La Visite à l’atelier. – Quel coloris!... (Visit to the Studio), plate 37 from Croquis parisiens (Parisian Sketches)
Honoré Daumier, La Visite à l’atelier. – Quel coloris!... (Visit to the Studio), plate 37 from Croquis parisiens (Parisian Sketches), 1857, lithograph on newsprint, Gift of Max W. Buhmann, public domain, 65.8
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- Title
La Visite à l’atelier. – Quel coloris!... (Visit to the Studio), plate 37 from Croquis parisiens (Parisian Sketches)
- Related Titles
original language: La Visite a L'atelier
series (original language): Croquis parisiens
series (translated): Parisian Sketches
translated: Visit to the Studio
- Artist
- Related People
print publisher: Destouches (French, active 19th century)
- Date
1857
- Medium
lithograph on newsprint
- State
2nd state
- Catalogue Raisonné
Delteil 2953
- Dimensions (H x W x D)
image: 8 in x 10 1/2 in; sheet: 10 in x 14 in
- Inscriptions & Markings
numbered: 1533, graphite, bottom margin, right
title; inscription: LA VISITE À L'ATELIER. // -Quel coloris! - Quel dessin! .. _ C'est du Van-Dyck ! ._C'est du Rubens! _C'est merveilleux! _C'est épatan!... // (L'Artiste se félicite d'avoir consulté des personnes ayant autant de goût, et huit jours après son tableau est refusé par le jury d'admission.), printed, bottom margin, center Language: French
inscription: Lith. Destouches ,28, r. Paradis Pre [re as superscript and underlined] Paris., printed, lower right Language: French
inscription: Mon [on as superscript and underlined] Martinet, 172,r.Rivoli et 41r. Vivienne., printed, lower left Language: French
signature: h.D, printed, lower left, in stone
numbered: 37., printed, upper right
inscription: CROQUIS PARISIENS, printed, upper middle Translation: Parisian Sketches Language: French
- Collection Area
Graphic Arts
- Category
Prints
- Object Type
planographic print
- Culture
French
- Credit Line
Gift of Max W. Buhmann
- Accession Number
65.8
- Copyright
public domain
- Terms
Visit to the Studio !T!—What colors, what draftsmanship, it must be a Van Dyck—it’s !T!a Rubens—it’s marvelous—it’s amazing. (The artist congratulates himself for having shown his painting to people of such good !T!taste…eight days later, his painting is refused by the jury.) !T!Published May 22, 1857, in Le Charivari
The Salon, the yearly art exhibitions in Paris, were juried art shows that attracted approximately one million visitors from Paris and the provinces. Hundreds of painters and sculptors exhibited. At the time, few independent art galleries existed, so the Salon was the most important way for artists to get their work seen. Rejection by the jury could spell disaster for an artist; once an artist was rejected from the Salon, he had very little chance to succeed commercially.
- Exhibitions
2013 In the Studio: Reflections on Artistic Life Portland Art Museum