Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
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Period: Late 19th Century
"Filipino Girl Coming Down the Steps", 19th Century by Artist Fabian de la Rosa
Located in Madrid, ES
FABIAN DE LA ROSA
Filipino, 1869 - 1937
"FILIPINO GIRLO COMING DOWN THE STEPS"
signed & dated "F. de la Rosa, 1894" (lower right)
oil on canvas
42-3/4 x 23-3/4 inches (108 x 60...
Category
Realist Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
"Filipino Farm Workers in Horse Carriage" 19th C. Oil on Canvas by F. de la Rosa
Located in Madrid, ES
FABIAN DE LA ROSA
Filipino, 1869 - 1937
FILIPINO FARM WORKERS IN HORSE CARRIAGE
signed & dated "F. de la Rosa, 1894" (lower left)
oil on canvas
42-3/4 x 2...
Category
Realist Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Young girl from Tetouan, Morocco
Located in New Orleans, LA
Young girl from Tetouan, Morocco
Signed (center right)
Oil on canvas
In this important oil on canvas, French Orientalist painter Charles Landelle captures the engaging visage of a young Moroccan woman in a moment of tranquil contemplation. Seated on the floor of what is almost certainly an opulent riad, the young woman wears an intricately embroidered Moroccan kaftan and headdress. The sumptuous patterns on the floor and in the background lend an additional warmth to the strikingly vivid red hues which dominate the composition and are a hallmark of Landelle’s work.
The symbols behind the young woman may represent either the Jewish Star of David or the Islamic Seal...
Category
Academic Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
The Columbian Exhibition, the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair
Located in Saratoga Springs, NY
Thaddeus Welch (American 1844-1919)
The Columbian Exhibition, the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair
70 x 35”, oil on board signed
Request Price
The C...
Category
Hudson River School Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Board
Price Upon Request
The Reading Lesson
Located in Missouri, MO
Bernard Pothast
"The Reading Lesson"
Oil on Canvas
Signed Lower Right
25 x 30 inches
30.5 x 35.5 inches framed
Born in Belgium, Bernard Pothast travel...
Category
Dutch School Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Price Upon Request
Readying for Play
Located in Missouri, MO
Framed Size: 25.5 x 23 inches
Joseph Gyselinckx was born in 1817. He was a genre painter in Antwerp. The artist was a student of F. de Brakeleer. He had two paintings included in ...
Category
Realist Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Price Upon Request
French landscape painting with children, figures & field Scene 'The Harvest'
Located in Shrewsbury, Shropshire
'The Harvest' is a stunning pastoral scene by Victor Gabriel Gilbert.
Victor Gabriel Gilbert was born in Paris, 13th February 1847. He studied for a perio...
Category
Impressionist Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Mother and Children
Located in Missouri, MO
Bernard DeHoog (1867-1943)
"Mother and Children"
Oil on Canvas
Signed Lower Left
Site Size: approx. 32.5 x 39.5 inches
Framed Size: approx. 39 x ...
Category
Realist Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Price Upon Request
Breton Chores
Located in Missouri, MO
Clement Nye Swift
"Breton Chores" 1870
Oil on Canvas
Signed and Dated Lower Right
Canvas Size: approx 27 x18 inches
Framed Size: approx 34 x 35 inches
Provenance: Private Midwes...
Category
Victorian Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Price Upon Request
A Lovely Reflection
Located in Missouri, MO
Auguste Toulmouche (1829-1890)
"A Lovely Reflection" 1874
Oil on Panel
Signed and Dated Lower Left
Site Size: approx 17 x 14 inches
Framed SIze: approx. 27.5 x 24 inches
Provenan...
Category
Victorian Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Price Upon Request
In the Study
By Hans Hamza
Located in Missouri, MO
Hans Hamza (Austrian 1879-1945)
In the Study
Oil on Panel
Signed
Site Size: approx. 8 x 6 inches
Framed Size: approx. 14 x 12 inches
Category
Victorian Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Price Upon Request
Épanouissement
Located in Missouri, MO
KPM Porcelain
After Angelo Asti (French, 1847-1903)
"Épanouissement" c. 1900
With Original Gold Gilded Frame
Image Size: approx. 6 x 4 inches
Framed Size: approx. 9 x 6 inches
Eve...
Category
Victorian Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Porcelain, Oil
Price Upon Request
Queen Louise
Located in Missouri, MO
KPM Porcelain
"Queen Louise" c. late 19th century
Original Hand-Painted Porcelain
Signed "R. Dittrich"
Since 250 years, the royal sceptre brand stands fo...
Category
Victorian Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Porcelain, Oil
Price Upon Request
Marguerite
Located in Missouri, MO
Marguerite
Hand Painted Porcelain
w/crown stamp #107
Signed "Wagner"
Original Gilded Florentine Frame
approx 6 x 4 inches /approx 14 x 8 inches framed
Since 250 years, the royal sc...
Category
Victorian Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Porcelain, Oil
Price Upon Request
Napoleon
By Manufacture Nationale de Sèvres
Located in Missouri, MO
Sevres 19th C.
Original Hand Painted Porcelain
Signed "G Poitevin"
approx 9 x 5 inches/15 x 12 framed
The vast and diverse production of the Sèvres factory in the nineteenth century resists easy characterization, and its history during this period reflects many of the changes affecting French society in the years between 1800 and 1900. Among the remarkable accomplishments of the factory was the ability to stay continuously in the forefront of European ceramic production despite the myriad changes in technology, taste, and patronage that occurred during this tumultuous century.
The factory, which had been founded in the town of Vincennes in 1740 and then reestablished in larger quarters at Sèvres in 1756, became the preeminent porcelain manufacturer in Europe in the second half of the eighteenth century. Louis XV had been an early investor in the fledgling ceramic enterprise and became its sole owner in 1759. However, due to the upheavals of the French Revolution, its financial position at the beginning of the nineteenth century was extremely precarious. No longer a royal enterprise, the factory also had lost much of its clientele, and its funding reflected the ruinous state of the French economy.
However, the appointment in 1800 of Alexandre Brongniart (1770–1847) as the administrator of the factory marked a profound shift in its fortunes. Trained as both an engineer and a scientist, Brongniart was both brilliant and immensely capable, and he brought all of his prodigious talents to the running of the troubled porcelain factory. He directed the Sèvres factory as administrator until his death in 1847, and during those five decades influenced every aspect of its organization and production. Much of the factory’s old, undecorated stock was immediately sold off, and new forms—largely in the fashionable, more severe Neoclassical style—were designed to replace out-of-date models. The composition for hard-paste porcelain was improved, and the production of soft paste, for which the factory had been famous in the previous century, was abandoned in 1804. New enamels colors were devised, and Brongniart oversaw the development of a new type of kiln that was both more efficient and cost-effective.
Much of the factory’s output during Brongniart’s first decade reflected the prevailing Empire taste, which favored extensive gilding, rich border designs, and elaborate figural scenes (56.29.1–.8). Backgrounds simulating marble or a variety of hardstones were employed with greater frequency (1987.224); the new range of enamel colors developed under Brongniart made it easier to achieve these imitation surfaces, and it is thought that his interest in mineralogy provided the impetus for this type of decoration.
For objects produced in sets, such as dinner, tea, and coffee services, and even garnitures of vases, Brongniart preferred decorative schemes that linked the objects in terms of subject matter as well as stylistically. Dinner services were given coherence by the use of an overall theme, in addition to shared border patterns and ground colors. One of the best examples of this can be found in the “Service des Départements,” which was conceived by Brongniart in 1824 (2002.57). Each of the plates in the service was decorated with a famous topographical view of the département (administrative unit) of France that it represented, and its border was painted with small cameo portraits of figures from the region, as well as symbols of the major arts, industries, and products of the area. This same type of thematic unity is found on a coffee service produced in 1836 (1986.281.1ab–4). All of the pieces of the service are decorated with scenes depicting the cultivation of cacao, from which chocolate is made, or various stages in the preparation of chocolate as a beverage. The compositions were conceived and executed by Jean Charles Develly, a painter at Sèvres who was responsible for many of the most ambitious dinner services produced at the factory during Brongniart’s tenure.
The range of objects produced in the first half of the nineteenth century was enormous, as were the types of decoration that they employed. A recent exhibition catalogue devoted to Brongniart’s years at Sèvres indicates that ninety-two new designs for vases were introduced, as were eighty-nine different cup models, and the types of objects produced by the factory included every sort of form required by a dinner or dessert service, coffee and tea wares, decorative objects such as vases, and functional objects such as water jugs, basins, and toiletry articles. A new form rarely replaced an older one; the range of production simply increased.
The same was true with types of decoration, as the factory was working in a wide variety of styles at any given time. From the earliest years of the Sèvres factory, its painters had copied not only contemporary compositions but also prints and paintings from earlier periods. However, under Brongniart, the factory sought to copy famous paintings with the specific intention of recording the “true” appearance of works increasingly perceived to be fragile. Works by a wide variety of artists were copied, but those by Raphael were especially popular. Raphael’s stature is reflected in a vase of 1834 in which a cameo-style portrait of the artist decorates the primary reserve, while on the back an artist’s palette is encircled by the names Titian, Poussin, and Rubens (1978.373).
Just as works by earlier artists were copied, so too were decorative techniques of previous centuries. The interlace patterns of so-called Saint-Porchaire ceramic ware of the sixteenth century served as the inspiration for the decoration on a cup of 1837 (2003.153). The form of the cup itself derives from Renaissance silver forms made in Italy and France. However, the palette of vibrant reds, greens, blues, and yellows contrasts markedly with the muted browns and off whites of Saint-Porchaire wares and reflects the reinterpretation of historical styles that was characteristic of so much of nineteenth-century decorative arts.
Interest in the Gothic style emerged early in Brongniart’s tenure at Sèvres and remained popular for much of the nineteenth century. Strict adherence to Gothic motifs was rarely observed, however, and the Gothic style was more evoked than faithfully copied. This tendency is reflected in a pair of vases (1992.23.1) for which the model was designated vase gothique Fragonard (named after the vase’s designer, Alexandre Evariste Fragonard [1780–1850]. The Gothic elements lie more in the painted decoration than in the form itself, and the style of the painting reflects a Renaissance technique rather than a medieval one. The palette of grays and whites on a blue ground instantly recalls the enamel-on-copper wares produced in Limoges, France, in the sixteenth century, and its use on these vases indicates the willingness to freely mix artistic styles and techniques of different periods in order to achieve new aesthetic effects.
The eclecticism and historicism that characterized so much of the production during Brongniart’s tenure continued after his death in 1847. The factory’s output reflected an ongoing desire for technical innovation as well as a wide embrace of diverse decorative styles that were employed simultaneously. A tea and coffee service of 1855–61 (69.193.1–.11) embodies the selective borrowing of forms and motifs that is found so frequently in Sèvres production of the middle decades of the nineteenth century. The shapes used for the different components of the service evoke both China and the Near East, an obvious allusion to the origins of the two beverages. The openwork decoration refers directly to Chinese ceramics made in this technique, and the decoration employs a variety of Chinese emblems. However, the palette of pink and gold, entirely European in character, serves to neutralize the Asian aspects of the service.
Perhaps the only thread that can be said to run through much Sèvres production of the nineteenth century is the proclivity to borrow freely from various historical styles and then to either reinterpret these styles or combine them in unprecedented ways. A standing cup of 1879 (1990.238a,b) draws upon silver cups of the Renaissance for its form, but in this instance the size of the porcelain cup dwarfs any of its metal prototypes. Its style of decoration derives from Limoges painted enamels of the sixteenth century, but the prominent use of gilding throughout reflects its wholly nineteenth-century character. This cup was presented by the French government to one of the first-prize winners at the 1878 Exposition Universelle.
It was with the advent of the Art Nouveau style at the very end of the nineteenth century that historicism lost its grip at Sèvres, and indeed throughout the decorative arts, and forms inspired by nature and often characterized by asymmetry become dominant. This reliance upon natural forms is fully evident in a coffee service of 1900–1904 (1988.287.1a,b). The designer, Léon Kann...
Category
Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Porcelain, Oil
Price Upon Request
Ruth
Located in Missouri, MO
KPM Porcelain
"Ruth" c. 1900
Original hand-painted KPM Porcelain
In Original Gilded Florentine Frame
7 x 4 (16 x 9 framed)
Since 250 years, the royal sceptre brand stands for finest...
Category
Victorian Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Porcelain, Oil
Price Upon Request
Queen Louise
Located in Missouri, MO
KPM Porcelain
"Queen Louise" c. 1900
Original hand-painted KPM Porcelain
approx. 14 x 11 inches
approx. 21 x 15 inches framed
Since 250 years, the royal ...
Category
Victorian Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Porcelain, Oil
Price Upon Request
Franco-Prussian Battle Scene
Located in Missouri, MO
Wilfrid Constant Beauquesne (1847 - 1913)
"Franco-Prussian Battle Scene" c. 1900
Oil on Canvas
Signed Lower Right
Site Size: approx 22 x 28 inches
Framed Size: approx 35 x 40 inches
French artistry was deeply influenced by three wars during the 19th century and, accordingly, the artistic imagination was not lost upon the public. "Patriotism comes to the aid of battle painters," a contemporary remarked, "presenting them with a sympathetic public already fascinated by the subject." After the brief Franco-Prussian conflict of 1870, French painters were particularly anxious to retrieve national pride by presenting works which reflected their own national heroism versus enemy brutality.
Known for his scenic depictions of this war, Wilfried Beauquesne, a native of Rennes, France, was undoubtedly influenced in his selection of subjects by his instructors at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. Vernet-Lecomte and Horace Vernet were both well known military artists. Vernet had actually lived and worked during the period of Napoleonic conflicts - being awarded the Legion of Honor by the Emperor's own hand. Beauquesne exhibited regularly at the annual Paris Salon between 1887 and 1899, as well as throughout Europe.
In 1890, illustrating the fortunes of life, The Art Amateur ran the following item in its "Gossip Column:"
"A queer story comes to me from Paris. A commission agent made a bargain with a poor painter, living out at Saint-Maude, to paint military subjects for him, at two francs an hour. The agent changed the signature to that of Gaubault, and sold the pictures to various dealers. On day, by chance, the poor painter came to Paris, went to the Salon, and was astonished to see one of his pictures there. He look at the catalogue, and found the name of the artist and the address of the dealer where he was to be found, The poor artist went to the dealer and introduced himself saying, "I am Gaubault." "Most happy to make your acquaintance," replied the dealer. "Your pictures sell very well, and I have been wanting to see you for the last six years." "But my name is not Gaubault, it is Beauquesne." Explanations followed. The dishonest commission agent disappeared; and Beauquesne restored his real signature on the pictures, which had made his pseudonym almost famous...
Category
Impressionist Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Price Upon Request
The Haywagon
Located in Missouri, MO
James Edwin Meadows (British 1828-1888)
"The Haywagon" 1866
Oil on Canvas
Site: 24 x 40 inches
Framed: 30 x 46 inches approx.
A London landscape painter, James Edwin Meadows was the...
Category
Land Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Price Upon Request
The Sculptor’s Studio Das Bildhauer Atelier
By Lesser Ury
Located in London, GB
LESSER URY 1861-1931
Międzychód, Poland 1861 - 1931 Berlin (German)
Title: The Sculptor’s Studio Das Bildhauer Atelier, 1883
Technique: Hand Signed and Dated Oil on Canvas
Pape...
Category
Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
Price Upon Request
The Cellist
Located in Missouri, MO
Ferdinand V.L. Roybet (1840-1920)
"The Cellist" c. 1880s
Oil on Panel
Site: 20 x 14 inches
Framed Size: 28 x 14 inches
Ferdinand Roybet is considere...
Category
Realist Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Price Upon Request
A Conundrum in the Kitchen
By Frank Hyde
Located in Missouri, MO
Frank Hyde (British 1849-1937)
"A Conundrum in the Kitchen" c. 1900
Oil on Canvas
Signed Lower Left
Image: 37.5 x 57.5 inches
Framed: 44 x 64.5 inches
From the Maidstone Museum, UK:
Hyde was born in Surrey in 1849 and spent a large amount of time in London during his youth. His father had been in the army but retired to live the life of a gentleman upon inheriting the family seat, Hyde End Manor in Berkshire. Hyde, however, would later inherit and sell the Manor.
As a young man, Hyde trained as an artist at the Royal Academy, London, and his subsequent career revealed striking artistic versatility. His subjects varied from the portrayal of real, dramatic events to comic characters commissioned by the card manufacturer Raphael Tuck.
Starting out as a 1st Lieutenant in the Royal Engineers, Hyde moved on to begin his career as a war artist during the Franco-Prussian war of 1870-71, producing drawings for ‘The Graphic’, an illustrated weekly publication.
Hyde married Constance Mary Louise Felgate in 1876, but she died less than a year later. While he travelled extensively throughout his life after Constance’s, death Hyde purchased a villa in Capri where he met Rosina Ferrara, whom he used as a model, and John Singer Sargent, with whom he shared a studio. Hyde is perhaps best known for his paintings of Capri...
Category
Realist Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Price Upon Request
The Monopolist
Located in Fort Washington, PA
Framed Dimensions: 36.00" x 48.00"
Signature: Signed Lower Right
J.G Brown's "Monopolist" was listed in 1885's Spring Exhibit catalogue of M.A. It was displayed on a panel in The We...
Category
Late 19th Century Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Price Upon Request
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