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the ways of men-第21章

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 master's beautiful wife); now known as LA FEMME AU GANT; for  the Luxembourg Gallery。

It is difficult to overestimate the impetus that a master's  successes impart to the progress of his pupils。  My first  studious year in Paris had been passed in the shadow of an  elderly painter; who was comfortably dozing on the laurels of  thirty years before。  The change from that sleepy environment  to the vivid enthusiasm and dash of Carolus…Duran's studio was  like stepping out of a musty cloister into the warmth and  movement of a market…place。

Here; be it said in passing; lies perhaps the secret of the  dry rot that too often settles on our American art schools。   We; for some unknown reason; do not take the work of native  painters seriously; nor encourage them in proportion to their  merit。  In consequence they retain but a feeble hold upon  their pupils。

Carolus; handsome; young; successful; courted; was an ideal  leader for a band of ambitious; high…strung youths; repaying  their devotion with an untiring interest and lifting clever  and dull alike on the strong wings of his genius。  His visits  to the studio; on which his friend Henner often accompanied  him; were frequent and prolonged; certain Tuesdays being  especially appreciated by us; as they were set apart for his  criticism of original compositions。

When our sketches (the subject for which had been given out in  advance) were arranged; and we had seated ourselves in a big  half…circle on the floor; Carolus would install himself on a  tall stool; the one seat the studio boasted; and chat A PROPOS  of the works before him on composition; on classic art; on the  theories of color and clair…obscur。  Brilliant talks; inlaid  with much wit and incisive criticism; the memory of which must  linger in the minds of all who were fortunate enough to hear  them。  Nor was it to the studio alone that our master's  interest followed us。  He would drop in at the Louvre; when we  were copying there; and after some pleasant words of advice  and encouragement; lead us off for a stroll through the  galleries; interrupted by stations before his favorite  masterpieces。

So important has he always considered a constant study of  Renaissance art that recently; when about to commence his  TRIUMPH OF BACCHUS; Carolus copied one of Rubens's larger  canvases with all the naivete of a beginner。

An occasion soon presented itself for us to learn another side  of our trade by working with our master on a ceiling ordered  of him by the state for the Palace of the Luxembourg。  The  vast studios which the city of Paris provides on occasions of  this kind; with a liberality that should make our home  corporations reflect; are situated out beyond the Exhibition  buildings; in a curious; unfrequented quarter; ignored alike  by Parisians and tourists; where the city stores compromising  statues and the valuable debris of her many revolutions。   There; among throneless Napoleons and riderless bronze steeds;  we toiled for over six months side by side with our master; on  gigantic APOTHEOSIS OF MARIE DE MEDICIS; serving in turn as  painter and painted; and leaving the imprint of our hands and  the reflection of our faces scattered about the composition。   Day after day; when work was over; we would hoist the big  canvas by means of a system of ropes and pulleys; from a  perpendicular to the horizontal position it was to occupy  permanently; and then sit straining our necks and discussing  the progress of the work until the tardy spring twilight  warned us to depart。

The year 1877 brought Carolus…Duran the MEDAILLE D'HONNEUR; a  crowning recompense that set the atelier mad with delight。  We  immediately organized a great (but economical) banquet to  commemorate the event; over which our master presided; with  much modesty; considering the amount of incense we burned  before him; and the speeches we made。  One of our number even  burst into some very bad French verses; asserting that the  painters of the world in general fell back before him …


。 。 。 EPOUVANTES …  CRAIGNANT EGALEMENT SA BROSSE ET SON EPEE。


This allusion to his proficiency in fencing was considered  particularly neat; and became the favorite song of the studio;  to be howled in and out of season。

Curiously enough; there is always something in Carolus…Duran's  attitude when at work which recalls the swordsman。  With an  enormous palette in one hand and a brush in the other; he has  a way of planting himself in front of his sitter that is  amusingly suggestive of a duel。  His lithe body sways to and  fro; his fine leonine face quivers with the intense study of  his model; then with a sudden spring forward; a few rapid  touches are dashed on the canvas (like home strokes in the  enemy's weakest spot) with a precision of hand acquired only  by long years of fencing。

An order to paint the king and queen of Portugal was the next  step on the road to fame; another rung on the pleasant ladder  of success。  When this work was done the delighted sovereign  presented the painter with the order of 〃Christ of Portugal;〃  together with many other gifts; among which a caricature of  the master at work; signed by his sitter; is not the least  valued。

When the great schism occurred several years ago which rent  the art world of France; Carolus…Duran was elected vice… president of the new school under Meissonier; to whose office  he succeeded on that master's death; and now directs and  presides over the yearly exhibition known as the SALON DU  CHAMP DE MARS。

At his chateau near Paris or at Saint Raphael; on the  Mediterranean; the master lives; like Leonardo of old; the  existence of a grand seigneur; surrounded by his family;  innumerable guests; and the horses and dogs he loves; … a  group of which his ornate figure and expressive face form the  natural centre。  Each year he lives more away from the world;  but no more inspiriting sight can be imagined than the welcome  the president receives of a 〃varnishing〃 day; when he makes  his entry surrounded by his pupils。  The students cheer  themselves hoarse; and the public climbs on everything that  comes to hand to see him pass。  It is hard to realize then  that this is the same man who; not content with his youthful  progress; retired into an Italian monastery that he might  commune face to face with nature undisturbed。

The works of no other painter give me the same sensation of  quivering vitality; except the Velasquez in the Madrid Gallery  and; perhaps; Sargent at his best; and one feels all through  the American painter's work the influence of his first and  only master。

〃TOUT CE QUI N'EST PAS INDISPENSABLE EST NUISIBLE;〃 a phrase  which is often on Carolus…Duran's lips; may be taken as the  keynote of his work; where one finds a noble simplicity of  line and color scheme; an elimination of useless detail; a  contempt for tricks to enforce an effect; and above all a  comprehension and mastery of light; vitality; and texture …  those three unities of the painter's art … that bring his  canvases very near to those of his self…imposed Spanish  master。

Those who know the French painter's more important works and  his many splendid studies from the nude; feel it a pity 
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