Monday, September 4, 2023

Artist of the Day, September 4, 2023: Fernand Khnopff, a Belgian symbolist painter, draftsman, photographer, sculptor, and writer. (#1896)

 Fernand Khnopff (1858-1921), was a Belgian painter, draftsman, photographer, sculptor, and writer associated with Symbolism and known best for his paintings that blend precise realism with an ethereal dreamlike atmosphere.

Khnopff came from an affluent family and was one of three siblings. When he was a child, his family lived for a time in the medieval Belgian city of Brugge, a place that would appear in many of his works later in life. Otherwise he was raised in Brussels and spent summers in the country in Fosset, Belgium, another place that he would later paint. In 1875 he set out to study law at the Free University of Brussels, but within a year he left to study art and literature at that city’s Royal Academy of Fine Arts. There he studied painting with Xavier Mellery. Throughout his years at the academy, Khnopff spent his summers in Paris to broaden his studies in the arts, and at the 1878 Exposition Universelle (world’s fair) he discovered works by Pre-Raphaelite Edward Burne-Jones and by Symbolist Gustave Moreau, artists who would have a major impact on the direction of his painting career. He began exhibiting (mostly landscapes) in 1881 with the Belgian exhibition society called L’Essor, and by 1882 he was showing his own Symbolist works, many of which had subjects that were inspired by literature, especially by the writings of Gustave Flaubert. He soon found the support of poet Émile Verhaeren, who went on to connect Khnopff to the writers and poets of La Jeune Belgique, Brussels’s avant-garde literary review that led to a movement of the same name.

In 1883 Khnopff became a founding member of the Belgian avant-garde artists’ group Les Vingt, which at its founding included 19 other artists, James Ensor among them. Khnopff created notable works such as Listening to Schumann (1883), After Joséphin Péladan: The Supreme Vice (c. 1884), and In Fosset. An Evening (1886).

By the time Les Vingt dissolved in 1893, Khnopff’s career had taken off. While holding a firm position within the avant-garde circles of Brussels, he also became known as a portraitist of the city’s elite. His best-known portraits from that period include Portrait of Jeanne Kéfer (1885), Portrait of Marie Monnom (1887), Portrait of Jeanne de Bauer (1890), Portrait of the Children of Louis Nève (1893), and two portraits of his sister, Marguerite (1887 and 1896). Khnopff used his sister as a model repeatedly, often working from his photographs of her. Two works from 1891—Who Shall Deliver Me? (Christina Georgina Rossetti) and I Lock My Door upon Myself—point to Khnopff’s interest in poetry, in this case that of British poet Christina Rossetti. In 1896 he painted The Caresses (The Sphinx), his best-known work. The painting’s subject is an interpretation of Moreau’s Oedipus and the Sphinx (1864) and features a hybrid human-leopard nestled next to an androgynous Oedipus.

Between 1900 and 1902 Khnopff designed a lavish house and studio for himself at 41 rue des Courses in Brussels. During the decade beginning in 1903, he collaborated regularly with Brussels opera house Théâtre Royal de la Monnaie, designing costumes, scenery, and sets for many productions. He also decorated interiors for landmark buildings in Brussels: Stoclet House and the Hôtel de Ville, Saint-Gilles. In his paintings, drawings, photographs, and sculptures of the 1900s, he continued to focus on mythological subjects and themes of introspection, memory, temptation, and mystery. Reflecting an ongoing interest in dreams and sleep, he turned to the Greek god of sleep Hypnos numerous times as a subject in his paintings and sculptures. Through the early 1910s he exhibited widely throughout Europe to great acclaim. Khnopff stayed in Brussels during World War I (1914–18), and, though his health and eyesight were declining, he taught painting classes, wrote on art and artists, and continued to create his own works.

© 2023. All content on this blog is protected by international copyright laws All images are copyrighted © by Fernand Khnopff  or assignee. Apart from fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright Act, the use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained. All images used for illustrative purposes only

 Fernand Khnopff
  Listening to Music by Schumann, 1883
  The Game Warden, 1883
A Portrait of a Standing Girl in White, 1884
 Portrait of Jeanne Kéfer, 1885
Gabrielle Braun, 1886
  Study of Women, 1887
Marie Monnom, 1887
Portrait of Marguerite Khnopff, 1887
  Memory of Flanders, 1889
In Fosset, Rain, 1890
Study of a Woman 1890-92
 I lock my door upon myself, 1891
 Defiance, 1893
 The Children of Monsieur Nève, 1893
Portrait of Madame Botte, 1896
 Caress of the Sphinx, 1896
 Posthumous Portrait of Marguerite Landuyt, 1896
In Fosset, a Stream, 1897
  Wierook Incense, 1898
Futur, 1898
 The Reflection 1902
  In Bruges. A Portal, 1904
 Interior of a Church in Brugge, 1904
The Abandoned City, 1904
 The Virgin (after Botticelli) 1909
Nude Study, 1910
Mary von Stuck, 1916
Clématis
Memories
 

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