Honore DAUMIER
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France 1808 - 1879
Realism
French painter and caricaturist, whose bold, dramatic paintings were largely devoted to everyday themes and contained a strong note of social protest.
Daumier was born in Marseille in 1808 and as a boy moved to Paris with his family. He worked in a law court and a bookshop and then studied art with a painter, at the Académie Suisse, and on his own. He began his career by making drawings for advertisements. He became a staff member of the comic journal, La Caricature, and became known for his bold, satirical political lithographs. One of these caricatures, published in 1832, showed Louis Philippe, king of France, as Gargantua and resulted in Daumier's imprisonment for six months. He later satirized bourgeois society in a series of lithographs published in the journal Le Charivari and returned to satirizing political subjects during the Revolution of 1848. His sculptures in plaster and bronze, used as models for his drawings of people, are much sought after by collectors and galleries.
Daumier was a skillful draftsman and extremely prolific, producing about 4000 lithographs during his career, as well as 300 drawings and 200 paintings. They include Republic and The Thieves and the Ass (Louvre, Paris) and The Uprising (Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.). Daumier had a great number of imitators, but none of them equaled the depth of his penetrating style. ...
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