Henri Beau

Henri Beau

Henri Beau
Born Louis-Henri Beau
(1863-06-27)27 June 1863
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Died 15 May 1949(1949-05-15) (aged 85)
Paris, France
Nationality Canadian
Education Joseph Chabert, Léon Bonnat, William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Jean-Léon Gérôme and Pierre Puvis de Chavannes
Known for Painter
Notable work
  • Chemin en été
  • Les noces de Cana
  • L'arrivée de Champlain à Québec and La dispersion des Acadiens
Movement Impressionism
Spouse(s) Marie Fertinel
Patron(s) Alfred-Léon Senneterre

Henri Beau (née Louis-Henri Beau; 27 June 1863  15 May 1949) was a French-Canadian Impressionist painter.[1] He is noted for Chemin en été, La dispersion des Acadiens, L'arrivée de Champlain à Québec, and Les Noces de Cana. He studied under French Masters Joseph Chabert, Léon Bonnat, William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Jean-Léon Gérôme, and Pierre Puvis de Chavannes.[2] He had initial success as an Impressionist painter, amongst other Canadian Impressionists in Paris, and was awarded the Ordre des Palmes Académiques by the French government.[3]

He obtained art commissions from the Notre-Dame Basilica in Montréal and the Government of Quebec.[2] He served as associate archivist for the Parisian-branch of the Public Archives of Canada (now Library and Archives Canada) from 1921 to 1938.[2][4] He is a largely forgotten artist due to his long absence from Canada. His widow Marie Beau worked towards establishing his reputation as an artist in Canada after his death.[5] He was only recognized as a notable artist, decades after his death, with a major retrospectives of his paintings celebrating his career by the Galerie Bernard Desroches in Montréal in 1974, and at the Musée du Québec (now Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec) in Québec City in 1987.[5]

Biography

Birth and childhood

Henri Beau was born Louis-Henri Beau to a working class French-Canadian family in Montréal, in 1863. He was the third child of restaurateur Charles-Arsène Beau and Marguerite-Clémentine Hupé. He had seven brothers and three sisters.[6] He was baptized at Notre-Dame Basilica in Montréal on 28 June 1863, a day after his birth. He was raised in a boarding house located at 129 Craig Street according to Lovell's Directory of the Citizens of 1863–1864.

His father, Charles-Arsène Beau, born in Belleville, east of Paris, France, in 1823, arrived in New York City in 1848, and settled in Montreal in 1858, where he lived until his death in 1894. He was a cook and restaurant manager at restaurant Beau frequented regularly by painter Edmond Dyonnet according to his mémoire.[6][7] His father met and married his mother, Marguerite-Clémentine Hupé, a 21-year-old Montréal woman sometime before 1851. They moved to Montréal in 1858. That union produced eleven children, including Arthur, Louis-Henri, Joseph-Vincent, Charles and Paul; but few records exist of the names of the other children. The surname "Beau" might be attributed as Le Beau.[8] His brother Paul Beau (1871–1949) was a fine arts ironworker. Later Beau produced a décanteur à trépied (decanter tripod) as an homage to his brother.

Art education

Chemin en Été (Path in Summer), Beau 1895. Early Impressionist landscape painted while he was a student in Paris.

In 1881, he studied under Abbé Joseph Chabert who taught academic art at the Institut National des Beaux-Arts, Sciences, Arts et Métiers et Industrie (1871–1887), an establishment founded by Chabert and benefactors such as industrialist Jean-Baptiste Prat.[9][10] Marie Chantal Leblanc, then a graduate student under art historian and professor Laurier Lacroix at the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM), notes in her mémoire that under Chabert, Beau most likely encountered and interacted with Joseph-Charles Franchère, Ludger Larose and Charles Gill at some point, as all are listed as students in the Nordheimer classroom between 1885 and 1888.[11] In 1884, he travelled to the United States, where he coloured woodcuts in San Francisco. He then travelled to Paris to continue his education at studios there. He began presenting his own work at exhibitions in Paris in the 1890s.[12]

Beau's presence in Paris is mentioned in the 21 June 1888 edition of the journal Paris-Canada, founded in 1884 to promote Franco-Canadian relations.[13] He studied under William-Adolphe Bouguereau at l'Académie Julian and Jean-Léon Gérôme at l'École des Beaux-Arts in Paris known today as l'École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts. Gérôme encouraged his pupils to be independent and used his influence to help them gain admittance to the Salon in Paris. Unlike many of his Canadian peers who pursued an art education in Paris, Beau's family was not wealthy so he used his talents as a painter to earn a living. He is known to have copied eleven paintings from the Louvre in 1896 and 1900.[14] According to a letter by Beau's wife (held in the archives of the MBNAQ) to Paul Rainville, then curator of the Musée de la Province du Québec(MBNAQ), Beau also attended l'Académie Colarossi. It is also mentioned that he studied under Léon Bonnat and Pierre Puvis de Chavannes who advised Beau to pursue landscape painting.[15][16]

Independent artist years

Beau married a woman before August 1906. Little is known about her aside from an entry in Ludger Larose's diary that states that Beau's wife is searching for him.[17] He left her around that time for Marie Fertinel an opera singer with whom he had an affair and later married in 1946.[18]

Beau died on 15 May 1949 in Paris. He is buried at the cimetière de Rueil-Malmaison (Hauts-de-Seine).[2]

Art career

Early career

In 1893, Beau received a commission from Alfred-Léon Senneterre to paint the Les Noces de Cana, depicting the marriage at Cana, delivered to the Notre-Dame du Sacré-Coeur Chapel in the Notre-Dame Basilica of Montreal in 1894. He received $500.00 (around $13,590) in 2016 dollars) according to a document held in the parish archives. The painting was destroyed on December 7, 1978, when a fire ravaged the chapel.[19][20]

As Beau's family background was that of a working-class family living in a boarding house, patronage from Senneterre allowed him to pursue an art education in Paris. Especially after his father's death in 1894, finishing his studies in Paris would only have been possible with the help of patrons. According to an article in Canadian Art by Evan H. Turner, few Montrealers were interested in Impressionist paintings. One notable early and first collector of French Impressionist art was Sir William Cornelius Van Horne.[21] It is documented that Van Horne sat on the Art Association of Montreal Gallery Committee and involved himself personally in Canadian Pacific Railway's art acquisition program. He was a known patron of Parisian-trained Impressionist painters, and his painting collection contained works by nearly all of the early Impressionist painters of his time.[22]

In 1902, Beau received a commission from the Government of Québec for L'arrivée de Champlain à Québec for the Legislative Council of Quebec, delivered in 1903, for which he was paid $1,300 (around $27,500) in 2016 dollars). It was criticized for historical inaccuracies.[23] In 1909, he proposed producing a larger painting depicting the first session of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec in 1792. This was deferred for administrative reasons and the project was assigned subsequently to Charles Huot in 1910.[24] In July 1904, Beau returned to Montreal and worked as an art professor at l'école Sarsfield from September 1905 to April 1906.[18] In 1906, he produced a painting for the Royal Alexandra Hotel (demolished in 1971) in Winnipeg. His brother, Paul Beau had previously collaborated with the Hotel's architects, Edouard et William Sutherland Maxwell.[18]

Career at the Public Archives of Canada (1915–1938)

Beau's career in the civil service started in 1915 when he was a temporary copyist for the Paris branch of the Public Archives of Canada (now Library and Archives Canada). He was promoted to associate archivist in 1921, a position he held until his retirement in 1938.[2][4] As the official painter,[12] his duties were to document and illustrate traditional civil, military, and religious customs related to Canadian history, painting the Port of France, and depicting historical figures involved the founding of New France.[24] During this time, he was based mostly in France, though he did work for a number of Canadian customers.[25] Art historians and critics often consider that he cut his career short working for the Archives, as the commissions involved religious, historical and political themes, restricting and repressing the inner creativity of an artist like Beau.[3] Multiple reasons can perhaps explain this decision such as the appointment of Arthur George Doughty as the Dominion Archivist, and Keeper of the Records, who Beau admired for his encouragement and his laissez-faire attitude.

Later career

In 1900, he received the bronze medal at the World Fair in Paris for his painting La Dispertion des Acadiens., depicting the expulsion of the Acadians.[25]

Among his notable works are L'arrivée de Champlain à Québec, which was hung in the council chamber of the National Assembly of Quebec. It has since been removed to Musée des Beaux-arts de Québec. He also painted Les noces de Cana, which is in Notre-Dame Basilica.[26]

Art styles and techniques

Artistic influences and styles

The evolution of Henri Beau as an artist can be seen in a photobiographic form, by looking at his works in chronological order. Beau drew inspiration from Camille Corot, Claude Monet and Camille Pissarro, which is reflected in his earlier paintings named Landscapes.[23][27] Beau would sign his paintings as "HBeau", usually with the year, and sometimes with the location, they were painted. Beau's wife, Marie, is portrayed in many of his paintings. He also drew inspiration for his paintings from his travels around Europe.

1881–99

Beau's earliest know work of art is from 1891. Very little is known of his time studying academic arts under Abbé Joseph Chabert. As Chabert was educated at the École Impériale des Beaux-Arts in Paris, and known to be neutral to politics, and described by Napoléon Bourassa as an uncontrollable spirit, this was reflected in his teachings.[9] As Beau was studying in Paris at a time Impressionism was establishing itself as an art movement, many of his paintings between 1891 and 1899 reflect the era's style.

1915–38

During his time at the Public Archives of Canada, Beau's works were more structured. During his personal time, he painted Impressionist landscapes.

1939–49

His paintings in his final years were of the Jaujac region in Ardèche in southern France.

Legacy

After his death, his widow Marie Beau and a few of his friends wished to honour his memory by establishing his reputation as an artist. They tried to interest the National Gallery of Canada and the Musée du Quebec in acquiring more of his works.[5] In 1956, Beau's wife donated ten of his paintings to the Musée du Québec. In 1974, the Galerie Bernard Desroches acquired artwork and documentation from Madame Beau's estate.[2]

The vast majority of Beau's known works reside at Library and Archives Canada. Beau was known to paint Impressionist landscapes for his personal collection.[4]

Known repositories of material about Beau in relation to Canadian and Quebecois art history are:

Exhibitions

Throughout his career, Beau exhibited his works in Montreal and Paris. He exhibited at the Salon des Indépendants in Paris and the Galerie Figaro according to documents held by the Galerie Bernard Desroches.

Exhibitions

Posthumous exhibitions

Permanent displays

List of known artworks

The following is an incomplete list of Beau's artworks. Those listed here are known to have appeared in a catalogue raisonné or other sources.

See also

References

  1. "Henri Beau". National Gallery of Canada. National Gallery of Canada.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 L'Allier. 1987. p. 15
  3. 1 2 Prakash. 2015. p. 441
  4. 1 2 3 Prakash. 2015. p. 451
  5. 1 2 3 Prakash. 2015. p. 452
  6. 1 2 L'Allier. 1987. p. 22
  7. Dyonnet, Edmond (1968). Mémoires d'un artiste canadien. Ottawa: Éditions de l’Université d’Ottawa. pp. 62–63.
  8. Fournier, Marcel (1995). Les Français au Québec, 1765–1865 : un mouvement migratoire méconnu. Sillery, Québec: Éditions du Septentrion. p. 99. ISBN 2-894-48025-3.
  9. 1 2 "Chabert, Joseph". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. University of Toronto/Université Laval. Retrieved 19 April 2016.
  10. L'Allier. 1987. p. 22-23
  11. Leblanc, Marie Chantal (12 November 2008). Formation artistique et contexte social des peintres canadiens à Paris (1887–1895). Montreal: Université du Québec à Montréal. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  12. 1 2 Champagne, Michel. "Beau, Henri". The Canadian Encyclopedia. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  13. "Relations France-Québec – Chronologie". services.banq.qc.ca. Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  14. Lacroix, Laurier (1975). "Les Artistes Canadiens Copistes au Louvre (1838–1908)". Journal of Canadian Art History. II (1): 56. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  15. Béland, Mario (Winter 2007). "Vive la Bretagne!" (PDF). Cap-aux-Diamants : la revue d'histoire du Québec (88): 48. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  16. L'Allier. 1987.
  17. L'Allier. 1987. p. 31
  18. 1 2 3 L'Allier. 1987. p. 30
  19. L'Allier. 1987. p. 40
  20. "History of the Notre-Dame Basilica de Montreal". Notre-Dame Basilica de Montreal.
  21. Turner, Evan H. (1960). "Impressionist Paintings in Canadian Collections". Canadian art (69): 202–208.
  22. Pringle, Allan. "William Cornelius Van Horne: ART DIRECTOR, CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY". Journal of Canadian Art History: 73.
  23. 1 2 Prakash. 2015. p. 445
  24. 1 2 L'Allier. 1987. p. 32
  25. 1 2 Karel, David (1 January 1992). Dictionnaire des artistes de langue française en Amérique du Nord: peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs, graveurs, photographes, et orfèvres (in French). Presses Université Laval. ISBN 9782763772356.
  26. Vallée, Anne-Élisabeth (2008). "L'Arrivée de Champlain à Québec" (PDF). Bulletin. Assemblée nationale du Québec. Retrieved 14 April 2016.
  27. L'Allier. 1987. p. 76
  28. Buisson, René (2001). Paysages du Québec, 1900–1948. Montreal: Musée Marc-Aurèle Fortin. pp. 3+67.
  29. "Art québécois et canadien – Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal". Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal (in French).
  30. "Marie Fertinel". Musée national des Beaux-Arts du Québec. Musée national des Beaux-Arts du Québec. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  31. "Atelier de l'artiste". Musée national des Beaux-Arts du Québec. Musée national des Beaux-Arts du Québec. Retrieved 15 April 2016.

Sources

Further reading

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