Thursday, March 7, 2019

Museums in Paris: Musée d'Orsay #1 (Part 2 of 5)

We recently visited Musée d'Orsay to view a temporary exhibition, Le Talisman of Paul Sérusier, Prophet of Color.


Paul Sérusier (1864-1927), a French painter, art theorist and student of Paul Gaugin, is credited with inspiring an art movement with a single painting.  

The Talisman, the Aven River at the Bois d'Amour by Paul Sérusier (1888) (oil on wood)
According Musee-Orsay.fr, "Paul Sérusier sojourned in Pont-Aven during the summer of 1888, as Paul Gauguin, whose advice he followed. On his returning to Paris, he showed his young fellow painters, the future "Nabis" ("prophets" in Hebrew), what was to become their "Talisman".  A close observation of the painting allows one to recognise certain elements of the landscape represented : the wood, at the top on the left, the transversal path, the row of beech trees on the river bank, and the mill, at the back, on the right. Each of these elements is a stain of colour. According to Maurice Denis, Gauguin had told Séruzier : "How do you see these trees? They are yellow. So, put in yellow; this shadow, rather blue, paint it with pure ultramarine; these red leaves? Put in vermilion"."

"Maurice Denis explained that in front of this landscape, he and his friends felt "liberated from all the yokes that the idea of copying brought to [our] painters' instincts".  Posterity was to see - in retrospect – in this painting the manifesto of a pure painting, autonomous and abstract, related to Maurice Denis's famous statement: "Remember that a painting, before being a battle horse, a nude woman or any anecdote, is essentially a plane surface covered with colours assembled in a certain order." 

The exhibition features more paintings by Sérusier.  




Below is a portrait of Sérusier.


Next Up:  The movement inspired by Sérusier's Le Talisman.

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