Jean-Joseph Weerts
b. 1846, Roubaix, northern France
d. 1927, Paris

Dominique Jean-Baptiste Hugues (1849–1930) in his Studio

1890

Oil on panel
73.1 x 58.5 cm (28 3/4 x 23 1/8 in.) With frame: 88.3 x 73.3 cm ( 34 3/4 x 29 in.)

Provenance
Private collection, United Kingdom.
Literature
F. Javel, "Salon de 1890", in L'Art français: revue illustrée hebdomadaire, 1890, p. 21.
P. Kjellberg, Les Bronzes du XIXe Siecle, (Dictionnaire des sculpteurs) c. 1980.
Catalogue sommaire illustré des sculpteurs du Musée d'Orsay, Paris, RMN, 1986, no. 175, as Jean-Baptiste Hugues: Oedipe Ó Colone, illustrated.
D. Lobstein, Défense et illustration de l'impressionisme: Ernest Hoschedé et son "Brelan de salons", 1890, Dijon, 2008, p. 47, illustrated.
Description

Born to Belgian parents in the city of Roubaix in northern France, Jean-Joseph Weerts initially trained under Constantin Mils in Roubaix and later entered the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where he studied with Isidore Pils and Alexandre Cabanel. Weerts made his debut at the Salon debut in 1869 and charted a course as a successful portrait and history painter. Noted for their verisimilitude, his portraits included leading political and society figures, notably of sitters such as Doumer, Chaumie, Robert-Fleury, and Liard. Among Weerts’ most famous works is his 1880 depiction of L'assassinat de Marat (The Assassination of Marat), now in the collection of the Musée d’Art et d’Industrie, Roubaix. He also decorated with paintings the arches in the community hall at the Hôtel de Ville in Paris, the ceilings in Limoges city hall, the Hôtel de la Monnaie (the Mint) and the Sorbonne where he painted Le Lendit Fair.


Praised by the critics at the Salon in 1890, Weerts’s portrait of Dominique Jean-Baptiste Hugues (1849–1930) shows the sculptor at ease in his studio, leaning against his marble sculpture Oedipus à Colone (Oedipus at Colonus). A pupil of Dumont and Bonassieux, Hugues first exhibited his sculptural work at the Salon in Paris in 1878 and went on to win numerous national awards. Hugues’s grand sculpture of Oedipus, shown in the final days of his life as related by the tragedian Sophocles in his final Theban play entitled Oedipus at Colonus, was completed in 1885, and was later exhibited at the Musées nationaux in 1888, the Musée du Luxembourg in 1890 and the Musée du Louvre in 1931. Today, it can be found at the Musée d'Orsay, Paris (inv. no. RF 842, LUX 128).


As for the other sculptures featured in the painting, in the foreground to the left of the artist is a bronze bust of a woman, which can be identified with a work Hugues realised in 1879, during his stay at Villa Medici, the French Academy in Rome (current whereabouts unknown). In the left background is Hugues’s plaster cast of Bailly prononçant le serment du Jeu de Paume (Bailly Taking the Oath of the Jeu de Paume), executed in 1788 and now lost. In anticipation of the centenary of the French Revolution, many artists took up the subject of Jean-Sylvain Bailly (1736 –1793), the first mayor of Paris, whom Hugues showed together with two compatriots, evoking the ire of some critics, who felt he had degraded the heroic, historic figure by creating “un trio de l’opéra-comique.”


The present portrait was made in response to a bronze bust Hugues had made of Weerts, exhibited at the Salon in 1884 (current whereabouts unknown). Executed in warm and subtle tones of brown and cream, the painting gives a vivid impression of the array of objects in the busy studio. Hugues is surrounded by sculpted figures at different scales, drawing the viewer’s eye around the composition.


The artwork described above is subject to changes in availability and price without prior notice. Where applicable ARR will be added.

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