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Festivities in Honor of David

Festivities in Honor of David

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Elijah Fed by the Ravens

Elijah Fed by the Ravens

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David Slings The Stone

David Slings The Stone

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What Our Lord Saw from the Cross

What Our Lord Saw from the Cross

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Daniel in the Lions Den

Daniel in the Lions Den

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By the Waters of Babel

By the Waters of Babel

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A Holy Woman Wipes the Face of Jesus

A Holy Woman Wipes the Face of Jesus

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Kunstdrucke von James Tissot

Collection: Art prints by James Tissot

James Tissot was a Franco-British painter and is considered one of the most fascinating and idiosyncratic chroniclers of upper-class life in the late 19th century. He was born in Nantes in 1836 and received his artistic training at the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris, where he came into contact with artists such as Edgar Degas and James McNeill Whistler, who had a lasting influence on his thinking about painting. His interest in the depiction of elegant society, fashionable dress and the subtle nuances of social interaction, which would inform all of his later work, became apparent early on.

In his early works, Tissot devoted himself primarily to historical and literary subjects as well as scenes of Parisian social life, which he depicted with a precision and sense of detail that quickly made him famous. After the Franco-Prussian War and the Paris Commune, he fled to London in 1871, where he quickly established himself as a sought-after painter among the English upper classes. These London years became one of the most productive periods of his career: he painted the elegant society of the Victorian era at garden parties, regattas, visits to the theater and boat trips on the Thames with an immediacy and richness of detail that makes his paintings priceless documents of a vanished era.

A central feature of Tissot's work became the combination of meticulous observation and subtle narrative tension. His depictions of elegant women in lavish toilets against the backdrop of modern city life are famous - scenes that at first glance appear glossy and light-hearted, but on closer inspection are imbued with an underlying ambiguity and psychological depth. These works reveal his masterful ability to depict the surface of social life with a precision that simultaneously fascinates and unsettles, celebrating the glitter of wealth and hinting at its hollowness. His depictions of women on ship decks and in harbor scenes in particular are among the most impressive achievements of 19th century European genre painting.

After the death of his lover Kathleen Newton in 1882, Tissot returned to Paris, where a deep personal and religious crisis triggered a complete reorientation of his work. He turned increasingly to religious themes and undertook several trips to the Holy Land to study the scenes of the life of Jesus and biblical history first-hand. The result was a monumental cycle of watercolors on the life of Jesus and the Old Testament, which caused an enormous stir when it was exhibited and attracted a broad international audience. This religious late phase of his work stands in striking contrast to his secular social paintings, but bears witness to the same precision of observation and intensity of execution that characterizes his entire oeuvre.

James Tissot died in Buillon, France, in 1902, leaving behind a body of work of remarkable thematic range and technical virtuosity. In the course of the 20th century, like many representatives of academic genre painting, he temporarily fell into the shadow of modernism. In recent decades, his work has undergone an extraordinary rediscovery. Today, James Tissot is regarded as one of the sharpest and most elegant observers of Victorian and Belle Époque society, whose works are represented in the major museums of Europe and North America and are highly valued on the international art market.