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Louis Boilly's Reading of the XIth and XIIth Bulletins of the Grande Armée

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  • 7/23/2019 Louis Boilly's Reading of the XIth and XIIth Bulletins of the Grande Arme

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    Deutscher Kunstverlag GmbH Munchen Berlin is collaborating with JSTOR to digitize, preserve and extend access to

    Zeitschrift fr Kunstgeschichte.

    http://www.jstor.org

    Louis Boilly's Reading of the XIth and XIIth Bulletins of the Grande ArmeAuthor(s): Albert BoimeSource: Zeitschrift fr Kunstgeschichte, 54. Bd., H. 3 (1991), pp. 374-387Published by: Deutscher Kunstverlag GmbH Munchen BerlinStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1482579Accessed: 19-08-2015 20:27 UTC

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  • 7/23/2019 Louis Boilly's Reading of the XIth and XIIth Bulletins of the Grande Arme

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    Albert Boime

    Louis

    Boilly's Reading

    of the

    XIth and

    XIIth

    Bulletins

    of

    the GrandeArmre

    The

    little known

    paintingby Louis-L6opold

    Boilly

    ntitled a

    lecture u

    Bulletin e a

    Grande

    Armie,

    recently cquired by

    the St. Louis

    Art

    Museum,

    s one ofthe rtist's

    mostunusual

    works

    both

    for

    ts

    exceptional lace

    n

    his

    repertoire

    nd

    for

    ts

    singular

    ubject Fig.

    )'.

    Dated

    1807

    nd

    exhibited t the Salon the

    following ear,

    t

    pro-

    vides a rare

    glimpse

    nto the

    domestic

    mpact

    f

    the

    Napoleonic

    wars.

    Even more

    extraordinary,

    it

    focuses

    on

    an artisanal

    milieu2,

    hus

    telling

    s

    something

    bout

    Napoleon's

    attempt

    o

    win the

    laboring eopleto his sidedespite hefact hathis

    military

    ampaigns

    ost heir

    amilies

    half

    million

    casualties nd forced

    many

    women nto

    nevitable

    celibacy.

    Boilly's ong

    life

    panned

    the

    years

    1761

    -

    1845,

    beginning

    ith

    his

    maturation

    nder heOld

    Re-

    gime,

    hen

    his successive

    xperience

    f the

    rauma

    of the

    Revolution,

    he rise of

    Napoleon,

    the Re-

    storation f the

    Bourbons,

    nd

    finally,

    evolution

    again

    in

    1830.

    These

    years

    witnessed drastic

    changes n culturecorrespondingo the social

    shifts,

    nd

    Boilly struggled

    o

    keep pace

    with he

    developing

    aste.His

    first ork nvolved senti-

    mental,

    moralizing,

    ildly

    rotic

    mphasis sually

    exhibiting

    oignant

    motional tates haracteristic

    of the Old

    Regime.

    Eventually

    e

    established

    is

    reputation

    orhis numerous

    ortraits

    f the

    spir-

    ingbourgeoisie

    nd nteriorcenes f

    everday

    ife

    done nmodest

    ize,

    these ast

    occasionally

    epre-

    senting

    exually uggestive

    hemesbut

    now in-

    fluenced

    y 17th-century

    utch models

    nd tend-

    ing

    toward

    greater bjectivity

    nd

    ournalistic

    e-

    portage.Boilly

    worked

    for a

    popular

    market

    y

    ordering rints

    f his

    paintings

    r

    otherwise

    l-

    lowing

    them o be

    reproduced

    nd

    circulated

    n

    the

    public

    domain.

    Ultimately,

    hese

    found heir

    way

    into the

    humble

    ottage

    s well as luxurious

    apartments

    f

    the

    period.

    He

    produced rapidly

    andprolificallyo accommodate hegrowingmar-

    ket

    for his

    work. His

    longevity

    nd enormous

    output

    reveal the

    progressive

    volution

    n

    taste

    towards realism that marks the ascendance of

    the

    middle class

    during

    he

    time

    of

    Bonapartist

    France3.

    The

    subject

    f he t.Louis ArtMuseum's

    picture

    is

    an

    unusual alon

    representation

    f

    thedomestic

    lifeof the

    working

    lasses

    during

    he

    Napoleonic

    era.

    n

    addition

    o the

    theme,

    he

    genre

    omposi-

    tionuniquely resentstself s a series f ymbolic

    vignettes

    urrounding

    central onvulsive ction

    growing

    ut of

    family

    trife.

    he

    majority

    f the

    workswith

    Bonapartist

    hemes

    hown t

    the

    emi-

    annual

    alons,

    whether

    fficially

    ommissionedr

    independently

    onceived,

    end to

    display

    heroic

    projections

    of the

    emperor, bigger-than-life

    I want

    o

    express

    my

    gratitude

    o Susan

    Siegfried

    nd

    Judith

    W. Mann fortheir

    enerous elp

    with

    deas,

    sources,

    nd

    photographs

    n

    theformationf this rti-

    cle. am also

    grateful

    o

    EdwardBerenson

    orhis

    n-

    sightfuluggestions

    n

    Napoleonic

    omesticife.Oth-

    ers thathave made

    lluminatinguggestions

    re

    Joni

    Kinsey,Angela

    Miller,

    nd Lawrence

    teefle,

    r.

    For

    the

    revious

    iterature

    n this

    work

    ee

    H.

    Harisse,

    L.-L.

    Boilly, eintre,

    essinateur

    t

    ithographe:

    a

    vie

    et

    son

    ceuvre

    76i-I845,

    aris

    1898,

    1,

    No.

    34;

    A. Mabille

    de

    Poncheville,

    oilly,

    Paris

    1931,

    16;

    M.

    Delafond,

    Louis

    Boilly

    1761-1845,

    Musee

    Marmottan,

    aris

    1984,

    o8.

    2

    The unadorned nteriornd

    rolled-up

    leeves

    f the

    central

    igure oint

    unmistakably

    o

    an

    artisanal

    n-

    terior.

    he cream f the

    working

    lass

    or thebottom

    of the

    bourgeoisie,

    he killed rtisan

    as a literatend

    oftentimes

    ntrepreneurial-minded

    radesman.

    He

    could fford

    he

    heapplaster

    astof

    Napoleon

    on the

    fireplace

    antle.

    3

    For the

    two?manners

    f

    Boilly

    eeM.

    N.

    Benisovitch,

    >Une

    autobiographie

    u

    peintre

    ouis

    Boilly,? ssays

    in

    Honor

    of

    Hans

    Tietze,

    88a-1954,

    eds.

    E.

    Gombrich,

    J.

    S.

    Held,

    O.

    Kurz,

    Paris

    958, 66;

    J.

    .

    Hallam,

    >The

    Two Manners f

    Louis-L6opold

    Boilly

    and French

    Genre

    Painting

    n

    Transition,?

    he

    Art

    Bulletin,

    ol.

    63, 981, 18-633.

    or

    Boilly's

    usiness

    nterests

    n a later

    period

    ee

    S. L.

    Siegfried,

    >The

    Artist s

    Nomadic

    Ca-

    pitalist:

    he

    Case

    of

    Louis-L6opold

    oilly,?

    Art

    His-

    tory,

    ol.

    13,

    December

    1990,

    516-541.

    374

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    i. Louis-L6opoldBoilly,La Lecturedu Bulletinde la GrandeArmee, 807.

    The

    Saint

    ouis ArtMuseum.Mr. nd Mrs.

    R.

    Crosby

    Kemper

    through

    he

    CrosbyKemper

    oundations

    characterizations

    estined

    o awe his enemies

    nd

    assure

    his followers.

    xamples

    re the

    Coronation

    of

    the

    Emperor

    nd The

    Baron

    Gros's Battle

    of

    Eylau,

    both of whichwere also shown

    n

    the

    8o8

    Salon. When

    heoccasional cenes f domestic ife

    are

    depicted,

    s for

    example

    he work of Martin

    Drolling, hey

    xhibit he table nvironmentnd

    harmoniousnteriors f thebourgeoisie.During

    the

    fifteen

    ears

    hathe ruled

    n

    France,

    Napoleon

    held on to

    his

    power

    by

    almostcontinuouswar

    with France's enemies nd he

    mobilizedthe arts

    to construct

    self-image

    f both nvincible ero

    and

    caring

    uler.

    His

    centralized ontrol

    over the media

    predis-

    posed

    artists o

    attempt

    o

    gain

    recognition

    nd

    awards

    n

    the official xhibitions nown as the

    salons

    by

    flattering

    im.

    Boilly

    was a

    politically

    shrewd

    painter,

    who had

    previously ainted

    an

    imageof the Triumph f Marat - the popular

    Jacobin

    hero

    when he was at riskof

    falling

    ut

    of favorwiththe

    revolutionary

    egime4.

    he son

    of a

    carpenter

    nd

    baker's

    daughter,

    oilly

    was a

    4

    M.

    Marmottan,

    e

    peintre

    .

    Boilly,

    aris

    1913,

    8ff.;

    A.

    Boime,

    Art n an

    Age of

    Revolution,

    hicago

    1987,

    457-458.

    his

    hesis

    as

    recently

    ontested

    y

    Susan

    Siegfried

    ho

    uggests

    different

    nterpretation

    nd

    amplifies

    he ontext

    nwhich

    he

    work

    wasdone. ee

    S.

    L.

    Siegfried,

    >Reconsideration

    u

    >Marat>charming>Napoleon

    decore

    uatre

    rtistesEmpire

    franqaise,>practicalWomen,

    ducation

    f,?

    His-

    torical

    ictionary fNapoleonic

    rance,

    o8-5II.

    386

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    was

    a

    common

    practice

    f

    Boilly

    to add animals

    in

    his

    picture

    o

    complement

    henarrative

    motifs13.

    The

    Civil

    Code

    -

    the Code

    Napoleon

    promulg-

    ated

    n

    1804

    -

    declared

    mastery

    or hehead of

    the

    household and

    accorded

    nferior tatus

    for

    wo-

    men.

    The father

    was

    assigned

    almost

    despoiic

    powerover thefamily.Womenhad no political

    rights,

    nd husbands

    were bound to

    carefor heir

    wives'

    needs.

    Wives,

    n

    turn,

    had to reside

    with

    theirhusbands

    nd

    could be forced

    y

    the

    police

    to return

    home.

    A wife owes

    obedience to her

    husband

    ust

    as a citizen

    owes obedience

    to

    the

    emperor.

    Women's

    place

    was

    in the

    home,

    where

    they

    wore everal ats:

    wife, over,

    nd

    companion

    to offer

    dvice

    and

    listen;

    nd

    mother,

    o

    instill

    virtues

    nd raise children

    orthe

    progress

    f the

    nation.Napoleon imposedon French ocietyhis

    view

    that

    women must

    be

    treated

    s

    irreponsible

    minors

    hroughout

    heir ives.

    He once told the

    son

    of

    Madame

    de

    Stael

    hat

    >woman

    hould

    tick

    to

    knitting,governs

    us as

    a

    father,