Lost Illusions (painting) explained

Lost Illusions
Medium:Oil on canvas
Artist:Charles Gleyre
Year:between 1865 and 1867
Height Metric:86.5
Width Metric:150.5
City:Paris
Museum:Louvre Museum

Lost Illusions (French: French: Illusions Perdues) is a painting by Charles Gleyre and his student Leon Dussart, commissioned by William Thompson Walters in 1865.

History

Charles Gleyre was known as an artist of classic methods but romantic tastes who often modified heroism into idyllic scenes. However, in execution he was not considered romantic, due to his use of pale colors, his delicate drawing style, and uncertain light.[1] At the 1843 Salon in Paris, Gleyre received praise for The Evening. In 1865 William T. Walters would commission a replica of the painting which was completed by Gleyre and Dussart and is now also known as Lost Illusions.[2]

Composition

Lost Illusions depicts a vision Gleyre experienced one evening while on the banks of the Nile. It represents a despondent scene and uses softened tones. In the scene, an aging poet watches as a mysterious "bark" drifts away with his youthful illusions. The illusions are represented by maidens playing instruments and a cupid scattering flowers.[3]

Off the Wall

Lost Illusions is featured in Off the Wall, an open-air exhibition on the streets of Baltimore, Maryland. A reproduction of the painting, the original of which is part of the Walters Art Museum collection, was displayed through January 2014 in O'Donnell Square.[4] The National Gallery in London began the concept of bringing art out of doors in 2007 and the Detroit Institute of Arts introduced the concept in the United States. The Off the Wall reproductions of the Walters' paintings are on weather-resistant vinyl and include a description of the painting and a QR code for smart phones.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Van Dyke, A Text-Book of the History of Painting, Forgotten Books, 2012, p. 155,
  2. Johnston, W., Nineteenth-Century Art: From Romanticism to Art Nouveau, The Walters Art Gallery, 2000, p. 76
  3. Johnston, W., Nineteenth-Century Art: From Romanticism to Art Nouveau, The Walters Art Gallery, 2000, p. 76-78
  4. Web site: Walters Art Museum - Off the Wall . 2012-10-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20121119005400/http://thewalters.org/offthewall/ . 2012-11-19 . dead .
  5. Smith, T., Walters Art Museum goes of the wall, The Baltimore Sun, September 11, 2012