id: 168565 accession number: 2010.291 share license status: CC0 url: https://clevelandart.org/art/2010.291 updated: 2024-03-26 02:01:23.427000 Dans la Fumé, 1800s. Jehan-Georges Vibert (French, 1840–1902). Gray wash with extensive point of brush work; sheet: 25.9 x 30.9 cm (10 3/16 x 12 3/16 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Bequest of Muriel Butkin 2010.291 title: Dans la Fumé title in original language: series: series in original language: creation date: 1800s creation date earliest: 1860 creation date latest: 1902 current location: creditline: Bequest of Muriel Butkin copyright: --- culture: France, 19th century technique: gray wash with extensive point of brush work department: Drawings collection: DR - French type: Drawing find spot: catalogue raisonne: --- CREATORS * Jehan-Georges Vibert (French, 1840–1902) - artist Jehan (or Jean)-Georges Vibert began his artistic career as an engraver in the workshop of his maternal grandfather, Jean-Pierre-Marie Jazet. In April 1857 he enrolled in the École des Beaux-Arts, where he remained for six years and studied painting under Félix-Joseph Barrias (1822-1907) and François-Édouard Picot (1786-1868). Vibert's early works are indebted to the subjects and style of Picot. After his debut at the 1863 Salon, Vibert won a medal at the 1864 Salon for Narcissus Transformed into a Flower (Musée des Beaux-Arts, Bordeaux), despite the scandal caused by the nudity depicted.1 Another mythological picture, Daphne and Chloe (Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, Va.), was harshly criticized at the 1866 Salon; one reviewer counseled the artist "to return to the study of nature, take on a live model."2 Meanwhile, the genre painting Entrance of the Toreros (private collection) he had submitted to the same Salon enjoyed a positive response. Vibert realized that he would achieve greater financial and popular success with smaller genre canvases than with larger mythological and historical paintings. Possessed of a cynical wit and great technical ability, he produced numerous anecdotal pictures that satirized the Catholic Church. Never completely abandoning his aspirations to the "higher" genres, he showed an ambitious allegorical painting, the monumental Apotheosis of Adolphe Thiers (Musée d'Orsay, Paris), at the 1878 Salon, but it, too, elicited extremely negative responses, though it was bought by the state. Also interested in the technique of watercolor, Vibert was a founding member of the Society of French Watercolorists in 1878 and served as its first president. He invented a number of products for painters, including special varnishes, brushes, and a red paint, which he named "Vibert Red"3 and used for his many images of cardinals. Vibert was intensely involved in the theater and wrote several satirical plays in the style of Molière, whom he greatly admired. He married one of the leading actresses of the Comédie Française, Maria Lloyd, but they divorced in 1887. He wrote frequently on art matters, and at the time of his death in 1902 he was compiling an autobiography, illustrated with reproductions of his paintings. 1. Zafran 1992, 14 (repr.). 2. Edmond About, cited and translated in Eric Zafran, French Salon Paintings from Southern Collections (Atlanta, 1982), 164. 3. This name may be a reference to his paternal grandfather, Jean-Pierre Vibert, who retired from the army to dedicate himself to gardening and horticulture, creating many new species of flowers, including a red rose (the Georges Vibert) named after his grandson. --- measurements: Sheet: 25.9 x 30.9 cm (10 3/16 x 12 3/16 in.) state of the work: edition of the work: support materials: description: paper board (non-laminated structure, off-white/cream) watermarks: inscriptions: inscription: Signed lower left, in brown ink, Je Ge Vibert translation: remark: --- CURRENT EXHIBITIONS --- LEGACY EXHIBITIONS --- PROVENANCE The Norton Galleries date: footnotes: citations: --- fun fact: digital description: wall description: --- RELATED WORKS --- CITATIONS --- IMAGES web: https://openaccess-cdn.clevelandart.org/2010.291/2010.291_web.jpg print: https://openaccess-cdn.clevelandart.org/2010.291/2010.291_print.jpg full: https://openaccess-cdn.clevelandart.org/2010.291/2010.291_full.tif