{
    "data": {
        "id": 102068,
        "accession_number": "1920.725",
        "share_license_status": "CC0",
        "tombstone": "Landscape, 1870\u201384. Fran\u00e7ois-Auguste Ravier (French, 1814\u20131895). Watercolor and gouache with graphite and traces of black chalk; sheet: 27.7 x 35.9 cm (10 7/8 x 14 1/8 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Mme. F\u00e9lix Thiollier, 1920.725",
        "current_location": null,
        "title": "Landscape",
        "creation_date": "1870\u201384",
        "creation_date_earliest": 1870,
        "creation_date_latest": 1884,
        "artists_tags": [
            "male"
        ],
        "culture": [
            "France, 19th century"
        ],
        "technique": "watercolor and gouache with graphite and traces of black chalk",
        "support_materials": [],
        "department": "Drawings",
        "collection": "DR - French",
        "type": "Drawing",
        "measurements": "Sheet: 27.7 x 35.9 cm (10 7/8 x 14 1/8 in.)",
        "dimensions": {
            "sheet": {
                "height": 0.277,
                "width": 0.359
            }
        },
        "state_of_the_work": null,
        "edition_of_the_work": null,
        "copyright": null,
        "inscriptions": [],
        "exhibitions": {
            "current": [
                {
                    "id": 443703,
                    "title": "From Delacroix to Cezanne: French Watercolor Landscapes of the Nineteenth Century",
                    "description": "<i>From Delacroix to Cezanne: French Watercolor Landscapes of the Nineteenth Century</i>. Art Gallery, University of Maryland at College Park, College Park, MD (organizer) (October 26-December 4, 1977); Speed Art Museum, Louisville, KY (January 9-February 19, 1978); University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor, MI (April 1-May 14, 1978).",
                    "opening_date": "1977-10-26T04:00:00"
                },
                {
                    "id": 178036,
                    "title": "Nature Sublime: Landscapes from the 19th Century",
                    "description": "<i>Nature Sublime: Landscapes from the 19th Century</i>. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH (organizer) (August 15-November 14, 2004).",
                    "opening_date": "2004-08-15T00:00:00"
                }
            ],
            "legacy": [
                {
                    "description": "Cleveland, Ohio: The Cleveland Museum of Art; 8/15/04-11/14/04. \"Nature Sublime: Landscapes from the 19th Century\".  No exhibition catalogue.",
                    "opening_date": "2004-08-15T00:00:00"
                }
            ]
        },
        "provenance": [],
        "find_spot": null,
        "related_works": [],
        "former_accession_numbers": [],
        "did_you_know": null,
        "description": "Fran\u00e7ois-Auguste Ravier was initially influenced by the Barbizon tradition, but as he matured, his work became increasingly subjective and expressive. This highly worked drawing depicts the landscape around Morestel, near the artist\u2019s native Lyon. Rather than focusing on cultivated fields of the region, Ravier preferred isolated ponds, woods, and plains that convey a poignant sense of his solitude and detachment from the Parisian art world. Ravier\u2019s watercolors were carefully considered studio works, distillations of remembered experiences in nature. In his writing, Ravier spoke of how the most beautiful landscapes of all were those in his dreams.",
        "external_resources": {
            "wikidata": [
                "https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q79499652"
            ],
            "internet_archive": [
                "https://archive.org/details/clevelandart-1920.725-landscape"
            ]
        },
        "citations": [
            {
                "citation": "Ferrillo, Lynn Boyer. \u201cTwo Landscapes by Fran\u00e7ois-Auguste Ravier.\u201d <em>Cleveland Studies in the History of Art</em> 3 (1998): 86\u2013118.",
                "page_number": "Mentioned: p. 86, 92; Reproduced: p. 89, fig. 2",
                "url": "http://www.jstor.org/stable/20079699"
            }
        ],
        "url": "https://clevelandart.org/art/1920.725",
        "images": {
            "annotation": null,
            "web": {
                "url": "https://openaccess-cdn.clevelandart.org/1920.725/1920.725_web.jpg",
                "width": "1155",
                "height": "893",
                "filesize": "199148",
                "filename": "1920.725_web.jpg"
            },
            "print": {
                "url": "https://openaccess-cdn.clevelandart.org/1920.725/1920.725_print.jpg",
                "width": "3400",
                "height": "2629",
                "filesize": "1755772",
                "filename": "1920.725_print.jpg"
            },
            "full": {
                "url": "https://openaccess-cdn.clevelandart.org/1920.725/1920.725_full.tif",
                "width": "5452",
                "height": "4217",
                "filesize": "68998064",
                "filename": "1920.725_full.tif"
            }
        },
        "alternate_images": [],
        "creditline": "Gift of Mme. F\u00e9lix Thiollier",
        "image_credit": null,
        "sketchfab_id": null,
        "sketchfab_url": null,
        "gallery_donor_text": null,
        "athena_id": 102068,
        "creators": [
            {
                "id": 1745,
                "description": "Fran\u00e7ois-Auguste Ravier (French, 1814\u20131895)",
                "extent": null,
                "qualifier": null,
                "role": "artist",
                "biography": "Fran\u00e7ois-Auguste Ravier was born in Lyons in 1814. His father, a confectioner, wanted him to pursue a career as a notary, and the young Ravier went off to Paris in 1832 to study law. His spare time was taken up with drawing and painting, and he has been said to have attended the studios of Jules Coignet (1798-1860) and Aligny (q.v.). But according to Nathalie Favier, an expert on this painter, it is possible that Ravier received advice from a number of artists without having pursued any traditional artistic training.1 In 1837-38 he painted in the Paris area, in the forest of Fontainebleau, and in the Dauphin\u00e9 and the Bugey, a region to the east of Lyons. In Royat, in 1839, he met Corot (q.v.), whom he revered the most. Between 1840 and 1847, no doubt following Corot's advice, Ravier went on a number of lengthy trips to Italy to draw and paint in the Roman countryside. Upon his return to Lyons, he worked in the surrounding countryside, and met with artists such as Daubigny (q.v.) and Corot. In 1853 Ravier purchased a house in Cr\u00e9mieu, his home for the next fourteen years. He began to perfect his method: drawing in the morning and painting outdoors later in the afternoon. Contrary to the usual procedure, his smaller studies painted at the site served as a reference point for his watercolors, elaborated with the greatest care in the peace and quiet of the studio. These watercolors were highly sought after by the first admirers of Ravier's work. When Cr\u00e9mieu became too popular, Ravier moved away. In 1867 he settled in Morestel, about twenty kilometers from Cr\u00e9mieu. It is there that he died, almost thirty years later. Ravier was a thinker and a religious man. It is not surprising that around 1855 Corot used him as a model for one of his canvases, in which he appears as a monk.2 Ravier described himself as a misanthrope; this is why he always lived on the sidelines and without the official honors. In addition, he exhibited little compared to his artist friends. Nevertheless, he exhibited watercolors and oils at Dussere's in Lyons starting in the 1870s, then watercolors only at the Salons of Paris, Lyons, Grenoble, and Geneva in the mid-1880s. He participated in the Salon of Lyons in 1893 and in the Exposition Universelle of Lyons in 1894 as well.3 By placing the temperament of the artist at the core of creation, Ravier invented a technique that could have had an influence on Monticelli (q.v.) and van Gogh (q.v.). The latter may in fact have known Ravier's work through the intermediary of his brother Theo. Between 1883 and 1886 Theo was in charge of Ravier's late works with the dealer Boussod-Valadon. Ravier was one of the first painters to take an interest in photography. Around 1849-50, he was already experimenting with this new technique, probably out of a desire to go as far as possible in his explorations of the phenomenon of light.",
                "name_in_original_language": null,
                "birth_year": "1814",
                "death_year": "1895",
                "use_in_caption": true,
                "include_extent": false,
                "weight": 1
            }
        ],
        "legal_status": "accessioned",
        "accession_date": "1920-11-11T00:00:00",
        "sortable_date": 1870,
        "date_added_to_oa": null,
        "date_text": "1870\u201384",
        "collapse_artists": false,
        "on_loan": false,
        "recently_acquired": false,
        "record_type": "object",
        "conservation_statement": null,
        "has_conservation_images": false,
        "cover_accession_number": null,
        "is_nazi_era_provenance": false,
        "impression": null,
        "alternate_titles": [],
        "is_highlight": false,
        "updated_at": "2026-03-27 00:02:26.723000"
    }
}