Émile Bernard chronology

Henri Toulouse-Lautrec, Émile Bernard, 1886

This is an Émile Bernard chronology of the life and career of French artist, art critic and writer Émile Bernard, based on documents hitherto published - however, most of the relevant sources remain unpublished. To a certain extent, these gaps can be filled by information derived from letters and biographies of e.g. Vincent van Gogh, Paul Gauguin and Émile Schuffenecker. Bernard and his work is associated with Post-Impressionism, Cloisonnism and Synthetism.

Since 1891, Bernard used to date his letters.

Contents: 1860s 1870s 1880s 1890s 1900s 1910s 1920s 1930s 1940s
The Vanguard Years: 1884 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897

Footnotes
References
External links

1860s

1870s

1880s

1886

After having been expelled by Cormon for insubordinate behaviour[1] in early spring, 1886, his parents tried to convince him to work in business, which he refused.
Financially supported by the parents, Bernard instead went on a foot trip to Brittany. Recommended by Claude-Émile Schuffenecker, whom he had met at Concarneau, he went to Pont-Aven in July, to see Paul Gauguin who however at first did not recognize Bernard's talent. Returned home after two months, he moved in with his parents, visited the exhibition of the Société des Artistes Indépendants and saw the work of Georges Seurat and Paul Signac.

1887

When his parents rented a house in Asnières, Émile was able to exhibit pointillist works there, early in the year, and was invited by Seurat to visit his studio. Bernard and Anquetin however soon decided to break with Neo-Impressionism and go their own way, painting flat colour areas but strong black contours.

At Tanguy's, Bernard met Lucien Pissarro and Charles Angrand at that time.

In spring, he returned to Brittany and stayed two months in Saint-Briac-sur-Mer, where he created stained glass windows. After his grandmother started to live with the family, they moved to a bigger house and built a studio for Émile.

1888

Self-portrait with portrait of Paul Gauguin, 1888

On occasion of the Salon des Indépendants in March 1888, the art critic Édouard Dujardin coined Bernard's and Anquetin's new style Cloisonnism.

1889

Poster of the 1889 Exhibition of Paintings by the Impressionist and Synthetist Group, at Café des Arts, known as the The Volpini Exhibition, 1889.
As his father prohibited him to visit Gauguin in Pont-Aven, he spent the summer in St. Briac, where he met one Charlotte Buisse whom he had liked to marry, but was repelled by her father for not being able to maintain a family.
He afterwards went to Lille, stayed with his grandmother and worked as a textile designer for a while.

1890

After returning to Paris, Bernard had to find out that Charlotte was meanwhile engaged to someone else. Madeleine became engaged to Charles Laval, who also was obliged to prove that he would be able to maintain a family. After losing his parental allowance, Émile organized a lottery of his paintings.

1891

1892

1893

Deciding to go abroad, together with Maria,[8] Bernard was supported by Count Antoine de La Rochefoucauld and Andries Bonger. He first travelled Italy: On visits in Genova, Pisa, Rome and Florence he admired Perugino, Botticelli, Giotto, Simone Martini, Taddeo Gaddi and Fra Angelico. When meeting Dal Médico, a fellow from Pont-Aven, he decided to accompany him to Constantinople via Samos. There, he got the commission to paint the chaple of Les Missionnaires de Lyon. He afterwards moved on to Smyrna, where Maria left him for a French photographer. Via Jerusalem and Alexandria, he arrived in Cairo by the end of the year. There, he had some income from decorating the chapel of the Pères de la Mission africaine de Lyon, but still was supported by Bonger and de La Rochefouauld.

1894

Married Hannénah Saati, of Libanese descent, on July 1 and started living like an Arab, whilst reading Fathers of the Church (St. Augustine, St. Thomas Aquinas) and philosophers like Hegel, Aristotle and Plato, for becoming inspired. Still was, to some extent, supported by his family. To the 5th album of André Marty's L'Estampe originale, he contributed a print.

1895

Bernard's first son, Otse, was born. The painter was commissioned with frescoes for the chapel of Cairo's Cathédrale de la Vierge and looked for inspiration in Michelangelo's oeuvre.

His sister Madeleine, terminally ill with tuberculosis, moved to Cairo where she died on November 19.

1896

For their difficult financial situation, the family moved to Spain, reaching Granada in August and Seville in December. Hannénah became ill of tuberculosis.

1897

In spring, Bernard met Spanish painter Zuloaga; after the birth of a second son, Fortunato, they moved back to Cairo to live with Hannénah's family. Both sons died of tuberculosis, soon later.

1898

Birth of a third son, Odilon. Bernard participated at the Salon de l'Art Religieux and published the firstone of 17 volumes of poetry. Besides, he started a major paintings series on life in Cairo.

1899

In an exhibition in honour of Odilon Redon, organized by de La Rochfoucauld and held at Durand-Ruel gallery, Bernard exhibited a tapestry and a cupboard panel.

1900s

1910s

1920s

1930s

1940s

Resources

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 Lit. A Sourcebook of Gauguin's Symbolist Followers ..., pp. 159-172
  2. Vincent van Gogh: Letter 510 to his brother Theo, July 15, 1888. - There are two short accounts of this exhibition, one by Maurice de Beaubourg, based on information supplied by Seurat and published in Revue indépendante XVI/47, September 1890, pp. 391-402; the other one, written by Émile Bernard in summer 1890 for Aurier's Moderniste, remained unpublished for a century. See Roland Dorn: Bernard on Van Gogh, in: MaryAnne Stevens, ed.: Appendix B, pp. 381-383
  3. Émile Bernard, Au Palais des Beaux-Arts. Notes sur la peinture: Le Moderniste I/14, 27 July 1889, pp. 108 and 110
  4. Theo van Gogh: Letter T18 to his brother Vincent, 4 October 1889
  5. Ronald Pickvance (1992), pp. 32-35
  6. Roland Dorn, Schuffenecker on Bernard, in: MaryAnne Stevens, ed. (1990), Appendix A, pp.376-380
  7. Unpublished manuscript, mentioned by Welsh-Ovcharov and Luthi
  8. Amongst other reasons, he did so to avoid pending military service.
  9. "La Grimpette, house of Eugène Boch"

References

External links

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