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Swiss painter Léopold Robert (1794–1835) is emblematic of the
romantic myth of the artist with a tragic destiny. Educated in
Paris at the École des Beaux-Arts and in the studios of artists
Jacques-Louis David and Edouard Girardet, he moved to Italy in
1818. With the substantial assistance of his brother and fellow
artist Aurèle (1805–71), he created idealised depictions of
Italian brigand life and gained recognition throughout Europe. Yet,
his success as a painter did not save him from the deep melancholy
that eventually led to his suicide in 1835, due also to his
unrequited love for Princess Charlotte Bonaparte. Loved and praised
by collectors and art critics of their time, the Robert brothers’
oeuvre gradually fell into oblivion after Léopold's death and
Aurèle's subsequent return to Switzerland. This book, published to
coincide with a dual exhibition at the Musée d’art et
d’histoire in Neuchâtel and the Musée des beaux-arts in the
Robert brothers’ native town of La Chaux-de-Fonds, pays tribute
to their art and brings their great skill as painters back into
focus. Based on a major research project at the University of
Neuchâtel and the École du Louvre in Paris, it offers scholarly
essays alongside some 170 colour plates. Text in French.
The artist monograph presents a representative overview of the
artistic work of Stéphane Zaech (* 1966). His paintings are
technically sophisticated and are created through an investigation
of the works of the old masters –Titian, Velasquez and Picasso.
At the same time he distorts the “classical” picture types and
translates them into contemporary art. Portraits of women artists
painting, clad in a denim miniskirt and with flip-flops on their
feet: Stephane Zaech’s works skilfully attract our attention –
often through the bodies of his mostly female protagonists with
their surreal addition of supernumerary arms and eyes. The facial
expressions and gestures are invariably self-confident. The
impressively designed monograph assembles over 100 paintings which
were created in the past 10 years, permitting us to immerse
ourselves in the fascinating world of Stephane Zaech.
Situated at around 3,300 ft above sea level in the mountains of the
Swiss Jura region, the town of La Chaux-de-Fonds experienced
significant economic development towards the end of the 19th
century, which went hand in hand with much building activity. There
are few other places in Switzerland in which the influence of art
nouveau is so clearly visible. Significantly inspired by the
painter and architect Charles L'Eplattenier (1874-1946), and his
art and decoration course at the local school of applied arts in
1905, a local variant of art nouveau developed, the so-called Style
sapin or "fir style." Protagonists of this movement accorded
special importance in their works to the use of symbolic motifs
that reflect the nature of the Jura landscape and especially its
fir forests. This book offers a comprehensive survey of the Style
sapin and builds bridges into the 21st century. It places the "fir
style" within the international context of art nouveau and also
addresses in detail the local facets of this movement, which has
left traces that are still visible today in watchmaking, applied
arts, and architecture. Moreover, it draws attention for the first
time to the previously scarcely acknowledged female artists of the
Style sapin. Text in French.
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