Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Introduction
- PART I
- Introduction: Old and New Studio Topoi in the Nineteenth Century
- 1 Studio Matters: Materials, Instruments and Artistic Processes
- 2 Jean-Léon Gérôme, his Badger and his Studio
- 3 Showing Making in Courbet's The Painter's Studio
- 4 Making and Creating. The Painted Palette in Late Nineteenth-Century Dutch Painting
- 5 14, rue de La Rochefoucauld. The Partial Eclipse of Gustave Moreau
- 6 The Artist as Centerpiece. The Image of the Artist in Studio Photographs of the Nineteenth Century
- PART II
- Introduction: Forms and Functions of the Studio from the Twentieth Century to Today
- 7 The Studio as Mediator
- 8 Accrochage in Architecture: Photographic Representations of Theo van Doesburg's Studios and Paintings
- 9 Studio, Storage, Legend. The Work of Hiding in Tacita Dean's Section Cinema (Homage to Marcel Broodthaers)
- 10 The Empty Studio: Bruce Nauman's Studio Films
- 11 Home Improvement and Studio Stupor. On Gregor Schneider's (Dead) House ur
- 12 Staging the Studio: Enacting Artful Realities through Digital Photography
- Epilogue: “Good Art Theory Must Smell of the Studio”
- Index
5 - 14, rue de La Rochefoucauld. The Partial Eclipse of Gustave Moreau
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 December 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Introduction
- PART I
- Introduction: Old and New Studio Topoi in the Nineteenth Century
- 1 Studio Matters: Materials, Instruments and Artistic Processes
- 2 Jean-Léon Gérôme, his Badger and his Studio
- 3 Showing Making in Courbet's The Painter's Studio
- 4 Making and Creating. The Painted Palette in Late Nineteenth-Century Dutch Painting
- 5 14, rue de La Rochefoucauld. The Partial Eclipse of Gustave Moreau
- 6 The Artist as Centerpiece. The Image of the Artist in Studio Photographs of the Nineteenth Century
- PART II
- Introduction: Forms and Functions of the Studio from the Twentieth Century to Today
- 7 The Studio as Mediator
- 8 Accrochage in Architecture: Photographic Representations of Theo van Doesburg's Studios and Paintings
- 9 Studio, Storage, Legend. The Work of Hiding in Tacita Dean's Section Cinema (Homage to Marcel Broodthaers)
- 10 The Empty Studio: Bruce Nauman's Studio Films
- 11 Home Improvement and Studio Stupor. On Gregor Schneider's (Dead) House ur
- 12 Staging the Studio: Enacting Artful Realities through Digital Photography
- Epilogue: “Good Art Theory Must Smell of the Studio”
- Index
Summary
His house was already almost a museum, his person was nothing more than the site where his oeuvre was achieved.
MARCEL PROUSTMoreau represents a singular equation between odi profanum and sinite venire; between the pedagogue’s stool and the ivory tower.
ROBERT DE MONTESQUIOUSTRATEGIES OF SECRECY BEYOND “HIDING MAKING”
Oedipus and the Sphinx, the work that gave Gustave Moreau instant notoriety when it was exhibited at the Salon of 1864, and which remains the artist's best-known work, is not a powerful image because of the action it depicts. It captures the viewer with its evocation of the paralyzing power of the sphinx's riddle that is central in this trial of strength. Similarly intriguing is the name of Gustave Moreau, even though more than a century has passed since a state-run museum first made public his unparalleled bequest of a house-cumoeuvre. To some extent, this unresolved, mysterious air is related to the mythic universe of Moreau's work, inhabited by Salomes, Jasons and Medeas, androgynous poets, and all sorts of chimeras. Another factor is that of the puzzling difficulties art historians confront when attempting to classify this Parisian painter: Moreau saw himself as the renewer of the dying tradition of history painting, but was later claimed as a Symbolist, a proto-abstract painter, and the forefather of surrealism. Much of the enigma surrounding Moreau also results from a number of the artist's secretive traits, much discussed during his lifetime. The “obscurely famous” Moreau was not only noted for not allowing visitors to enter his studio and thus hiding his making; to a considerable extent, Gustave Moreau was also secretive in hiding away his creation. Joséphin (Sâr) Péladan quotes Moreau as saying that he was more jealous about the 200 works concealed in his townhouse than a caliph might be about his women. As regards women, or for that matter Moreau's private life in general, the artist seems to have been just as reticent, both during his life and in the way he prepared the memory of his own person. In order to understand Moreau's hiding and showing strategies, which were aimed at modeling his artistic persona as part of a politics of positioning himself vis-à-vis the art world, we thus need to adopt a perspective that looks beyond Moreau's tactics during his life.
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- Information
- Hiding Making - Showing CreationThe Studio from Turner to Tacita Dean, pp. 86 - 105Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2013