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TITLE:
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Jeune Fille dans le Bois (Young Girl in the Woods)
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WORK DATE:
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1853
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CATEGORY:
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Paintings
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MATERIALS:
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Oil on canvas
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MARKINGS:
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Signed and dated lower left: N. Diaz 53
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SIZE:
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22 x 16 inches (30 x 24 inches framed)
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PRICE*:
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Contact Gallery for Price
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DESCRIPTION:
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Jeune Fille dans le Bois presents a young woman cloaked in exotic garb, standing in a small clearing. Diaz was well-known for his figurative works, which were widely admired by artists such as Monticelli, Corot, and Renoir. While some of these paintings feature large fete gallants or mythological figures, this work is a charming portrait of a lone girl in the rich forest interior. Her white robe with accents of gold jewelry and vibrant, brocaded fabric calls to mind the influence of Eugene Delacroix and his Orientalist nymphs, Turks, and Bohemians. In Diaz’s work, however, the subject is invariably placed outdoors, in a shady wooded grove or sunlit clearing in the forest. Even when painting figures, the influence of the forest forms a crucial part of his composition.
Narcisse Virgile Diaz de la Pena was born to Spanish emigrant parents on August 20, 1808 in Bordeaux. He survived the loss of a leg in a childhood accident and further suffered the death of his parents at age fifteen.
Diaz’s artistic training was as a porcelain painter and he studied briefly with the painter Souchon. His early paintings catered to the popular taste for 18th century sty1e Rococo and resulted in financial success for the young artist. Fetes galantes were favorite subjects and the women depicted in Diaz’s canvases were often cloaked in exotic Turkish garb, reflecting the artist’s admiration for Delacroix and his orientalist followers. Indeed Diaz’s first Salon entry in 1831 was titled Scene Amour.
Diaz first visited Barbizon in 1835 and it was in 1837 that he met Rousseau. The influence of Rousseau could be seen in Diaz’s Salon entry of that year depicting a view of Fontainebleau Forest. Through the 1840s, his figure paintings continued to be the major part of his work, and are thought to have influenced the female subjects of Corot, Renoir and certainly Monticelli.
Though figure painting would always remain important for Diaz, it is his landscapes of the 1850s—particularly of the Fontainebleau Forest—for which the artist is most remembered. Recognized as a superb colorist in his day, his forest interiors are richly painted with warm browns, oranges, golds and silvery tree trunks and branches. Though the artist often applied paint loosely with a broad palette knife, his observation of nature was nevertheless keen. A regular exhibitor at the Salon, in 1848 Diaz won a first-class medal, and received the Legion d’honneur. A good-natured and generous man, Diaz’s financia1 success enabled him to lend a helping hand to his friends when in need, including Troyon, Rousseau and Millet. The artist died at Menton on November 18, 1876.
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EXHIBITION HISTORY:
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Museum Collections Include: Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Detroit Institute of Art, MI, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge; Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg; Louvre Museum Database, Paris; Minneapolis Institute of Arts, MN; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.; National Gallery, London; Wallace Collection, London; Cleveland Museum of Art, OH; Courtauld Institute of Art, London; Mildred Lane Kemper Art Musuem, St. Louis; Mohamed Mahmoud Khalil & Wife Museum, Egypt; Montana Museum of Art & Culture, Missoula; Musée des Beaux-Arts de Bordeaux, France; National Gallery of Victoria, Australia; New Art Gallery, Walsall; Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena; Philadelphia Museum of Art, PA; St. Louis Art Museum, MO; Victoria & Albert Museum, London
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