Category: 19th Century Dog Art

  • Dog Painting by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

     

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    Follette by Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

    Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec is mainly known for his 19th century Parisian women.   Ballerinas, can-can girls, and laundresses all were subjects of his work.  But he was also a very sensitive dog artist.  And he was quite resourceful.  This piece, Follette, 1890, is oil painted on cardboard.   It is part of the Philadelphia Museum of Art's collection, not currently on view.  But you can see it and enlarge it on their website.

    Touc, Seated on Table is another dog painting by Toulouse-Lautrec.  It is one of my all-time favorites.  A postcard of it has been hanging on my refrigerator for years.

  • Bonhams Dogs in Show and Field Fine Art Sale

     

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    Bonhams yearly dog art sale
    which coincides with the Westminster Kennel Club Dog Show in NYC is tomorrow, February 16, 2011.  This year appears to be an interesting mix of traditional and whimsical.  Here are my picks, not the star of the show, which is this Black Lab painting by Maud Earl, but the pieces I like best.

     

    Pug_brooch

    Maud_earl_toy_poodles

     

    Sight_hound_cigar_cutter

     

    Terrier_painting_bonhams

     

    Dogs_as_I_see_them_lucy_dawson

     

    Lucy_dawson_drawings

     

    Rolling_dachshund

     

     

    For more information visit Bonhams.  To browse the entire catalog click here.

  • Thérèse Schwartze: Dog Artist

     

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    Young Italian Woman with a Dog Called Puck by Thérèse Schwartze, 1879

    Via Figuration Féminine.

     

  • Young Girl With Dog by Theodore Robinson

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    Young Girl with Dog by Theodore Robinson, 1884

    Theodore Robinson (1852 – 1896), was born in Vermont, grew up in Wisconsin, and studied in Paris with Claude Monet, before returning to paint and teach in New York and Philadelphia.  He is considered the pioneer of American Impressionism.  This work, Young Girl with Dog, is up for auction at Christie’s in NY tomorrow, December 1, 2010, as part of their Important American Paintings, Drawings, and Sculpture sale.  Estimated price: $70,000 – $100,000.

    Visit Christie’s for more information.

  • Winter Scene in Brooklyn by Francis Guy

     

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    Winter Scene in Brooklyn by Francis Guy, 1819-20

    A storm is blowing in and my parents arrive on Monday.   It’s going to get cozy here.   Can’t wait.

    Painting via the Brooklyn Museum.

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  • Elizabeth Crowell and her Dog by Thomas Eakins

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    Elizabeth Crowell and her Dog by Thomas Eakins, 1873-74

    Thomas Eakins (1844 – 1916) was a renowned painter, sculptor, and photographer known for depicting his fellow Philadelphians.

    This week, Dog Art Today will look at great works of dog art in the city of Philadelphia.  For some reason, the city keeps popping up on my radar.  Feel free to leave me any tips in the comments section.

    P.S. You may remember The Artist’s Wife and his Setter Dog by Thomas Eakins, I featured last November.  I think I like this painting of Elizabeth Crowell and her dog better.  It’s the red.

     

  • Paul Gauguin’s Arearea Dog Art

     

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    Arearea by Paul Gauguin, 1892

    If you’re in San Francisco, you can see Arearea by Paul Gauguin in the Post-Impressionists show at the M.H. de Young Museum.  Paintings are on loan from the Paris’s Musee d’Orsay.

    Read a review by Stephen West at Bloomberg.

    P.S.  Arearea means joyousness.
  • September is Different

     

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    Turn little Sportsman, turn thine eye
    To wound the gaudy burtterfly:
    And thus prepare thy playful aim
    For furture Yearn more tempting game

     

    September a is big transition in a place with real seasons.  I recently learned that my neighbor is butchering cows and now I know what hunting smells like.  

    Image is from Room 26 Cabinet of Curiosities, DO NOT go there unless you have several hours to spare.

  • Writers and Dogs and Other Creatures

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    Edith Wharton and her dogs

    Apropos of yesterday's post about how a dog can impinge on creativity, Gilbert Alter-Gilbert has an incredibly comprehensive collection of authors and their animal muses at Will Schofield's blog, A Journey Round My Skull.  This photo of Edith Wharton is my favorite.  I recently read The Custom of the Country
    by her and loved how contemporary and cutting is.  I would describe it as "The Real Housewives of Late 19th Century New York City and Paris."   I had never read anything by her before.  Highly recommend.

    Hat tip to Rebecca Collins of Art Dog Blog who sent me this story.  I spent hours at A Journey Round My Skull, then I hated my blog and redesigned it, then I put it back the way it was.  I felt very Jealous Curator spending time in Will Schofield's skull.  But I appreciate the link, Rebecca.   And I think your new works, especially your mosaics, are fantastic.

    I also found some more incredible photos of Edith Wharton and her dogs through the years.  She will have another post soon.

  • Charles Darwin: A Wife is Better than a Dog Anyhow

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    The pros and cons of marriage by Charles Darwin, age 29, London 1838

    Darwin writes:

    This is the Question

    Marry

    Children (if it Please God)
    Constant companion (and friend in old age) who will feel interested in one
    Object to be beloved and played with. Better than a dog anyhow
    Home, & someone to take care of house
    Charms of music and female chit-chat
    These things good for one’s health—but terrible loss of time
    My
    God, it is intolerable to think of spending one’s whole life, like a
    neuter bee, working, working, and nothing after all—No, no, won’t do
    Imagine living all one’s day solitary in smoky dirty London House
    Only picture to yourself a nice soft wife on a sofa with good fire and books and music perhaps
    Compare this vision with the dingy reality of Great Marlboro Street, London

    Not Marry

    Freedom to go where one liked
    Choice of Society and little of it
    Conversation of clever men at clubs
    Not forced to visit relatives and bend in every trifle
    Expense and anxiety of children
    Perhaps quarrelling
    Loss of Time
    Cannot read in the evenings
    Fatness and idleness
    Anxiety and responsibility
    Less money for books etc.
    If many children forced to gain one’s bread (But then it is very bad for one’s health to work too much)
    Perhaps my wife won’t like London; then the sentence is banishment and degradation into indolent, idle fool

    Marry, Marry, Marry Q.E.D.

    I had to look up what Q.E.D. means; From latin, "quod erat demonstrandum," in English, "that which was to be demonstrated." 

    Via 3QuarksDaily with some interesting thoughts on Darwin's analysis by Alta L. Price.

    P.S. Happy Anniversary to my parents who just celebrated their 47th year of marriage.