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Émile Friant (16 April 1863 – 9 June 1932)[1] was a French artist.

Émile Friant
Self-portrait, 1887
Born(1863-04-16)16 April 1863
Dieuze, France
Died9 June 1932(1932-06-09) (aged 69)
Paris, France
Known forPainting, drawing
MovementRealism

Friant was born in the commune of Dieuze. He would later be forced to flee to Nancy by the encroachment of the Kingdom of Prussia's soldiers. He exhibited paintings throughout his lifetime at the Paris Salon.

Friant created works in charcoal, oil, and other media. He also used photographs to prepare finished paintings.[2]

Early life

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Friant was born in the commune of Dieuze in 1863.[3] His father was a locksmith and mother a dressmaker. The wife of a chemist, Madame Parisot would hire the wife of Émile Friant's father to design custom clothing. The Parisots took an early interest in the young Friant and treated him maternally, as they were without children of their own.[4]

In 1870, with the defeat of the Second French Empire at hand as part of the then-ongoing Franco-Prussian War, annexation of Alsatia occurred and Dieuze was no longer under French state control.[4] Intensely distressed by this, Monsieur Parisot intended to leave the commune for Nancy, but died shortly before having the chance. In 1871,[3] Madame Parisot fled with Friant to Nancy; his biological family would follow later.[4]

 
Studio of Emile Friant, around 1887

Friant was sent to the lycée to learn Latin, as Madame Parisot intended for him to follow in her husband's footsteps and become a chemist.[4][5] Meanwhile, friends of his biological father had suggested sending him to a municipal school of art because of his skill with the brush. Because of his poor performance at the lycée, Friant requested permission to leave and focus on his art. His father agreed, and the young Friant was placed under the guide of a private tutor who would arrange his academic work so that time remained for painting. Under the guidance of Louis-Théodore Devilly, director of a school in Nancy and a proponent of realism,[5][6] Friant learned the art of still life and landscape painting.[4]

Friant painted a self-portrait at the age of 15. When it was exhibited in the Salon des Amis des Arts in Nancy he was referred to as Le petit Friant and quickly became the center of public intrigue. The municipal council granted him permission to travel to Paris a year later. There, he studied under Alexandre Cabanel, who tutored him in creating oil sketches of historical works.[6] Friant, becoming disenchanted by the academic style of the atelier method, returned to Nancy where he worked with the painter Aimé Morot.[5][4]

The Salon

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Young lady from Nancy in snow landscape, 1887. Musée des beaux-arts, Nancy
 
Madame Coquelin Mère

In 1882, Aimé Morot encouraged him to debut two of his works at the Salon: The Prodigal Son and Studio Interior, for which he received an honourable mention.[7] The following year, Friant again presented at the Salon and took second place in the Prix de Rome concours. In 1884 he received a third class medal at the Salon with his painting Un coin d'atelier and in 1885 a second-class medal.[7] He would form a lasting friendship with the actors Ernest and Benoit Coquelin. With the travel grant he received from the Salon of 1886, Friant traveled to and studied in the Netherlands. His portrait of the Coquelins' mother reflects the influence of that trip.[5] In 1889 he exhibited his 1888 painting La Toussaint at the Salon, for which he received a first prize. This painting depicts a revanchist patriotic image of a group of people visiting a cemetery in which the French victims of the Franco-Prussian War were buried.[8] He received a gold medal for the same painting at the Universal Exposition of 1889, as well as the Legion of Honour. The painting was acquired by the State and added to the collection of the Luxembourg[7] and is now on permanent display in the Musée des beaux-arts in Nancy. He received a second gold medal from the jury at the Universal Exposition in 1900,[7] where he exhibited five paintings including La Discussion politique, Jours heureux and La Douleur.[9]

Later life

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Chagrin d'Enfant, 1898, Frick Art & Historical Center

Friant was appointed a professor of painting in 1923 at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, France, promoted to the position of commander in the Legion of Honour, and made a member of the Institut de France. In 1930 the art critic Arsène Alexandre published a comprehensive review of the art of Friant.[10] In 1932, Friant fell to his death in Paris.[11]

 
Lady and the Lion, 1919

Paintings

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References

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  1. ^ Death certificate on geneanet.org (the creation of an account is required before consulting).
  2. ^ "Émile Friant at the Dahesh Museum of Art, New York". www.daheshmuseum.org. Archived from the original on 2008-01-01.
  3. ^ a b Thomson 2004, p. 183
  4. ^ a b c d e f Hamerton, Philip Gilbert (1894). Types Of Contemporary Painting. XII "Cast Shadows", Painted by Emile Friant, Scribner's Magazine 16: 675-678.
  5. ^ a b c d McIntosh 1997, p. 1
  6. ^ a b Villeneuve de Janti, C. 2016. Émile Friant (1863-1932), Le dernier naturaliste? Somogy éditions d’arts, Musée des Beaux Arts de Nancy. 208 p.
  7. ^ a b c d E. Benezit, 1976. Dictionnaire critique et documentaire des peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs et graveurs. Volume 4, p. 524. Librairie Gründ. Paris, France. ISBN 2-7000-0152-4.
  8. ^ Fae Brauer, 2013. Rivals and Conspirators: The Paris Salons and the Modern Art Centre. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 457 p. ISBN 1-4438-5376-3
  9. ^ F.-G. Dumas, 1881. Catalogue Officiel illustré de L'Exposition Décennale Des Beaux-arts de 1889 à 1900. L. Baschet, Ed. Imprimeries Lemercier et Cie, 346 p.
  10. ^ Alexandre, A. (1930). Emile Friant et son oeuvre. Published by Etablissement Braun & Cie, Mulhouse-Dornach (Haut-Rhin), 48 p., 62 pl.
  11. ^ Mackintosh, C.R., 1997. Emile Friant: a forgotten realist of the gilded age. The Magazine Antiques 151(4), p. 585.
 
Drawing of painter Aimé Morot, 1905

Bibliography

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