Saturday, April 19, 2014

Three paintings of Maurice Deriaz, by Gustave Courtois


"Portrait de l'athlète Maurice Deriaz", 1907.

Maurice Deriaz and his older brother, Emile, were the most famous of seven athletic brothers. They were born in Baulmes, Switzerland - Maurice in 1885 - but lived in France from an early age. Maurice was five foot six and weighed about two hundred pounds. His neck was nineteen inches around, his chest forty-eight, and his waist thirty-five. His thighs measured twenty-six inches, calves sixteen-and-a-half, forearms fourteen, and his biceps seventeen. He was celebrated for his weight-lifting feats, his impressive gymnastic abilities, and as a champion Greco-Roman wrestler. Called Le lion suisse or Roi de la beauté plastique, speaking fluent English, German, and Russian, he performed all over Europe. As his career wound down, he acquired a factory which produced reeds for oboes, clarinets, saxophones.  He would often return to visit his home town and he eventually returned to live in Baulmes, where he died in the summer of 1974.

Hercule au pied d'Omphale, 1912.
Persée délivrant Andromède, 1913.

I don't know if Deriaz commissioned them or how, otherwise, he came into possession of the three paintings by Courtois.  But he donated all three to the municipality of Baulmes, where they are hung along the staircase of the Hôtel de Ville.

Deriaz modeling for Courtois in the latter's studio.

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"Bouderie" Gustave Courtois dans son atelier, by Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret, 1880.  Courtois looks very jolly, but not so the unknown woman;
the title, "Bouderie", translates as sulkiness, so perhaps that's part of the story here.

Gustave-Claude-Étienne Courtois (May 18, 1852, Pusey – November 25, 1923, Paris), French painter, whose work is in the academic style. He showed an early interest in art, and at the age of seventeen, he entered the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris. There, Courtois formed a close friendship with a fellow student, the naturalist painter Pascal Dagnan-Bouveret (January 7, 1852, Paris – July 3, 1929, Quincey), that lasted a lifetime; beginning in the 1880s they shared a fashionable studio in Neuilly-sur-Seine, and Dagnan-Bouveret married Courtois' cousin. Both artists would eventually be awarded the Légion d'honneur, as chevalier and officier, respectively.

(Detail of the above painting.)
Dagnan-Bouveret and Courtois, with a model, in their studio in Neuilly-sur-Seine.
Courtois and Dagnan-Bouveret, 1888.


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1 November, 2016: I just came across this wonderful sketch of Deriaz by Courtois, dated 1911. 

"Se faire un chemin par la force" is a French translation of "Fit via vi" ("a way is made by force") a quotation from Virgil's Aeneid .




7 comments:

  1. Thanks a lot! Now I have an erection & cannot stand up from my desk.

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    1. Haha! But really, Stephen! I do believe that's the most appropriately inappropriate response this blog has ever received. : )

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  2. Hi,
    I am searching for a photo from Courtois studio for an exhibition I am working on. I see you have posted one in this blogg post, and i wonder if you know where I can purchase a high resolution version of it?

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  3. I notice you are using a photo from Courtois studio. I am in search of exactly that and I'm wondering if you know where I could purchase a high resolution version of it.

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  4. I don't know the source of either of the studio photographs. I would think they're in an archive somewhere. Sorry I can't be of more help....

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  5. Thank you for this very interesting post. I see some questions about sources - would you know where the last, Ingres-like sketch is from? Extraordinary.

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    1. Thank you so much. I don't usually keep or remember my sources, but I just did an image search on that last drawing, and it looks to have been sold through Galerie Hubert Duchemin in Paris. If you wanted more information, perhaps you might contact them.

      The listing page on their website for the drawing is:
      https://www.hubertduchemin.com/fiche_work_en?OEU_id=380&ph=1161

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