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RAFFAELLI, Jean-Francois

Jean François Raffaelli grew up initially studying singing and acting. But at the age of twenty began to paint. He was very talented and had immediate success. His first teacher was the highly acclaimed painter and instructor Gerome. In fact, Raffaelli’s first entry to the salons in 1870 was to become one of his most famous and highly accredited works. It was the painting Guests Waiting for the Wedding. During that exhibition the naturalist writers noted him; specifically Emile Zola became an admirer and a protagonist of Raffaelli’s. Ironically his formal training actually came after he won acclaim in 1870 and even then he only studied formally for three months in 1871.

Raffaelli’s style was clearly different from most of the Impressionist painters yet he was invited to participate in the 1880 and 1881 Salons due to the sponsorship of Edgar Degas. In fact in 1881 he had more paintings in the show than any other painter.

Although his works in the Impressionist salons aroused the attention of critics who showered Raffaelli with much attention and praise, he didn’t fare as well with his fellow artists. Gaugin and Guillamin both issued a public declaration that if Raffaelli were included in 1882’s exhibition, they would not show their work. History may have treated Raffaelli much differently had this not taken place!

Raffaelli’s subject matter is equally as interesting today as it was during his lifetime. His philosophical bent and naturalistic tendencies can be interpreted to show a highly evolved and quite futuristic thinker. His observations of the absinthe drinkers and rag-pickers, chiffonnières as they were dubbed at the time, are still extremely poignant today. Raffaelli keenly observed life in the suburbs of Paris where he had taken residence. He was an ecologist of sorts. He documented various aspects of a changing reality. Unlike most other artists of the day, who were observing landscapes and city streets, Raffaelli noted the effects of the changing urban landscapes and the effects it had on peoples’ lives. Where there had been farms, albeit quite barren land due it having been worked so often due to its proximity to Paris, there were now urban developments and factories. The Chiffonnière who may have been a tenant farmer or even a small landowner was now scavenging rags to be gathered from house to house and then sold to be recycled into sacks or paper. He keenly portrayed the underside of the prosperity gained from the industrial revolution.

During the 1890’s, at the height of his career, his works enjoyed even greater acceptance and brought him increased prosperity, evidenced by his light-hearted scenes of Parisian monuments and boulevards.

By the early 1900s his primary work was printmaking in color. In the 1890s he had co-founded the French Society of Color Etching with Mary Cassatt and Camille Pissarro. He introduced a new technique in printmaking whereby up to five plates were used to create a drypoint etching.

Raffaelli died in 1924 after a long and illustrious career. His paintings hang today in major museums throughout the world, reminding us not only of his tremendous originality, but also his extraordinary efforts as a color etcher. All told Raffaelli executed one hundred and eighty-three original prints. He is a great example of the painter-printmaker.


Museum collections include:

  • ·     Musee d’Orsay, Paris
  • ·     Musee Marmottan-Monet, Paris
  • ·     Musee Rodin, Paris 
  • ·     Musee national du Château de Versailles 
  • ·     Musee de la Chartreuse, Douai 
  • ·     Musee des Beaux-Arts, Lyon 
  • ·     Musee des Beaux-Arts, Nancy 
  • ·     Musee des Beaux-Arts, Agen
  • ·     Palais des Beaux-Arts, Lille 
  • ·     Musee Fabre, Montepellier
  • ·     Musee du Petit Palais, Paris 
  • ·     Musee Carnavalet, Paris 
  • ·     Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY
  • ·     Maryhill Museum of Fine Arts, WA
  • ·     Goteborg Art Gallery, Sweden
  • ·     Museum of Pictorial Art, Leipzig, Germany
  • ·     Ball State University Art Gallery, , IN
  • ·     Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY
  • ·     Melton Park Gallery, Oklahoma City, OK
  • ·     National Gallery, Oslo, Norway
  • ·     Kroller-Muller National Museum, Netherlands
  • ·     John G. Johnson Collection, PA
  • ·     Phoenix Art Museum, AZ
  • ·     Telfair Academy of Arts and Science, GA
  • ·     Municipal Museum of Fine Arts, Argentina
  • ·     National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
  • ·     Museum of Fine Arts, Boston,
  • ·     Louvre, Paris
  • ·     Musee de la Princerie, Verdun
  • ·     Mairie de Le Quesnoy
  • ·     Musee des Beaux-Arts, Reims
  • ·     Musee des Beaux-Arts, Nantes
  • ·     Musee d‘Art moderne et d’Art, Liege
  • ·     Musee des Beaux-Arts, Pau
  • ·     Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam
  • ·     Pret de la Fondation Willem van der Vorm
Collection particuliere :
  • ·         Prêt de la Beadleston Gallery, New York 
  • ·         Maison de Victor Hugo, Paris 
  • ·         Musee de Grenoble 
  • ·         Dublin National Gallery 
  • ·         Musee des Beaux-Arts, Nice 
  • ·         Musee d’Árt et d’Histoire, Saint-Denis
  • ·         Musee des Beaux-Arts, Tourcoing 
  • ·         Museum Voor Schone Kunsten, Gand
  • ·         Singer Museum, Laren
  • ·         L’Isle-Adam, Musee Louis Senlecq
  • ·         Musee des Jacobins, Morlaix
  • ·         Musee des Beaux-Arts, Bordeaux
  •          Musee des Beaux-Arts, Beziers
  • ·         Bibliotheque Nationale de France
  • ·         Bibliothèque de l’Ínstitut de France, Paris


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