Skip to main content

The Streets of Paris


The Milliner on the Champs Elysées

A lesser-known painter from the Belle Époque era, Jean Béraud was born in Russia on January 12, 1849 but spent all of his career in Paris. Béraud mainly painted street scenes of Paris with a style that ranged from realistic to impressionist, and it is his unique charm and astute observation that merits recognition. What makes Béraud so interesting is his ability to chronicle modern Parisian life while experimenting with color temperatures and lighting conditions, his use of contrast as well as being an observer of fashion and human nature. Moments that we take for granted...crossing the street, sitting on a bench, going for a walk, reading an advertisement...by giving presence to everyday life Béraud makes the insignificant timeless and real.


The woman walking down the street above in The Milliner on the Champs Elysées is a hatmaker, and Béraud depicts her with a confidence and verve typical of the Belle Époque. Note how Béraud divides the painting from cool to warm, and the casual strokes of the street somehow convey a believable busy road reflecting an overcast sky from above. I like how the street-sweeper is brushing the road of debris (horse manure) amongst this well-dressed bourgeois famous street. Although this street would be painted by many other French artists such as Antoine Blanchard and Edouard Cortes, Béraud still focuses on people and body language, even in distant figures.








After the Misdeed ('Après la Faute'), 1890

Beautiful color harmony in this painting. The combination of dark blue accents on the light blue of her dress against a burgandy wall and couch is visually sumptuous. In fact, the color of that deep violet red is like wine, and the way she covers her face with her hands deep in the pillow implies a 'drowning of her sorrows' in a wine-like atmosphere without suggesting alchohol. Béraud creates an emotional setting that raises questions without answering them, and despite its simplicity it is the way Béraud uses color itself as drama heightens the underlying story.















Jean Béraud - Avenue Parisienne
Avenue Parisienne

A beautiful moment. Béraud has captured the late 1800's on a warm summer day of a busy street in Paris. We are instantly transported back in time...horse drawn carriages, people sitting on a bench, gentlemen crossing the street...everyday life is itself the subject. Note Béraud's warm highlights dappled across the road amidst the cool shadows. By leaving the foreground open and spacious yet filling the background with figures Béraud creates a real sense of depth and perspective. Many streetscene artists today are reluctant to include figures at all in their paintings, yet Béraud added character to his by making people and their natural actions a key ingredient of the story.












Le Mont-de-Piété (The Pawn Shop) or Chez Ma Tante

Béraud conjures a scene here that looks right out of a film, even though we are still not quite sure what has transpired. The light here is soft, almost in shadow, and Béraud uses clever use of green, orange and yellow to keep this scene from appearing dull and uninteresting. I like the way he scumbled the green on the tiled floor over a yellow underpainting. Béraud's characters are always doing something, even when doing nothing, advice that Da Vinci himself wrote about centuries before and still holds true today.














Jean Béraud, The Church of Saint-Philippe-du-Roule, Paris
The Church of Saint-Philippe-du-Roule, Paris, 1877

Overcast light is not easy to paint, and here Béraud makes it look effortless. This is quite an intricate balance of a warm and cool palette, with color temperatures changing within the same buildings and in Béraud's use of atmospheric perspective. Béraud contrasts the dirty streets with the Sunday morning bourgeois of Paris. Once again, look how everyone is doing something. The two main foreground figures, a woman with her daughter with veils over their faces, are waiting to cross the street. Béraud uses facial expression on every single figure in this painting, and it works. The people here are in front of the church after mass to be seen as much as anything else, and yet it is another day, another moment. Béraud is telling us that drama is not inherently necessary to tell a story, only mood and setting...and people going about their lives.











Le Boulevard St. Denis, Paris, 1890's

This painting has an unusual quality to the light, highlighting Paris' uniqueness as a city. Béraud contrasts architecture with society, another moment in time gone forever but preserved here for us to experience. While a photograph could have easily done the same, here Béraud creates life and color and light in way that makes us want to participate and breathe the air, something a photograph is incapable of doing.











Paris Kiosk, 1884

Overcast light on a busy street corner in Paris, here Béraud contrasts the loud colors of the advertisement posters on the kiosk against the muted tones of the street behind them. Look closely in the far distance behind the tree and you can see see Béraud uses a tint of purple in the air to create a sense of atmospheric perspective, yet the sky above has traces of yellow, muted greens and heavy greys. Béraud also contrasts texture well by juxtaposing the cobblestone street with the smooth sidewalk and the refined clothing of the bourgeois. In spite of the beauty here he still manages to include the urine and horse droppings on the curb.











Boulevard des capucines

A more lively street scene than his other works, Béraud uses a multitude of textures while contrasting architecture with nature. The use of a slightly higher vantage point is interesting here, possibly to enhance the perspective. Béraud is also commenting on the social classes here that make up Paris. Once again, his attention to even the furthermost background figures is a testament to his art, and to the creation of a scene, a moment...where everyone is a subject and the entire scene is the subject at the same time. Our society needs to appreciate artists like this for their incredible insight into the world, not merely their current monetary value at auction houses.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

More Old Master Drawings

There is nothing in all the world more beautiful or significant of the laws of the universe than the nude human body. Robert Henri Charles Louis Müller , A Standing Female Nude Leaning Against an Arch, ca.1864 Once again I decided to talk about some Old Master drawings and delve into the thinking behind how these drawings may have been created and the knowledge of the artist. In the above drawing by Müller, done in sanguine with white chalk highlights, the figure is drawn from a low view-point, with her body twisting toward her left side while resting on one knee. Note how Müller alternates the bent right leg with the bent left arm to create dynamic contrast. The right arm is also foreshortened and partially in shadow. Expressing power and femininity, this is a study that is Renaissance in spirit, even Mannerist, revealing the female nude as sculptural yet always graceful. Anton Raphael Mengs , Seated male nude viewed from the back, 1755 One of several Academic nu

The Genius of Ramon Casas

Open Air Interior, 1892 Born on January 4, 1866 in Barcelona, Ramon Casas i Carbó was a Spanish portrait painter and graphic designer. He was a contemporary of Santiago Rusiñol , both founders of the Spanish art movement modernisme . Where Santiago painted pensive interiors and moody landscapes, Casas focused more on the portrait and figure with a penchant for costume and posture. His palette often consists of more muted tones with vibrant color accents. Casas enjoyed a lengthy and prominent career throughout Europe and South America where he often exhibited in shows with his friend Rusiñol. In Open Air Interior above, Casas encapsulates a quiet moment outdoors during tea time. I love these kind of paintings for their calm visual intensity. The way that man sits in his chair, lost in thought while his wife carefully stirs her tea...this is the kind of mindfulness in the subjects that makes us, the viewer, envision ourselves in this scene. Casas paints the far wall of the house

Isaac Levitan, Russian Poet of Nature

Before the Storm, 1890 Born August 30, 1860, Isaac Ilyich Levitan was a Russian landscape painter. Born in Congress Poland to a Jewish family, Levitan would study art in Moscow where he would become friends with Anton Chekov and his brother, Nikolay who was also an artist. Levitan's work has a unique mood that is very distinct from the Impressionism of France and the Classicism of Russia...sometimes compared to Monet but still different. Levitan has a rare presence with astute attention to detail and a fascination with light at different times of day. At times highly accurate, while in his more personal work deeply Impressionistic and imbued with rich tone and color. There is something about Levitan that lingers in your mind long after seeing his work...in a way that is individual and personal, not attached to a specific genre or movement, but to the world around him. In Before the Storm , Levitan captures a moment so stunning it seems to defy words...of sunlight piercing