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Please cite this page by using the following URL/DOI:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.71008#0327
DOI issue:
Nr. 2
DOI article:Artykuły
DOI article:Zgórniak, Marek: Matejko jako przedstawiciel szkoły Fortuny'ego: Uwagi Edmonda About o Salonie 1874
DOI Page / Citation link:https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.71008#0327
Matejko jako przedstawiciel szkoły Fortuny'ego
321
Matejko As a Representative of Fortuny 's School.
Edmond About 's Remarks on the 1874 Salon
The works dating from the 1870s of Jan Matejko
(1838-93) are discussed, particularly his large-size
painting Batory (1872, Royal Castle in Warsaw),
displayed in Paris in 1874. Departing from Edmond
About's review, in which the critic ranked Matejko
among the disciples of Mariano Fortuny (1838-
1874), the Author recalls the Paris reception of
Fortuny and of the painters from his circle; including
among the latter Henri Regnault whose Salome, one
of the most popular works at the 1870 Salon, drew
Matejko's attention during his third stay in Paris.
The tendency to lighten the palette and realistically
render details bring Matejko closer to this informal
school. However, his inclination to apply large-size
canvases and aspiration to achieve historical
synthesis differ the Polish painter from Fortuny's
pure visualism and preciosity. More features in
common are found in Matejko's works and the
oeuvre of some French painters (Regnault, Georges
Clairin).
Translated by Magdalena Iwińska
321
Matejko As a Representative of Fortuny 's School.
Edmond About 's Remarks on the 1874 Salon
The works dating from the 1870s of Jan Matejko
(1838-93) are discussed, particularly his large-size
painting Batory (1872, Royal Castle in Warsaw),
displayed in Paris in 1874. Departing from Edmond
About's review, in which the critic ranked Matejko
among the disciples of Mariano Fortuny (1838-
1874), the Author recalls the Paris reception of
Fortuny and of the painters from his circle; including
among the latter Henri Regnault whose Salome, one
of the most popular works at the 1870 Salon, drew
Matejko's attention during his third stay in Paris.
The tendency to lighten the palette and realistically
render details bring Matejko closer to this informal
school. However, his inclination to apply large-size
canvases and aspiration to achieve historical
synthesis differ the Polish painter from Fortuny's
pure visualism and preciosity. More features in
common are found in Matejko's works and the
oeuvre of some French painters (Regnault, Georges
Clairin).
Translated by Magdalena Iwińska