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* [[Abigail May Alcott Nieriker]] |
* [[Abigail May Alcott Nieriker]] |
Revision as of 13:00, 26 September 2016
The Académie Julian (French pronunciation: [akademi ʒyljɑ̃]) was an art school in Paris, France, active 1868-1968, whereafter it integrated with fr .
History
Rodolphe Julian established the Académie Julian in 1868 at the Passage des Panoramas, as a private studio school for art students.[1] The Académie Julian not only prepared students to the exams at the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts, but offered independent training in arts. At that time, women were not allowed to enroll for study to the École des Beaux-Arts, but the new Académie Julian accepted them, providing an alternative education and training. Men and women were trained separately, and women participated in the same studies as men, including the basis of art training – drawing and painting of nude models.[2]
Like its counterpart, the Académie Colarossi, it was popular with French as well as foreign students from all over the world, particularly Americans.[3] Eventually, Académie Julian students were granted the right to compete for the Prix de Rome, a prize awarded to promising young artists.[4]
The longstanding success of the Academie was secured by the famous and respected artists whom Rodolfo Julian employed as instructors: Adolphe William Bouguereau (1825–1905), Henri Royer, Jean-Paul Laurens, Edgar Chahine, Gabriel Ferrier, Tony Robert-Fleury, Jules Lefebvre and other leading artists of that time, mainly exponents of the academic style.
Over time, Académie Julian opened schools in other locations. In addition to the original school at Passage des Panoramas, studios were at no.28 Boulevard St-Jacques in the 6th arrondissement of Paris, no.5 fr in the 8th arrondissement, no. 31 fr in the 6th arrondissement, no. 51, fr in the 2nd arrondissement accepting female student artists as of 1880.
In 1888–89, Les Nabis originated as a rebellious group of young student artists who banded together at the Académie Julian.[1]
Académie Julian integrated with fr in 1968.[5]
Notable professors
See also Category:Faculty of the Académie Julian Template:Multicol
- Marcel Baschet
- Jean-Joseph Benjamin-Constant
- William Bouguereau[6]
- Gustave Boulanger[6]
- Jules Cavaillès
- Henri Chapu
- Constant Detré
- Étienne Dinet
- François Flameng
- Marcel Gimond
- Jean-Paul Laurens
- Jules Joseph Lefebvre[6]
- Tony Robert-Fleury[6]
Notable students
See also Category:Alumni of the Académie Julian
- Abigail May Alcott Nieriker
- Mirra Alfassa[7]
- Joseph Allworthy
- Mathias Alten
- Ion Andreescu
- Boris Anrep
- Thomas Anshutz
- Athanase Apartis (1899–1972)
- Jean ArpCite error: The
<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). - Will Ashton
- John Noble Barlow
- William Barr
- William Barribal[8]
- Charles W. Bartlett
- Marie Bashkirtseff[2]
- Rebeca Matte Bello[9]
- John William Beatty[10]
- Cecilia Beaux[2]
- Xu Beihong
- Eugène Béjot
- Shmuel Ben David
- Enella Benedict[11]
- Frank W. Benson[2]
- Thomas Hart BentonCite error: The
<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). - Ricardo Acevedo Bernal
- Émile Bernard[3]
- Alan Best
- Robert Polhill Bevan
- Anna Bilińska-Bohdanowicz[2]
- Pierre Bonnard[4]
- Gutzon Borglum
- Louise Bourgeois[1]
- Louise Breslau[2]
- Frank Budgen
- Francis Cadell
- George Francis Carline
- Adolphe Mouron Cassandre
- Edgar Chahine
- Robert W. Chambers
- Benjamen Chinn
- Tarsila do Amaral
- Alson Clark[2]
- Pierre Clerk
- Griffith Baily Coale
- Colin Campbell Cooper
- William Cotton[3]
- Jean Crotti
- Maurice Cullen [12]
- Charles Courtney Curran
- Lucien Daudet
- José de Creeft
- Guy de Montlaur
- Ernest de Saisset
- Walter Lofthouse Dean
- Jenny Eakin Delony
- Maurice Denis[4]
- Charles Demuth
- André Derain
- Emilie Desjeux
- Wynford Dewhurst
- Thomas Wilmer Dewing[2]
- Étienne Dinet
- Arthur Wesley Dow
- Jean Dubuffet
- Marcel Duchamp[3]
- Georges Dufrénoy
- Thomas Cantrell Dugdale
- Frank Vincent DuMond[13]
- Anne Dunn
- John Elliott
- Frederick William Elwell
- Lydia Field Emmet
- Jesús María Espinosa
- Birgitta Moran Farmer [14]
- Herbert Cyrus Farnum
- Eric Forbes-Robertson
- Frederick Carl Frieseke
- Sears Gallagher
- Akseli (Axel) Gallén-Kallela
- Leon Gaspard
- Kahlil Gibran
- Georges Gimel
- Luc Giraud
- Eric Goldberg
- C. F. Goldie
- Constance Gore-Booth
- Alexander Grinager
- Sir James Gunn
- Pekka Halonen
- Pop Hart
- Archibald Standish Hartrick
- Edmund Arthur Harvey
- Ida C. Haskell
- Childe HassamCite error: The
<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). - Theodore Haupt
- Louis Welden Hawkins
- Stanley William Hayter
- K. K. Hebbar
- Robert Henri[2]
- Paul HenryCite error: The
<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). - Adelia Maud Herdman (won Prix de l'Academie)
- René Georges Hermann-Paul
- Albert Herter
- D. Howard Hitchcock
- Jack Hooper[15]
- Charles Sydney Hopkinson
- Richard Jack
- A.Y. Jackson[16]
- Frances Benjamin Johnston
- Alfred Garth Jones
- Amédée Joullin
- Stanisława de Karłowska
- Barry Kay
- Augustus Kenderdine
- William Kennedy[17]
- Charles H. M. Kerr[18]
- Fernand Khnopff[3]
- Mati Klarwein
- Anna Elizabeth Klumpke
- Torleif S. Knaphus
- Ludwik Konarzewski
- Käthe Kollwitz[2]
- Albert Henry Krehbiel
- Shanu Lahiri [19]
- Eugene Lanceray
- John St Helier Lander
- Olaf Lange
- Jacques Henri Lartigue
- John Lavery
- Mary Lawrence
- Georges Emile Lebacq
- Fernand Léger[3]
- Sabine Lepsius
- Gisèle Lestrange
- J. C. Leyendecker[2]
- Flora Lion
- Jacques LipchitzCite error: The
<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). - Ștefan Luchian
- John Goodwin Lyman
- Stanton Macdonald-Wright
- William Brown Macdougall
- Jacques Majorelle
- Vahram Manavyan
- Alexander Mann
- Harrington Mann
- Ödön Márffy
- Johannes Martini
- Arthur Frank Mathews[2]
- Henri Matisse[4]
- Robert Bledsoe Mayfield
- Gari Melchers[2]
- Willard Metcalf
- Arturo Michelena
- Richard E. Miller
- George Augustus Moore
- Harry Morley
- James Wilson Morrice[20]
- Alfons Mucha
- Albert H. Munsell[21]
- Ismael Nery
- Ernest Normand
- Jacques Ochs
- Alfred Henry O'Keeffe
- Aina Onabolu
- Omar Onsi
- Sara Page
- Abel Pann
- Irene E. Parmelee
- William McGregor Paxton
- Waldo Peirce
- Sophie Pemberton
- Lilla Cabot Perry
- Bert Geer Phillips
- Robert Wakeham Pilot
- Henry Varnum Poor
- Edward Clark Potter
- H. Septimus Power[22]
- Maurice Prendergast[23]
- Norman Mills Price
- Sarah PurserCite error: The
<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). - Hovsep Pushman
- Henrietta Rae
- Robert Rauschenberg
- Edward Willis Redfield
- Granville Redmond[2]
- Robert Reid
- Camil Ressu
- Diego RiveraCite error: The
<ref>
tag has too many names (see the help page). - Henri-Pierre Roché[24]
- Oscar Rodríguez Naranjo[25]
- Cristóbal Rojas
- Georgios Roilos
- Guy Rose[2]
- William Rothenstein
- Ker-Xavier Roussel
- Pierre Roy
- Alexander Rummler
- Chauncey Foster Ryder
- Alexander Sachal
- Tito Salas
- John Singer Sargent[2]
- Rudolf Scharpf
- Hans Schuler
- René Schützenberger
- Guillaume Seignac
- Paul Sérusier
- Ernest Thompson Seton
- Joseph Henry Sharp[2]
- Aleksandr Shevchenko
- William Posey Silva
- Edward Simmons
- Charles Walter Simpson
- Max Slevogt[3]
- Yngvar Sonnichsen
- Arthur Watson Sparks
- Edward Steichen[3]
- John Storrs
- August Suter
- Marc-Aurèle de Foy Suzor-Coté
- Arthur Szyk
- Allen Butler Talcott
- Henry Ossawa Tanner
- Edmund C. Tarbell[2]
- Madge Tennent
- William B. T. Trego
- John Henry Twachtman[2]
- Hans Unger
- Artus Van Briggle
- Lucretia Van Horn
- Fanny Vandegrift
- János Vaszary
- Jacques Villon
- Eliseu Visconti
- Édouard Vuillard[4]
- William T. Warrener
- Rob Wagner
- Frederic Whiting
- Terrick Williams
- Walter Withers
- Beatrice Wood[26]
- Grant Wood
- Martha Dewing Woodward
- Pang Xunqin
- Cabot Yerxa[27]
Notes
- ^ a b c Tate Gallery, "Académie Julian."
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Farmer, J. David. "Overcoming All Obstacles: The Women of the Académie Julian," California Art Club. April/May, 2000.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Russell, John. "An Art School That Also Taught Life," New York Times. 19 March 1989.
- ^ a b c d e Chilvers, Ian, ed. (2004). "Académie," Oxford Dictionary of Art, p. 5–6., p. 5, at Google Books
- ^ penninghen.com, historique, From Académie Jullian to ESAG Penninghen
- ^ a b c d Collier, Peter; Lethbridge, Robert (1994). Artistic Relations: Literature and the Visual Arts in Nineteenth-century France. London: Yale University Press. p. 50. ISBN 9780300060096.
- ^ "The Mother". sriaurobindoashram.org. 2013. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
- ^ Gosling, Lucinda (2008). Brushes & Bayonets: Cartoons, Sketches & Paintings of World War I. Oxford: Osprey Publishing. p. 200. ISBN 978-1-84603-095-6.
- ^ Grove Art Online
- ^ Reid, Dennis R. (1988). A Concise History of Canadian Painting, p. 139.
- ^ Ganz, Cheryl R. (2001). Women Building Chicago 1790-1990. Indiana University Press. p. 75.
- ^ Montiège, Samuel.(2011).""Papyrus, Université de Montréal"
- ^ http://www.societyillustrators.org/Awards-and-Competitions/Distinguished-Educator/Current-Honorees/Frank-Vincent-DuMond.aspx
- ^ Birgitta Moran Farmer 1906 Diary and Letters, Owned by Family.
- ^ von Hartmann, Gene (1975). Jack Hooper: Works from the Jane and Peter G. Arnovick Collection with Additional Works Lent by the Artist. Felton, CA: Big Trees Press. pp. 14–15. OCLC 21545828. Retrieved 11 April 2016.
- ^ Reid, p. 243.
- ^ McConkey, Kenneth (1 January 1995). Impressionism in Britain. Yale University Press. p. 142. Retrieved 6 November 2014.
- ^ "Charles Henry Malcolm Kerr - Tate". Tate.
- ^ "Shanu Lahiri dead". The Telegraph (Calcutta). Retrieved 15 March 2013.
- ^ Cloutier, Nicole. "Morrice, James Wilson," Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- ^ Nickerson, Dorothy. (1940). History of the Munsell Color System and its Scientific Application, p. 575.
- ^ Holden, Robert. (1988). "Power, Harold Septimus (1877–1951)," Australian Dictionary of Biography Online
- ^ Mathews, Nancy Mowll (1993). Charles Prendergast. Williamstown, MA.: Williams College Museum of Art. p. 10. ISBN 0-913697-16-8.
- ^ Lake, Carlton and Linda Ashton. (1991). Henri-Pierre Roché: an Introduction, p. 190.
- ^ Archivo de Arte y Cultura Julio de 2006 – Luto por Rodríguez Naranjo
- ^ Smith, Roberta. "Beatrice Wood, 105, Potter And Mama of Dada, Is Dead," New York Times. 14 March 1998.
- ^ "Cabot the Man". Cabot's Pueblo Museum.
References
- Reid, Dennis R. (1988). A Concise History of Canadian Painting. Toronto: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-540664-1; ISBN 978-0-19-540663-4; OCLC 18378555