Geneviève Lacambre | |
Birth Place: | Paris, France |
Nationality: | French |
Occupation: | Curator |
Employer: | Musée national Gustave Moreau, Musée d'Orsay |
Geneviève Lacambre (born 1937) is a French honorary general curator of heritage, and has been the Chargée de mission at the Musée d'Orsay.[1]
Curator at the department of paintings of the Louvre Museum from 1965 to 1979, then at the Musée d'Orsay until 2002.[2] Lacambre has been for seventeen years director of the Musée national Gustave Moreau in Paris, from 1985 to 2002, a specialist of this Symbolist painter.[3] She has published numerous articles and exhibition catalogues on Gustave Moreau and the Symbolists. She authored French: Gustave Moreau : Maître sorcier (French: [[Découvertes Gallimard]], 1997) and organised the 1998 exhibition of Moreau at the Grand Palais in Paris before being presented in Chicago and New York.[4] In addition to Symbolism, she also curated an exhibition in 2017 where Japonisme is the theme.[5] [6] [7]
Italic Title: | Gustave Moreau : Maître sorcier |
French: Gustave Moreau : Maître sorcier | |
Author: | Geneviève Lacambre |
Title Orig: | Gustave Moreau : Maître sorcier |
Orig Lang Code: | fr |
Translator: | Benjamin Lifson |
Cover Artist: | Gustave Moreau |
Country: | France |
Language: | French |
Series: | Découvertes Gallimard●Peinture |
Release Number: | 312 |
Exclude Cover: | yes |
Subject: | Gustave Moreau |
Genre: | Nonfiction monograph |
Publisher: | FR: Éditions Gallimard US: Harry N. Abrams |
Pub Date: | 1997 |
English Pub Date: | 1999 |
Media Type: | Print (Paperback) |
Pages: | 128 pp. |
Isbn: | 978-2-070-53388-6 |
Oclc: | 37228980 |
Preceded By: | French: George Sand : Un diable de femme |
Followed By: | French: Le peuple hébreu : Entre la Bible et l'Histoire |
It is outside the modes of his time that Gustave Moreau, trained in Renaissance art traditions, elaborated a complex and decorative art style, which combines a deep knowledge of all mythologies with a high awareness of a painter's profession. Creator of a highly personal universe, where there is a passion for myths and mysticism—Salome, Orpheus, Oedipus and the Sphinx ...—dream and imagination, poetry and mystery.
Moreau was at the same time one of the forerunners of Symbolism and one of those who opened the way for modern art: he was teacher of Henri Matisse and Georges Rouault, and was fascinating to the later Surrealists who drunk on dreams. The Gustave Moreau Museum—created by the artist himself—contains all the secrets of this "master enchanter", who was happy to call himself an "assembler of dreams".
Geneviève Lacambre retraces Moreau's life and artistic sources in this small colourful volume—entitled French: Gustave Moreau : Maître sorcier (lit. 'Gustave Moreau: Master Enchanter'; English edition – Gustave Moreau: Magic and Symbols)—with more than 120 paintings, drawings, watercolours and photographs, and an anthology of documents and letters, published by Éditions Gallimard. It is part of the French: Peinture series in their French: [[Découvertes Gallimard|Découvertes]] collection. The book opens with seven full-page reproductions of Moreau's Jupiter and Semele and its details. The body text is divided into five chapters: I, "Uncertain Beginnings"; II, "In the School of Italy"; III, "A Hope for History Painting"; IV, "The Birth of Symbolism"; V, "A Message to Future Generations". The second part of this book is the "Documents" section containing a compilation of excerpts which is divided into five parts : 1, Moreau's writings; 2, Moreau's myths; 3, Novels and poems; 4, Critical perspectives; 5, A benevolent equal. At the end of the book are list of further reading, list of illustrations, and an index. It has been translated into American English and Japanese.