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The Sweet Life

James W Tottis

Julius LeBlanc Stewart and Painting the Belle Epoque

Barcode 9781913875596
Hardback

Original price £45.91 - Original price £45.91
Original price
£45.91
£45.91 - £45.91
Current price £45.91

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Release Date: 04/11/2024

Genre: Entertainment & The Arts
Sub-Genre: Art & Photography
Label: D Giles Ltd
Contributors: Barbara Dayer Gallati (Contributions by), Campbell Mobley (Contributions by), James W Tottis (Contributions by), James W Tottis (Edited by), Michael Crane (Contributions by), Jacqueline Francis (Contributions by), Vincent DiGirolamo (Contributions by), Valerie Ann Leeds (Contributions by)
Language: English
Publisher: D Giles Ltd

Julius LeBlanc Stewart and Painting the Belle Epoque
An entirely new exploration of the life and career of the expat American artist Julius LeBlanc Stewart (1855-1919), who spent nearly all his life in Paris, and whose oil paintings feature in private collections and those of many major museums on both sides of the Atlantic.
Stewart's paintings are highly engaging and attractive, covering a broad cross-section of later nineteenth- and early twentieth-century American Expat Parisian high society, its genteel past-times, and travel, in a style of painting that was uniquely his own, and that was lauded in both Europe and America. This new volume presents over seventy major paintings, pastels and drawings across thematic sections, with a new introduction to Stewart's life, career, and world through essays by major specialists on nineteenth and early twentieth century American art and history.The authors look variously at Stewart's early career and training at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, his later tutelage under French and Spanish masters, Eduardo Zamacois, Jean-Leon Gerome, and Raimundo Madrazo, his family's involvement in the production of sugar; then the world of the American Expat society in which Stewart circulated, and the evolution Stewart's later style, in the mid 1880s towards multi-figured, narrative scenes of his family, friends and meticulous depictions of their costumes; then for a brief period later the sensuous Arcadian nudes bathed in sunlight, celebrating the attributes of Diana and the Bachenates. Collectively these provide the first major exploration of Stewart's world and work with, new contribution to our understanding of the importance and legacy of his art, and his advocation for his community of fellow American artists in France.