Hispagnolisme

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Certes (talk | contribs) at 19:15, 23 June 2020 (Disambiguating links to Fragonard (help needed) using DisamAssist.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Hispagnolisme (espagnolisme fr.) is the inordinate love of all things Spanish, a craze for which spread through French society, and much of the associated art world, in the 19th century.

Origins

Hispagnolisme first began to emerge in the 18th century, as seen in figures like Fragonard[disambiguation needed].[1] It received a powerful impetus from Napoleon's Spanish campaigns;[2] and took off fully in French society in and after the 1830s.[3]

Apex

Writers like Merimee, and musicians like Bizet,[4] profited from, and also helped foster, Hispagnolisme; as did such painters as Manet,[5] with his Spanish-derived masterpiece Le Déjeuner sur l’herbe.[6]

In Britain, hispagnolisme had an influence on artists such as Sargent.[7]

Hispagnolisme was still powerful enough in Paris at the close of the century for Pablo Picasso to finance his early stays there with pictures of bullfights and Spanish peasant themes.[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ D Sutton, Nocturne (1963) p. 21
  2. ^ 19thC Spanish fans
  3. ^ J Richardson, A Life of Picasso (London 1991) p. 153
  4. ^ J Richardson, A Life of Picasso (London 1991) p. 153
  5. ^ K Adler, Manet (1992) p. 11
  6. ^ J Golding, Visions of the Modern (1994) p. 112
  7. ^ C Baker, The Discovery of Spain (2009) p. 29
  8. ^ J Richardson, A Life of Picasso (London 1991) p. 178 and 195

Further reading

  • A F Gillard-Estrada, Beyond the Victorian/Modernist Divide (2018)

External links

Mary Cameron

espagnolism