Artist: Jean-Jacques Henner (French, 1829-1905)
Medium: Hand pulled copper plate etching on laid paper after the original oil on canvas by master etcher Mademoiselle Poynot.
Signature: Signed in the plate, lower left.
Dimensions: Image Size 8 7/8 x 11 5/8 inches.
Framed Dimensions: Approximately 18 x 21 inches.
Framing: This piece has been professionally matted and framed using all new materials.
Everyone who is acquainted with modern French art knows the characteristics of Henner’s work —its strong oppositions of light and dark spaces, its generally somber, yet rich, coloring, and its peculiarly fine technical qualities of style, including a morbidezza like that of certain old masters. In the serenity of his artistic temper, and in the artistic purpose independently of the simple imitation of nature, Henner recalls the times when art rested on its own foundations, and had not been called to account by literature and science.
Jean-Jacques Henner was a French painter, noted for his use of sfumato and chiaroscuro in painting nudes, religious subjects, and portraits. Henner was born at Bernwiller (Alsace). He began his studies in art as a pupil of Michel Martin Drolling and François-Édouard Picot. In 1848, he entered the École des Beaux Arts in Paris, and took the Prix de Rome with a painting of Adam and Eve finding the Body of Abel in 1858. In Rome, he was guided by Flandrin, and painted four pictures for the gallery at Colmar among other works. He first exhibited Bather Asleep at the Salon in 1863 and subsequently contributed Chaste Susanna (1865), now in the Musée d’Orsay. Other noted works include: Byblis turned into a Spring (1867); The Magdalene (1878); Portrait of M. Hayem (1878); Christ Entombed (1879); Saint Jerome (1881); Herodias (1887); A Study (1891); Christ in His Shroud and a Portrait of Carolus-Duran (1896); a Portrait of Mlle Fouquier (1897); and The Dream (1900). The Levite of the Tribe of Ephraim (1898) was awarded a first-class medal. Among other professional distinctions, Henner also took a Grand Prix for painting at the Paris Exposition Universelle of 1900. He was made Chevalier of the Legion of Honour in 1873, Officer in 1878, and Commander in 1889. In 1889, he succeeded Cabanel in the Institut de France. Henner died at age 76 in Paris.