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Decadent Aesthetics and the Acrobat in French Fin de siècle

Current price: $54.99
Decadent Aesthetics and the Acrobat in French Fin de siècle
Decadent Aesthetics and the Acrobat in French Fin de siècle

Barnes and Noble

Decadent Aesthetics and the Acrobat in French Fin de siècle

Current price: $54.99
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In his discussion of clowns in nineteenth-century French painting from Jean-Léon Gérôme’s 1857 to Georges Rouault, art historian Francis Haskell wondered why they are so sad. The myth of the sad clown as an allegory for the unappreciated artist found echoes in the work of literary counterparts like Charles Baudelaire and his "Vieux saltimbanque" who seeks in vain a responsive public. For some, the attraction of the acrobatic clown for the creative imagination may have been his ability to embody the plight of the artist: these generally led an ambulatory and uncertain existence. Other artists and writers, however, particularly the Decadents, perceived in the circus acrobat – including the acrobatic clown – a conceptual and performative tool for liberating their points of view from the prison-house of aesthetic convention. If authors’ protagonists were themselves sometimes failures, their aesthetic innovations often produced exhilarating artistic triumphs. Among the works examined in this study are the circus posters of Jules Chéret, Thomas Couture’s Pierrot and Harlequin paintings, Honoré Daumier’s paintings, Edgar Degas’s , Édouard Manet’s , the pantomimes of the Hanlon-Lees troupe, and novels, short stories, and poems by Théodore de Banville, Edmond de Goncourt, J. K. Huysmans, Gustave Kahn, Jules Laforgue, Catulle Mendès, Octave Mirbeau, Jean Richepin, Edouard Rod, and Marcel Schwob.

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