Jean François PORTAELS
Portrait of the artist Alexandre Robert in the roman campagna, 1844
Oil on canvas
50 x 60 cm
65 x 75 cm (with the frame)
65 x 75 cm (with the frame)
Signed, dated, and dedicated lower left: J. Portaels / to his Friend and Traveling Companion Alessandro Robert, ROME 1844.On the verso: exhibition label En route, Musée Félicien Rops, 24/05 – 28/09/2014
Provenance
En route, Musée Félicien Rops, 2014, p. 51
Exhibitions
En route, Musée Félicien Rops, 2014
Jean-François Portaels was a central figure in 19th-century Belgian painting, closely associated with an academic style open to new influences. While undoubtedly academic in his figure construction and drawing, the artist distinguishes himself through a freer and more luminous palette compared to the neoclassical tradition. In this sense, he anticipates certain sensibilities later developed by Belgian Realism and Impressionism, without fully adhering to either movement. Best known for his historical and Orientalist painting, the genre for which he is best known, and for his key role in training a new generation of artists in Belgium. As director of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Ghent (1847) and later, in 1863, as a professor at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels (where he later assumed the role of director in 1878), Portaels passed on this international openness to subsequent generations, contributing to the renewal of Belgian art at the end of the century.
Trained at the Academy of Fine Arts in Brussels, Portaels won the Prix de Rome in 1842, a decisive experience that led him to travel extensively in Italy, Greece, and the Middle East. His journeys around the Mediterranean also fostered a lasting interest in Orientalism. He spent a prolonged period in Italy, where he studied classical and Renaissance art, refining both his drawing and his sense of composition. The Italian experience profoundly influenced his pictorial language, which combines formal rigor with a sensitive use of color. It is precisely in Italy that the painting presented here is set, in which Jean-François Portaels portrays his dear friend and travel companion Alexandre Robert (Belgium, 1817–1890). Both pupils of François-Joseph Navez at the Brussels Academy, the two artists departed for the traditional Italian journey in 1843.
In 1844, the artists painted each other, reclining in the Roman countryside, commemorating both their friendship and their shared experience in Italy. Robert’s pose, as captured by Portaels, recalls the famous portrait of Goethe in the Roman countryside by Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein, painted in 1787 and currently held at the Städel Museum in Frankfurt (Fig. 1). In his correspondence with his master, Robert described this double portrait: “Nous sommes couchés dans la campagne de Rome, dans notre costume pittoresque, avec armes et bagages, pendant un moment de repos.”/“We are lying in the Roman countryside, in our picturesque costume, with arms and luggage, during a moment of rest.”
In 1844, the artists painted each other, reclining in the Roman countryside, commemorating both their friendship and their shared experience in Italy. Robert’s pose, as captured by Portaels, recalls the famous portrait of Goethe in the Roman countryside by Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein, painted in 1787 and currently held at the Städel Museum in Frankfurt (Fig. 1). In his correspondence with his master, Robert described this double portrait: “Nous sommes couchés dans la campagne de Rome, dans notre costume pittoresque, avec armes et bagages, pendant un moment de repos.”/“We are lying in the Roman countryside, in our picturesque costume, with arms and luggage, during a moment of rest.”
Portaels demonstrates great technical finesse in his treatment of the figure, both solid and supple, and in his luminous rendering of the Lazio landscape, broad and airy. The work unites portrait, genre scene, and landscape, revealing a mature balance between observation from life and academic construction. Alexandre Robert was also depicted in another celebrated painting, today on display at the Royal Museum of Fine Arts Antwerp (Fig. 2). In 1901, Herman Richir (Belgium, 1866–1942), another Belgian artist, paid tribute to the great painter with a portrait that preserves the same somatic features. The shape of the eyes, the gaze, the moustache, and the goatee remain identical to those in Portaels’ Roman painting, executed when Robert was only twenty-seven.
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Fig. 1 - Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein |
Fig. 2 - Herman Richir (1866–1942) Portrait of the painter Alexandre Robert, 1901 |
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