|
Date: |
|
Description: | Signed: yes Description: As the inscription on its frame records, Jules Tavernier painted the crater of Kilauea in Hawaii 'on the spot'. It is painted in a fluid style, characteristic of the work of early nineteenth-century French plein-air artists, and recalls the dictum of that school's master, Achile-Etna Michallon (1796-1822), who urged himself: 'to reproduce as scrupulously as possible what I saw in front of me.' Tavernier used a long narrow canvas to capture this scene which he dramatically composed with a bold repoussoir element in the left foreground. Contrasted against this is the expansive landscape that opens out to the right, revealing the magisterial volcano's incandescent, cracked crust and craters beneath a luminous sky, veiled by billowing smoke tinged pink by evening light. The painting records Annie and Merton Russell-Cotes' 1885 visit to Kilauea, 'the largest active volcano in the world'. In his biography Merton recalled that: 'whilst sojourning in Honolulu, my wife and I met two French artists, Jules Taverniers [sic] and Chas. Ferneaux. Jules Taverniers was a Knight of the Legion of Honour [a fact which remains unsubstantiated] and a remarkably clever artist. He was travelling like ourselves for health and pleasure. On our trip to Hawaii to explore the great volcano of Kilauea he, at our invitation, accompanied us as our guest, and I commissioned him to paint the picture which is now in the Russell-Cotes Art Gallery of the interior of Kilauea'. | Subjects: | landscape; place (Kilauea Island of Hawaii) | Source: | Vads | Creator: | Artist: Tavernier, Jules (French painter, 1844-1899) Æ | Identifier: | http://www.vads.ac.uk/large.php?uid=8467... | Go to resource |
|
More Like this...
-
-
-
-
-
Judith
Signed: yes Description: Judith by…
-
-
-
-
-
|