词条 | Francis Bourgeois |
释义 |
In the late 18th century he became an art dealer and collector in association with Frenchman {{ill|Noël Desenfans|de}}. The pair were commissioned by Polish king Stanisław August Poniatowski to compile a collection of paintings, which they spent five years doing, but Stanisław's exile in 1795 meant the contract could not be completed and they were left with a large collection of paintings. Bourgeois outlived Desenfans and bequeathed the art to Dulwich College with an additional £2000 to build a permanent building to house it. This became the Dulwich Picture Gallery, England's first purpose-built public art gallery.[3] BiographyBourgeois was born in London in November 1753 (or, according to Royal Academy records, in 1756). He was the son of Isaac Emanuel Bourgeois, a prosperous emigre Swiss watchmaker, and Elizabeth Bourgeois (née Gordon or Garden). He had a sister. In 1768, when he was fifteen, his mother died and he and his sister were abandoned by their father. Some time afterward he was taken into the protection of Noel Joseph Desenfans, a writer who had come from France to Britain in 1769. Bourgeois studied painting as a pupil of Philip James de Loutherbourg. In 1776, at the age of 23, Bourgeois made a tour of Europe. When in Warsaw he met bishop Michal Jerzy Poniatowski, primate of Poland and brother of the Polish king, Stanislaw II. In the same year, his protector Noel Desenfans married Margaret Morris, an heiress and sister of the Swansea industrialist, John Morris. By the 1780s Margaret and Noel Desenfans were collecting pictures and discreetly dealing. Bourgeois lived with them at their house in Charlotte (now Hallam) Street, London. In December 1787 Bourgeois was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy and was elected a full member on 11 February 1793, when he donated a landscape painting as his diploma work. In 1791 Bourgeois's friend, Michal Poniatowski visited London to commission Bourgeois to paint a portrait of the king Stanislaw (now in Dulwich Picture Gallery). For this Bourgeois was presented with the Polish medal "Merentibus", for which George III allowed him to use the title of 'Sir' in Britain. While in London Poniatowski asked Noel and Margaret Desenfans and Bourgeois to assemble a royal collection for Poland. During the next five years, Bourgeois joined Margaret and Noel Desenfans touring Europe and buying pictures and continued his own painting In 1794 he was appointed landscape-painter to George III. The collection assembled for King Stanislaw included works by Vernet, Rembrandt, Veronese, and others. In 1795 Desenfans was appointed Polish consul general in London, but a few months later Stanislaw was forced to abdicate and the dealers were left with the collection. Their attempts to sell it to Alexander I of Russia or the British Government proved unsuccessful and in 1799 Desenfans published a Plan[4] for establishing some national galleries in Britain, of which the collection might form a basis, and in 1802 he exhibited the collection in London with a sale Catalogue.[5] The collection remained unsold. Bourgeois shared the Desenfans' wish that the collection should be exhibited publicly, and when he died in 1811 he left it to Dulwich College with £10,000 to build a public gallery. Dulwich Picture Gallery - one of the first public art galleries anywhere in Britain was founded. The gallery was designed by Sir John Soane, who also designed the attached mausoleum, in which Bourgeois, Margaret Desenfans and Nöel Desenfans rest in sealed coffins (visible on request). His death was indirectly caused by a horse riding accident and came about when he refused to have his leg amputated and dismissed his physician. His body was later entombed in the Mausoleum of Dulwich Picture Gallery. A portrait of Bourgeois by William Beechey is in the collection of the National Portrait Gallery and another by James Northcote is at the Dulwich Picture Gallery. George Dance the Younger made a pencil portrait of him, and he is included in H. Singleton's The Royal Academicians in general assembly 1795 (at the Royal Academy of Arts, London). Family members of Francis Bourgeois included Victor H. Bourgeois (1864–1935) and Louise Forget-Bourgeois (1830–1914). Paintings{{commons category|Francis Bourgeois}}
Further reading
References1. ^{{cite book|author=Redgrave, Samuel|authorlink=Samuel Redgrave|chapter=Bourgeois, Sir Francis|title=A dictionary of artists of the English school|year=1878|pages=49–50|url=http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=gri.ark:/13960/t3613cq79;view=1up;seq=69}} 2. ^{{cite journal|title=SIR FRANCIS BOURGEOIS, R.A.|journal=The Art Journal|year=1891|volume=43|pages=344|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RbghAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA344}} 3. ^{{cite news |url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/art/art-news/8177412/The-history-of-Dulwich-Picture-Gallery.html |date=2 December 2010 |last=Dunn |first=Daisy |work=Daily Telegraph}} 4. ^N. J. Desenfans, A Plan, Preceded By A Short Review Of The Fine Arts, To Preserve Among Us, And To Transmit To Posterity, The Portraits Of The Most Distinguished Characters ... Also, To give Encouragement to British Artists, and to enrich and adorn London with some Galleries of Pictures, Statues ... Without any Expence to Government (1799) 5. ^A Descriptive Catalogue (With Remarks And Anecdotes Never Before Published In English) Of Some Pictures Of The Different Schools, Purchased For His Majesty The Late King Of Poland; Which will be exhibited early in 1802 ... By Noel Desenfans ... (2nd. ed., 2 vols. 1802) External links{{Commons category}}
15 : 1753 births|1811 deaths|18th-century English painters|English male painters|19th-century English painters|English landscape painters|Swiss landscape painters|18th-century Swiss painters|Swiss male painters|19th-century Swiss painters|Museum founders|Court painters|Royal Academicians|Art collectors|Dulwich Picture Gallery |
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