One might say of Greuze, as of Hogarth, that the moral scenes which he
represents appear to have been posed for and acted by excellent actors rather
than copied directly from nature. This is the truth, but seen, however, through
an interpretation and under a travesty of rusticity. All is reasoned out, full
of purpose, and leading to an end. There is in every stroke what the
littérateurscall ideas when they talk about painting. Thus Diderot has
celebrated Greuze in the most lyric strain. Greuze, however, is not a mediocre
artist: he invented a
genreunknown before his time, and he possesses
veritable qualities of a painter. He has colour, he has touch, and his heads,
modelled by square plans and, so to speak, by facets,
oil paintings for sale, have relief and life. His
draperies, or rather his rumpled linen, torn and treated grossly in a systematic
fashion to give full value to the delicacy of the flesh, reveal in their very
negligence an easy brush.
La Malédiction Paternelleand
Le Fils
Maudit are homilies that are well painted and of a practical moral, but we
prefer
L'Accordée du Village, on account of the adorable head of the
fiancée; it is impossible to find anything younger, fresher, more
innocent
281and more coquettishly virginal, if these two words
may be connected. Greuze, and this is the cause of the renown which he enjoys
now after the eclipse of his glory caused by the intervention of David and his
school, has a very individual talent for painting woman in her first bloom, when
the bud is about to burst into the rose and the child is about to become a
maiden. As in the Eighteenth Century all the world was somewhat libertine, even
the moralists, Greuze, when he painted an Innocence, always took pains to open
the gauze and give a glimpse of the curve of the swelling bosom; he puts into
the eyes a fiery lustre and upon the lips a dewy smile that suggests the idea
that Innocence might very easily become Voluptuousness.
oil paintings
La Cruche Cassée.
Greuze.
La Cruche Cassée is the model of this
genre. The head has still
the innocence of childhood, but the fichu is disarranged, the rose at the
corsage is dropping its leaves, the flowers are only half held in the fold of
the gown and the jug allows the water to escape through its fissure.
Guide de l'Amateur au Musée du Louvre (Paris, 1882).
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