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In 1912-1913, James Ensor produced a series of 32 drawings in
coloured pencil titled Scenes de la vie du Christ [Scenes from the
life of Christ]. Each drawing on paper measures about 15 by 21 cm.
The series depicts different episodes from the lives of Jesus and
the Virgin Mary. In it, Ensor managed to combine the sublime and
the grotesque in an unsurpassed manner. Some compositions are quite
conventional, others typically 'Ensorian', and some even humorous.
Among the works in the series is a drawing in which Ensor portrays
himself as Christ, confronted with a dozen Belgian art critics who
have gathered before him. In 1929 the drawings were made into
lithographs and published in the form of an album by Galerie
Georges Giroux in Brussels. These drawings can be considered as a
link between the Ostend master's early and later oeuvre. The series
combines various motifs which Ensor also executed in oil paint. The
author of the work, Xavier Tricot, also pays close attention to the
figure of Christ in James Ensor's work. From 1885 onward, the
figure of Christ occupied a central position in Ensor's oeuvre. In
some of his works, the artist identified with the Messiah.
An illustrated biography of the celebrated artist James Ensor The
Belgian artist James Ensor (1860-1949) was a major figure in the
Belgian avant-garde of the late 19th century and an important
precursor to the development of Expressionism in the early 20th
century. Daring and socially engaged, Ensor included political,
religious, historical, and autobiographical themes in his works. He
is known for brightly colored depictions of masked skeletons,
seascapes, and carnivals, which frequently tend toward the macabre
or grotesque. Structured like a biography, this book explores
Ensor's life and art year by year. Chapters are illustrated with
Ensor's masterpieces as well as archival photographs and previously
unpublished letters.
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