Aristide Maillol
Aristide Maillol
The sculpture of the French artist Aristide Maillol (1861-1944) is classical in form and spirit but does not imitate ancient art or the academic, Greco-Roman traditions. He was also a painter, printmaker, and tapestry designer.
Aristide Maillol was born on Dec. 8, 1861, in Banyuls-sur-Mer, the son of a ship captain who was also a fisherman and cultivator of vineyards. Maillol, second of four children, was brought up in a region once colonized by the ancient Greeks. His home looked out on the Mediterranean. After attending a local school, he was sent to Perpignan to further his education. He began to draw and to develop an interest in art early in life.
At the age of 21, Maillol became a painting student of Jean Léon Gérôme at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. Dissatisfied, he turned to other teachers, Alexandre Cabanel and Jean Paul Laurens, but then rejected official instruction as sterile and pointless. Maillol was not alone in his opinion: other artists of consequence throughout the second half of the 19th century reacted in a similar manner.
In 1884 Maillol saw the paintings of Paul Gauguin and Maurice Denis. "Gauguin's painting was a revelation to me!" he exclaimed. Indeed it was. Maillol's style changed, but without assuming the mannerisms of Gauguin's style, only its breadth and innocence. Later, in 1894, Gauguin saw some of Maillol's tapestries and said they could not be "too highly praised." The two artists met once, but they never developed a close relationship.
In 1889 Maillol began to design tapestries. He was inspired by medieval examples he had seen at the Musée de Cluny in Paris. He returned to Banyuls to set up a small tapestry factory and hired some local women to assist him. He made the designs and dyed the wool to obtain colors not found in commercial wools. His drawings, paintings, and cartoons reveal the influence of the Nabis, many of whom he knew personally. Superintending his factory was such a strain that his eyesight began to fail.
About 1898 Maillol began to model in clay, and soon he confined himself exclusively to sculpture. By 1900 he had developed a style so distinctive and personally satisfying that it was to undergo no critical change thereafter. He depicted only the human figure, especially the female nude. A fine example of his early work is The Mediterranean (1901), a larger-than-life, seated female figure. It is a strong work and betrays no lack of experience or confidence.
In 1902 Maillol had his first one-man exhibition, which was a great success and led to a number of commissions. His earliest pieces were carved in stone and wood. After 1905 he concentrated on modeling and having the completed works cast in bronze. He was to follow this procedure throughout his life.
In 1904 Maillol had established a studio at Marly-le-Roi near Paris. He continued to spend his winters in his
hometown. He did little traveling usually, but he did go to Greece, primarily to view ancient sculptures in the original. Seeing them caused no change in his work. Rather it seemed to confirm him in his approach. In a sense, Maillol had already recreated the Greek spirit without imitating the sculpture.
In 1906 Maillol was commissioned to design a monument in memory of the socialist Louis Blanqui, who had spent half of his life in prison in defense of his principles. For it Maillol conceived his Chained Action, an aggressively striding female nude; this sculpture is not typical of his production. Most of his figures appear placid, self-contained, and yet earthy, almost sensuous. They closely resemble those of Auguste Renoir; like Renoir's nudes, they are refined, sensitive, innocent pagans. It is as if they were untouched by time or other external pressures—except possibly for a slight air of melancholy. Maillol's Three Nymphs (1936-1938) exhibits no appreciable difference over his earlier works. In fact, the figures are very close in pose and attitude to his Pomona (1907).
In 1912 Maillol executed woodcuts for Virgil's Eclogues, and in 1931 he made lithographs to illustrate Emile Verhaeren's Belle Chair. Maillol died on Sept. 28, 1944, in Perpignan.
Further Reading
Waldemar George, Aristide Maillol (1965), with a biographical sketch by D. Vierny, and John Rewald, Maillol (1939), have many reproductions. The texts provide the basic biographical information, but they are essentially tributes to the artist. Rewald is the editor of The Woodcuts of Aristide Maillol: A Complete Catalog with 176 Illustrations (1943).
Additional Sources
Lorquin, Bertrand, Aristide Maillol, London; New York, N.Y.: Skira in association with Thames and Hudson, 1995, 1994.
Slatkin, Wendy, Aristide Maillol in the 1890s, Ann Arbor, Mich.: UMI Research Press, 1982. □
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Sainsbury picks a fruitful alliance: JS is standing by its Windward Island banana suppliers.(supply chain costs, J Sainsbury PLC)
Magazine article from: Grocer; 6/4/2005; ; 700+ words
; ...traditional links with the Windward Islands, a part of the Caribbean...supply links with the Windward Islands--Grenada, St Vincent...trade links with Windward Island growers. There were fears...Sainsbury to abandon the Windward Islands and switch to a cheaper source...
|
|
US Airways and Windward Island Airways begin code share relationship.
M2 Presswire; 12/24/2002; 700+ words
; ...US AIRWAYS: US Airways and Windward Island Airways begin code share relationship...US Airways and Windward Island Airways (Winair) received...service to the surrounding islands, we look forward to our new...Cancun, Cozumel, Grand Bahama Island, Grand Cayman, Grenada...
|
|
Windward Islands banana industry hit by series of crises
Newspaper article from: Caribbean Today; 12/31/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...sector. This prompted the Windward Islands Banana Development...Jamaica, could reach the Windward Islands. But the most crucial...contract to continue marketing Windward Island bananas. But given the longstanding...the spectre of Windward Islands bananas being marketed ...
|
|
US Airways and Windward Island Airways Begin Code Share Relationship.
PR Newswire; 12/23/2002; 700+ words
; US Airways and Windward Island Airways (Winair) received U.S...years of service to the surrounding islands, we look forward to our new relationship...Bermuda, Cancun, Cozumel, Grand Bahama Island, Grand Cayman, Grenada, Montego...
|
|
US Airways and Windward Island Airways Seek DOT Approval to Code Share On Select Caribbean Flights.
PR Newswire; 10/31/2002; 700+ words
; US Airways and Windward Island Airways (WINAIR) filed for U.S...between the U.S. and these attractive island vacation destinations will find conveniently...Bermuda, Cancun, Cozumel, Grand Bahama Island, Grand Cayman, Montego Bay, Nassau...
|
|
Footloose Expands to St. Lucia in the Windward Islands; Footloose Sailing Charters Celebrates 10th Year of Operations With Announcement of 4th New Destination in 12 Months.
Business Wire; 10/19/2005; 700+ words
; ...will open up the Windward Islands from St. Lucia to...the beauty of these islands on a bareboat fleet...and Tonga but down island in the Windwards." Footloose announced...Footloose Offers The Windward Islands - Cruise From Marigot...
|
|
Windward Islands banana exports reach lowest level in over two decades
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 1/24/2002; 350 words
; ...Dateline: CASTRIES, St. Lucia Windward Islands banana exports last year reached...company said Thursday. The Windward Islands Banana Exporting and...tonnage exported from the Windwards, which include Dominica...its position as the leading Windward Islands exporter but its 34...
|
|
Carib Cup: Windward Islands defeats Kenya by 26 runs
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 2/14/2004; ; 505 words
; ...St. Vincent The Windward Islands won the sixth...innings, against the Windwards total of 357 for...take a catch in the Windwards innings. The Windwards bowlers worked together...two for 20. The Windward Islands now has...
|
|
The Windward Islands economy under siege... Crucial banana industry
Newspaper article from: Caribbean Today; 10/31/1995; ; 700+ words
; ...Caribbean Today 10-31-1995 The Windward Islands economy under siege.... Last...largest supermarket chain (the Windward Islands, Jamaica and Belize...Between July and September, the Windward Islands (Dominica, Grenada...
|
|
Caught in the crossfire: across the Caribbean to the Windward Islands, where small-scale banana growers are deserting the battle front.
Magazine article from: New Internationalist; 10/1/1999; ; 700+ words
; ...a key figure in the island's banana trade and...Dominica, as one of the Windward Islands (the others are St...delivered this tiny island's people into a fatal...villages around the island, stores that sold basic...them, the Windward Islands still have an annual...
|
|
Windward Islands
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Windward Islands southern group of the Lesser...480 km) from the Leeward Islands toward NE Venezuela. Excluding...the group, the Windward Islands consist of the French overseas...The culture varies from island to island, but the French...
|
|
windward
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
...blowing: the ships drifted west, leaving the island quite a distance to windward . PHRASES: to windward of dated in an advantageous position in relation to: I happen to have got to windward of the young woman.
|
|
Society Islands
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Society Islands island group (2002 pop. 214,445...Polynesia . The group comprises the Windward Islands and the Leeward Islands (total...and Tetiaroa; the Leeward Islands include Rai'atea (largest island of the Leeward group), Huahine...
|
|
Marshall Islands
Encyclopedia entry from: Countries and Their Cultures
...designation for the leeward and windward chains of atolls, was considered...the capital of the Marshall Islands has been located on Majuro...population increase, the Marshall Islands has changed rapidly from 43...The independent Marshall Islands is perhaps too new to have...elites representing the ...
|
|
Solomon Islands
Encyclopedia entry from: Countries and Their Cultures
...symbols to closely represent the different islands and their cultures. This is shown in...The first discoverers of the Solomon Islands were the island peoples themselves. They settled the main islands and developed land-based communities...
|