Small Business Resources, Business Advice and Forms from AllBusiness.com

The Private Lives Of The Impressionists

By Roe, Sue
Publication: Kirkus Reviews
Date: Friday, September 1 2006
Group portrait of the French artists linked by shifting alliances who emerged in the 1860s, endured parody and ridicule before triumphing at their first New York City exhibition in 1886 and enjoy towering reputations (and prices) today.

In his late 70s, near death but

still painting, Renoir reportedly said of his profession, "I think I am beginning to understand something about it." His words could serve as an epigraph for this fine synthesis of a remarkable movement and its principals. It took decades for professional art critics and the public to accept the work of Manet, Monet, Degas, Czanne and the other astonishingly talented artists who, for survival's sake, first formed a loose coalition, then actually wrote and signed a (short-lived) charter. Poet and novelist Roe has written about the art world before (Gwen John: A Painter's Life, 2001) and here shows evidence of having read the significant biographies of both major and minor players (many quotations are tertiary) and of walking the ground the notables once trod. The title suggests titillation and does not disappoint, with its frank account of the subjects' financial and personal struggles, loves and losses. But she also deals with the era's political, economic and military developments. The Franco-Prussian War of 1870 had a particularly powerful impact on the artists; a number of them ran toward the fray, and one of their number, Bazille, died in battle. Roe has plucked from her subjects' lives many engaging and poignant stories: Renoir's escape from a firing squad, Manet's fascination with feet (and his death from syphilis), the savage reviews the group endured from critic Albert Wolff, Degas's struggles with his sculpture of a young dancer. The author properly emphasizes the pivotal role played by art-dealer Paul Durand-Ruel, who believed in the Impressionists from the start and dedicated his life to their cause—and financial solvency.

Intelligent and well-crafted portraits of some of history's most intriguing geniuses.

In addition, make sure to read these articles:

  • BOMBAY SAPPHIRE(R) Gin Launches Career of Emerging Designer Michael Kritzer.
  • Michael Kritzer and His Martini Glass Palletini, Takes First Place in 4(th) Annual U.S. BOMBAY SAPPHIRE Designer Glass Competition. the Winner Was Selected by Design ......
  • Three New York City Area Youth Volunteers Win TopHonors in National Awards Program.
  • New York and New Jersey students earn $1,000 awards, engraved silver medallions and trip to nation's capital U.S. Senators John Kerry and Chuck Hagel to ......
  • The New York Times Names Gerald Marzorati Assistant Managing Editor.
  • NEW YORK -- The New York Times announced today that Gerald Marzorati, editor of The New York Times Magazine, has been named to the ......
  • Ohio Angels
  • A quietly lyrical debut about a young woman coming to terms with family and mortality. Hallie Greaves has long since arrived at that point in ......
  • Grandes Horizontales
  • For her writing debut, translator and editor Rounding has picked a spicy topic: four notorious courtesans who plied their trade during the Second Empire (1852–70)....
  • A Matter Of Dignity
  • Edifying portraits of activists, therapists, technicians, and others working to help the disabled participate more fully in mainstream American life. Potok, a painter and writer ......
  • Lucky Us
  • Silber's acutely observed fourth (In My Other Life, 2000, etc.) follows the trail of emotions left behind an HIV diagnosis as it touches the lives ......
  • The Road To Verdun
  • From the author of Occupation (1998), a splendid account of the WWI battle that raged for more than nine months and claimed more than 300,000 ......
  • Cri de Coeur: the revolution will be televised.
  • LA COMMUNE FIRST RUN/ICARUS FILMS The two reporters, both clutching microphones and staring earnestly into the camera, crouch behind the barricades and whisper questions to ......
  • Painting American
  • A thoughtfully conceived, well-executed study of France's influence on American art—and vice versa. In 1867, writes French cultural-affairs journalist Cohen-Solal (Sartre, not reviewed), cultured Europeans ......
  • A Painter's Reward. (Keeping your edge).
  • WHO? Virgil R. Carter WHAT? Executive Director WHERE? Project Management Institute, Newton, Pennsylvania WHEN? Since 1997 Q: When and why were you attracted to painting?...
  • Einstein's Clocks, Poincaré's Maps
  • The problem of synchronizing timepieces was a preoccupation of many turn-of-the-century scientists, writes Galison (History of Science/Harvard; Image and Logic, not reviewed), and notable among ......
  • The Judgment Of Paris
  • King, a novelist (Domino, 2002, etc.) and art historian (Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling, 2003, etc.), has crafted an exciting chronicle about political and cultural ......
  • Gwen John
  • British novelist and poet Roe (The Spitfire Factory, not reviewed, etc.) pens a well-tempered, bracing biography of the painter too often trivialized as Augustus John's ......
  • Recommended Books: Janet Fish
  • This gorgeous book accompanied a show of Janet Fish's work at DC Moore Gallery in New York City last February. The quality of the reproductions ......