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Ary Scheffer | Romantic painter


Ary Scheffer (10 February 1795 - 15 June 1858) was a Dutch**-French** Romantic painter.
  • Life
Scheffer was the son of Johan Bernard Scheffer (1765-1809), a portrait painter born in Homberg upon Ohm or Kassel who had moved to the Netherlands in his youth, and Cornelia Lamme (1769-1839), a portrait miniature painter and daughter of the Dordrecht landscape painter Arie Lamme, after whom Arij (later Ary) was named. He had two brothers, the journalist and writer Karel Arnold Scheffer (1796-1853) and the painter Hendrik Scheffer (1798-1862).




He was taught by his parents and attended the Amsterdam drawing academy from the age of 11. In 1808 his father became court painter of Louis Bonaparte in Amsterdam, but he died a year later. Encouraged by Willem Bilderdijk, he moved to Lille for further study after the death of his father. In 1811 he and his mother, who had a large influence on his career, moved to Paris, where he studied at the École des Beaux-Arts as a pupil of Pierre-Narcisse Guérin. His brothers followed them later.
Scheffer started exhibiting at the Salon de Paris from 1812 on. He started to become recognized in 1817 and in 1819 he was asked to make a portrait of the Marquis de Lafayette. Perhaps because of Lafayette's contacts, Scheffer and his brothers were politically active throughout their lives and he became a prominent Philhellene.
In 1830 Scheffer had a daughter Cornelia. He registered the name of her mother as Maria Johanna de Nes, but nothing is known about her and she may have died soon after Cornelia's birth. Considering that his own grandmother's name was Johanna de Nes, it has been speculated that he kept Cornelia's mother's name a secret not to compromise a noble family's reputation. Cornelia Scheffer (1830-1899) became a sculptor and painter in her own right. Scheffer's mother did not know of her namesake granddaughter until 1837, after which she took care of her until she died only two years later. Scheffer became associate member of the Royal Institute of the Netherlands in 1846, and resigned in 1851.




Scheffer was made commander of the Legion of Honour in 1848.
As a captain of the Garde Nationale he escorted the royal family in their escape from the Tuileries and escorted the Duchess d'Orléans to the Chambre des Députés where she in vain proposed her son to be the next monarch of France. Scheffer fought in the army of Cavaignac during the popular uprising in Paris, but he was so shocked by the cruelty and hatred from the government's side and the misery of the lower classes that he withdrew from political activity and refused to make portraits of the family of Napoléon III.
On March 16, 1850 he married Sophie Marin, the widow of General Baudrand, and on November 6 of that year he finally became a French citizen. He continued his frequent travels to the Netherlands, and made trips to Belgium, Germany and England, but a heart condition slowed him down and eventually ended his life in 1858 in his summer house in Argenteuil. He is buried in the Cimetière de Montmartre.




  • Works
When Scheffer left Guérin's studio, Romanticism had come into vogue in France, with such painters as Xavier Sigalon, Eugène Delacroix** and Théodore Géricault. Scheffer did not show much affinity with their work and developed his own style, which has been called "frigidly classical".
Scheffer often painted subjects from literature, especially the works of Dante, Byron and Goethe. Two versions of Dante and Beatrice have been preserved at Wolverhampton Art Gallery, United Kingdom, and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, US. Particularly highly praised was his Francesca da Rimini, painted in 1836. 
Scheffer's The Shades of Francesca di Rimini and Paolo Malatesta Appearing to Dante and Virgil illustrates a scene from Dante Alighieri's Inferno. In the piece the entwined bodies of Francesca di Rimini and Paolo Malatesta swirl around in the never-ending tempest that is the second circle of Hell.
The illusion of movement is created by the drapery that envelopes the couple, as well as by Francesca's flowing hair. These two figures create a diagonal line that intersects the majority of the canvas creating not only a sense of movement, but also giving the painting an air of instability. Francesca clings to Paolo as he turns his face away in anguish. There are an additional two figures in the image: hidden in the background, the poets Dante and Virgil look on as they make their way through the nine circles of Hell.
Scheffer's popular Faust-themed paintings include Margaret at her wheel; Faust doubting; Margaret at the Sabbat; Margaret leaving church; The garden walk, and Margaret at the well. In 1836, he painted two pictures of Goethe's character Mignon: Mignon desires her fatherland (1836), and Mignon yearns for heaven (1851).
He now turned to religious subjects: Christus Consolator (1836) was followed by Christus Remunerator, The shepherds led by the star (1837), The Magi laying down their crowns, Christ in the Garden of Olives, Christ bearing his Cross, Christ interred (1845), and St Augustine and Monica (1846).





One of the reduced versions of his Christus Consolator(the major work today to be found in the Van Gogh-museum, Amsterdam), lost for 70 years, was rediscovered in a janitor's closet in Gethsemane Lutheran Church in Dassel, Minnesota in 2007. It has been restored and is on display at the Minneapolis Institute of Arts.
Scheffer was also an accomplished portrait painter, finishing 500 portraits in total. His subjects included composers Frédéric Chopin and Franz Liszt, the Marquis de la Fayette, Pierre-Jean de Béranger, Alphonse de Lamartine, Charles Dickens, Duchess de Broglie, Talleyrand and Queen Marie Amélie.
After 1846, he ceased to exhibit. His strong ties with the royal family caused him to fall out of favour when, in 1848, the Second Republic came into being. Scheffer was made commander of the Legion of Honour in 1848, that is, after he had wholly withdrawn from the Salon. Shut up in his studio, he produced many paintings that were only exhibited after his death in 1858.
The works first exhibited posthumously include Sorrows of the earth, and the Angel announcing the Resurrection, which he had left unfinished. By the time of his death, his reputation was damaged: though his paintings were praised for their charm and facility, they were condemned for poor use of color and vapid sentiment.


















































































Ary Scheffer (Dordrecht, 10 febbraio 1795 - Argenteuil, 15 giugno 1858) è stato un pittore Olandese** naturalizzato Francese**.
  • Biografia
Sheffer era figlio di Johan Bernhard Scheffer, pittore di buon nome che, forse, lavorò per un anno alla corte del re d'Olanda Luigi Bonaparte. Due anni dopo la morte prematura di suo padre, avvenuta nel 1811, Ary si trasferì a Parigi con sua madre, donna di grande carattere, che lo fece accogliere nello studio di Pierre-Narcisse Guérin.
Sheffer lasciò l'atelier di Guérin proprio quando iniziava a diffondersi il movimento romantico. Iniziò la carriera nel 1819 con una mostra al Salon. Dopo questa prima uscita egli dovette tentare esperienze diverse per trovare la propria strada, anche perché gli insegnamenti ricevuti ed i suoi maestri di riferimento (Delacroix, Géricault, etc.) non lo aiutavano ad identificarsi con lo spirito romantico che iniziava a dominare la scena artistica francese. Il suo stile, infatti, era stato definito come "classicismo freddo". Prese allora a studiare Byron e Goethe, il cui Faust lo ispirò moltissimo.
Scheffer fu un eccellente ritrattista, come testimoniano tanti ritratti, fra cui quelli di Fryderyk Chopin e di Franz Liszt. Di fede protestante, egli si applicò comunque anche a soggetti religiosi di ispirazione cattolica. Poi, dopo il 1846, smise di esporre. Era stato legato strettamente alla famiglia reale (fu infatti professore di disegno di Maria d'Orléans) e ciò spiega la caduta della sua fama e il suo ritiro a vita privata nel 1848, con l'avvento della Seconda Repubblica.
Sempre nel 1848 fu promosso Commendatore della Legion d'Onore e nel 1850 assunse la cittadinanza francese.
Lo stesso anno, il 6 dicembre, sposò Sophie Marin, vedova di un suo amico. Rinchiuso nel suo studio, Scheffer continuò sempre a dipingere, finché la morte lo colse all'età di 63 anni mentre si trovava ad Argenteuil in Val d'Oise, di ritorno da un viaggio in Inghilterra durante il quale era stato colpito da un attacco cardiaco. Parigi gli ha dedicato una strada e la sua città natale una piazza con una statua commemorativa al centro.
Ary Scheffer, pur straniero e romantico della prima ora, riuscì a imporsi spesso fra i maestri della pittura romantica francese per la forte ispirazione mistica e sognante delle sue composizioni.