Georges Clairin
1843-1919
Gondola in the Venetian Lagoon
ca. 1880
10 1/2 x 15 1/4 inches (268 x 387 mm)
Watercolor, white opaque watercolor over graphite on laminated wove paper.
2021.133
Gift of Roberta J.M. Olson and Alexander B.V. Johnson.
Notes
In 1836 two minor Venetian islands, San Cristoforo and San Michele were joined to become a single island that served as a burial ground for Venice. The city's dead were brought to the island, now known as San Michele, by a distinctive, ornate gondola, a conveyance that poet Percy Bysshe Shelley had already likened to a funeral bark when exploring the city with Byron in 1818.
Clairin was a well-known personality in Paris at the end of the century and had a wide-ranging oeuvre. He began his career as a painter of Moroccan scenes before embracing decorative work at the Paris Opéra. An intimate of the actress Sarah Bernhardt, Clairin portrayed her in various roles. In this haunting watercolor, a grieving woman leans against the matronly figure of death while a pensive young woman is seated before them. Clairin's background in the theater lends this gondola scene the air of a dramatic performance that suggests it might be a scene from an opera.
Clairin was a well-known personality in Paris at the end of the century and had a wide-ranging oeuvre. He began his career as a painter of Moroccan scenes before embracing decorative work at the Paris Opéra. An intimate of the actress Sarah Bernhardt, Clairin portrayed her in various roles. In this haunting watercolor, a grieving woman leans against the matronly figure of death while a pensive young woman is seated before them. Clairin's background in the theater lends this gondola scene the air of a dramatic performance that suggests it might be a scene from an opera.
Associated names
Olson, Roberta J. M., former owner.
Johnson, Alexander B. V., former owner.
Johnson, Alexander B. V., former owner.
Artist
Classification
Century Drawings
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