the forefront of painting in France in the 1850s, opposing neoclassicism and academicism. Following the period in Spain, Bonnat worked the studios of the history painters Paul Delaroche and Leon Cogniet (1854) in Paris. Despite repeated attempts, he failed to win the prix de Rome, finally receiving only a second prize. However, a scholarship from his native Bayonne and support from the Personnaz family allowed him to spend three years in Rome (1858–60) independently where he and Antonin Personnaz became lifetime friends. During his stay in Rome, he also became friends with Edgar Degas, Gustave Moreau, Jean-Jacques Henner and the sculptor Henri Chapu.

Career

[edit]

Bonnat won a medal of honour in Paris in 1869, going on to become one of the leading artists of his day. Bonnat went on to win the Grand Officer of the Légion d'honneur and became a professor at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in 1882. Bonnat was quite popular with American students in Paris. In addition to his native French, he spoke Spanish and Italian and knew English well, to the relief of many monolingual Americans. In May 1905 he succeeded Paul Dubois as director of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Julius Kaplan characterised Bonnat as "a liberal teacher who stressed simplicity in art above high academic finish, as well as overall effect rather than detail."[2] Bonnat's emphasis on overall effect on the one hand, and rigorous drawing on the other, put him in a middle position with respect to the Impressionists and academic painters like his friend Jean-Léon Gérôme. In 1917, Bonnat was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Honorary Corresponding member.[3]

Paintings

[edit]
The Resurrection of Lazarus by Bonnat in 1857

Bonnat's vivid portraits of contemporary celebrities are his most characteristic works, but his most important works are arguably his powerful religious paintings, such as his Christ on the Cross (now in the collection of the Musée du Petit Palais in Paris, but not currently on display), Job (in the Musée Bonnat), St Vincent Taking the Place of Two Galley Slaves (at the church of Saint-Nicholas des Champs in Paris), and the large Martyrdom of St Denis for the Pantheon in Paris. However, he received few commissions for religious and historical paintings, and most of his output consists of portraits. He also produced genre paintings of Italian peasants, and a small number of Orientalist scenes.

The writers Émile Zola and Théophile Gautier were among Bonnat's supporters. Gautier hailed him as "the antithesis of Bouguereau," because of the stark naturalism and lack of surface finish that characterize Bonnat's work. Bonnat was an academic painter. He was a member of the Institute, one of the only 14 painters who had administrative power over the Academy des Beaux Arts and thereby the Ecole des Beaux Arts. He had friends and connections among the independent artists of his time as well, such as Edgar Degas, whom he met during his stay in Rome and who painted two portraits of Bonnat, and Édouard Manet, who shared his predilection for Spanish painting. He taught together with Pierre Puvis de Chavannes in the private atelier he ran before becoming professor at the École. He supported Auguste Rodin's candidacy for the Institut, and defended Gustave Courbet's submissions to the salon.

Teacher

[edit]

As a teacher he encouraged freedom of expression and execution. He recommended traveling to Madrid to visit the Prado Museum, and introduced in Paris the tendency paint in the Spanish way, which influenced the evolution of French painting.

Some of Bonnat's more notable students include: John Singer Sargent, Stanhope Forbes, Gustave Caillebotte, Prince Eugen, Duke of Närke, Gustaf Cederström, Laurits Tuxen, P. S. Krøyer, Suzor-Coté, Robert Harris, Alfred Philippe Roll, Georges Braque, Thomas Eakins, Raoul Dufy, Jean Béraud, Franklin Brownell, Marius Vasselon, Hubert-Denis Etcheverry, Fred Barnard, Louis Béroud, Paul de la Boulaye, Aloysius O'Kelly, Erik Werenskiold, Graciano Mendilaharzu, Edvard Munch, Alphonse Osbert, Henry Siddons Mowbray, Francis Petrus Paulus, Charles Sprague Pearce, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, Manuel Cusí y Ferret, Hyakutake Kaneyuki, Nils Forsberg, Walter Tyndale, Émile-Louis Foubert, and Harry Watrous.[4]

Later years

[edit]
Bonnat painting a portrait of Alfred Roll, 1918

In his last years his painting evolved, from the influence of seventeenth-century painters and Goya, towards a more modern freedom of execution, scratching the brush and using the spatula, as well as a more colorful color gamut, as can be seen in his Self-portrait of the Prado Museum. In a gesture of gratitude for the help he had been provided in his youth and with the assistance of Antonin Personnaz, Bonnat built a museum in his native city of Bayonne, the Musée Bonnat. Most of the works in the museum are from the personal collections of Bonnat and Personnaz, amassed over a lifetime of travelling around Europe. It includes an exceptionally fine collection of Old Master drawings from Leonardo da Vinci and Michelangelo to Ingres and Géricault. Bonnat died on 8 September 1922 at Monchy-Saint-Éloi, and was buried at the Cimitiére Saint-Etienne, Bayonne.

Personal life

[edit]

Bonnat never married, and lived for much of his life with his mother and sister in the Place Vintimille (renamed Place Adolphe-Max in 1940).[5]

Honours

[edit]

Criticisms

[edit]

"We wonder why Velázquez's infant has fake shoulders and why the head doesn't join properly...And how good it looks. While a head by Bonnat joins actual shoulders...And how bad it looks!" – Paul Gauguin (from Ramblings of a Wannabe Painter Publication 2017, David Zwirner Books)

[edit]

See also

[edit]
His grave in Bayonne.

References

[edit]
  •  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bonnat, Léon Joseph Florentin". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^ Artfact.com. Retrieved 27 November 2006.
  2. ^ Julius Kaplan, "Leon Bonnat", The Dictionary of Art, Volume IV, New York: Grove, 1996, ISBN 978-1-884446-00-9, p. 329.
  3. ^ "National Academicians | National Academy | National Academy Museum". Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 4 March 2016.
  4. ^ World Wide Arts Resources. Archived 20 July 2012 at archive.today Retrieved 27 November 2006.
  5. ^ New York Times
  6. ^ Index biographique des membres et associés de l'Académie royale de Belgique (1769–2005).