id: 135701 accession number: 1959.237 share license status: CC0 url: https://clevelandart.org/art/1959.237 updated: 2024-03-26 01:58:46.390000 Cavalry Scene. George Hendrik Breitner (Dutch, 1857–1923). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Rijksprentenkabinet, Amsterdam 1959.237 title: Cavalry Scene title in original language: series: series in original language: creation date: creation date earliest: creation date latest: current location: creditline: Gift of Rijksprentenkabinet, Amsterdam copyright: --- culture: Netherlands technique: department: Prints collection: Prints type: Print find spot: catalogue raisonne: --- CREATORS * George Hendrik Breitner (Dutch, 1857–1923) - artist History painter Charles Rochussen (1814-1894) advised George Hendrik Breitner to attend the academy in The Hague, which he did in 1876. Not impressed with the training methods there, which mainly involved copying plaster models, he was expelled for unruly behavior in 1880. He made contacts with members of The Hague school of painters, such as Israels (q.v.), Willem Maris (1844-1910), Anton Mauve (1838-1888), and Hendrik Willem Mesdag (1831-1915), who painted plein-air landscapes in the tradition of the Barbizon painters, investigating the atmospheric qualities of the landscape. Mesdag asked Breitner in 1880 to assist him on his famous panorama of Scheveningen (Museum Panorama Mesdag, The Hague). Although these modern artists exposed him to many new influences, Breitner preferred to focus on human figures rather than pure landscape. In the spirit of naturalist authors such as Gustave Flaubert and Émile Zola, he wanted to be a "painter of the people." He also favored military painting, which he had been practicing since his youth. The merchant C. E. van Stolk, Breitner's early supporter and his father's employer, unsuccessfully urged the young painter to change his loose impressionist style in order to have a better chance of success. In May 1884 the artist left for Paris and briefly entered the studio of the academic painter Fernand Cormon (1854-1924). Breitner complained about his own lack of technical skills and, probably because of financial problems, left Paris within half a year. In 1886 he moved to Amsterdam and eventually became the main chronicler of street life in the city. His reputation was established that same year when the state bought his painting Horse Artillery for the new Rijksmuseum. He became one of the leading figures of Amsterdam's strongly developed avant-garde intellectual scene. A group of painters and writers called De Tachtigers (The Eighties Movement) used their publication De Nieuwe Gids (The New Guide) to voice their ideas against the establishment. In addition to his contemporary genre painting, Breitner often returned to the female nude; these works, however, met with some criticism because of the artist's realistic approach. Breitner photographed frequently and used the images for his paintings, both nudes and cityscapes. In 1901 he married his model Marie Jordan (1866-1948). By the turn of the century Breitner was a famous artist in the Netherlands, as demonstrated by a highly successful retrospective exhibition at Arti et Amicitiae in Amsterdam (1901). That accomplishment also meant, however, that he now belonged to the cultural establishment while other artists, such as Piet Mondriaan (1872-1944), or new movements, such as cubism and expressionism, were waiting in the wings. Breitner traveled frequently in the last decades of his life, visiting Paris, London, and Berlin, among other cities, and continued to take photographs. In 1909 he went to the United States as a member of the jury for the Carnegie International Exhibition in Pittsburgh, where the Cleveland painting had been exhibited in 1904. --- measurements: state of the work: edition of the work: support materials: inscriptions: --- CURRENT EXHIBITIONS --- LEGACY EXHIBITIONS --- PROVENANCE --- fun fact: digital description: wall description: --- RELATED WORKS --- CITATIONS Robinson, William. “George Hendrik Breitner and the Emergence of Dutch Modernism.” The Bulletin of the Cleveland Museum of Art 81, no. 2 (1994): 27-43. page number: Reproduced: p. 30 url: https://www.jstor.org/stable/25161441 --- IMAGES web: https://openaccess-cdn.clevelandart.org/1959.237/1959.237_web.jpg print: https://openaccess-cdn.clevelandart.org/1959.237/1959.237_print.jpg full: https://openaccess-cdn.clevelandart.org/1959.237/1959.237_full.tif