Gaston La Touche

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Gaston La Touche, or de La Touche (24 October 1854 - 12 July 1913) was a French painter, illustrator, engraver and sculptor.

Biography

 
The Arbor, a frequently reproduced painting from c.1906 Walters Museum)

His family originally came from Normandy. He was born in Saint-Cloud. His passion for art began at a very early age and he finally persuaded his parents to give him drawing lessons, which he took for ten years from a local instructor at the rate of three Francs per month.[1] His lessons had to be cancelled at the start of the Franco-Prussian War, when his family returned to Normandy to ensure their safety.[2] This would be all the formal art training he ever received.

Nevertheless, in 1875 he was able to make his début at the Salon with a bas-relief portrait medallion of François Jules Edmond Got, an actor at the Comédie-Française, and several etchings. Between 1877 and 1879, he made the acquaintance of Edgar Degas and Edouard Manet, who he met with frequently at the Café de la Nouvelle Athènes. It was there that he was introduced to Émile Zola, some of whose works he would later illustrate.[2]

 
The Joyous Festival

Beginning in 1880, he produced dark toned works of social realism in the style of the Dutch Masters. His first painting was shown at the Salon the following year. Félix Bracquemond, a friend and associate, suggested that he might be more successful if he brightened his color palette and chose different subjects, recommending Antoine Watteau and François Boucher as models.[1] He also painted landscapes and portraits in the style of Puvis de Chavannes, which brought him his first major successes at the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts. In 1891, he burned most of his earlier paintings.[2]

Later, he received commissions to provide decorations for the Town Hall in Saint-Cloud and the reception hall at the Ministry of Justice (Hôtel de Bourvallais), although the latter were never installed there and are now at the Palais du Luxembourg. In 1900, he was one of several artists who provided decorations for Le Train Bleu, a famous restaurant near the Gare de Lyon.[1]

In his later years, he divided his time between his studio in Saint-Cloud and his family's properties in Champsecret. In 1909, he was named an Officer in the Legion d'Honneur. In 1912, he completed his last major decorative project at "Villa Arnaga", Edmond Rostand's home in Cambo-les-Bains, which is now a museum. He died in Paris while painting.

Among the works he illustrated are The Dram and L'Assommoir by Zola, Aux flancs du Vase by Albert Samain, and Poèmes by Henri de Régnier.

Prizes, medals

1884 - Medals 3 e class at the Salon of French artists for a wish and another
1888 - Medal 2 e class at the Salon of French artists for the new mother
1889 - Silver Medal at the Universal Exhibition in Paris
1900 - Gold medal at the Universal Exhibition in Paris

Salons

1875 - Exhibition of French Artists, medallion in bas-relief portrait of Francis Got some etchings and
1881 - Exhibition of French Artists, The Lady of the fifth
1882 - Salon of French artists, the Burial of a Child in Normandy
1884 - Salon of French artists (3 Medal E Class)
1888 - Salon of French artists (Medal 2 E Class)
1890 - Exhibition of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts , Phlox
1896 - Exhibition of the Société Nationale des Beaux-Arts, decorative panel that bears his wife and son
1906 - 1 st Exhibition of Painting Water
1910 - Living Arts. Four decorative panels for the Department of Justice (never installed), are at the Palais du Luxembourg

Exhibitions

1889 - Exposition Universelle in Paris
1899 - International Art Exhibition of the City of Venice (Biennale)
1900 - Exposition Universelle in Paris
1908 - Galerie Georges Petit , a retrospective exhibition of more than three hundred of his works
1909 - Gallery Boussod and Valadon in The Hague, Netherlands, Netherlands