Add this site to your favorites Go to Remedios Varo Art Home Page  
  Always Free Shipping and Friendly Service.  
The Fine Art of Oil Paintings and Canvas Gilcees for the Home or the Workplace
Satisfying Customers since 2002 Over 10,000 Paintings Sold
 

We offer 5 star quality artwork from professional artists at affordable prices. Each order is made just for you.

  • Fast Worldwide Shipping
  • Over 10,000 Paintings Sold
  • Secure Online Ordering
  • We Paint on Demand
  • All Major Credit Cards Accepted
  • 24 Hour Customer Service

Are you looking for that hard to find painting? We can make it especially for you. No job is to small.

Make the right choice the first time you buy a painting online. From start to finish always a smooth transaction.

Read our testimonials
View Original vs Reproduction

paypal logo

 

 

 

Jacques Tissot French Painter, 1836-1902James Joseph Jacques Tissot [French Painter, 1836-1902]

 

Biography

Tissot is famous for his exquisite paintings of beautiful English women and most people think he was English. In fact Jacques-Joseph Tissot was born in Nantes, then a thriving port on the Loire estuary in western France. He adopted the name James as an anglicized form when living in England.

His friends were Manet and Degas, with whom he shared a teacher in the painting school in Paris. Not a lot is known of his personal life except that around 1876 a mysterious attractive lady begins to appear in his pictures. Her identity remained a mystery until well into this century. Her name was Kathleen Newton, née Kelly. Her father, an Irish army officer, arranged the marriage of his convent-educated daughter when she was only 17, sending her off to India to marry a certain Isaac Newton, a surgeon in the Indian Civil Service. On the ship, however, she fell in love with a Captain Palliser, but only confessed this to Newton after their wedding on 3rd of January 1871. Newton's response was to divorce her immediately.

Decree nisi was granted on the 20th December the same year. Kathleen had returned to England by then and on the same day gave birth to her daughter by Captain Palliser. We do not know exactly when or where Tissot met and fell in love with her, but we do know that in March 1871 she gave birth to another child, believed to be Tissot's son. This of course was regarded as scandalous behavior in those days and was kept secret by Kathleen's family until quite recently. (continued on the bottom)

IMAGES ARE COMPRESSED FOR FASTER LOADING

 

 
A Little Nimrod by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
Captain Frederick Gustavus by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
Hide and Seek by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
The Bridesmaid by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
The Bunch of Lilacs by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
The Garden Bench by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
The Picnic by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
The Thames by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
Spring by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
The Annunciation by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
Un Dejeuner by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
Young Lady in a Boat by James Joseph Jacques Tissot
     
     

Don't see the painting you are looking for. We can paint it for you. No job is to small. Email Us

 

In 1876 Kathleen Newton and her two children moved into Tissot's house and remained there until her death from consumption in 1882. She was only 28. For Tissot, the time spent with Kathleen was the happiest period in his life, and one which he was to look back on longingly for the rest of his days.

Finding the thought of life in London intolerable without her, he decided to leave at once. Within only five days of her death he abandoned the house, leaving his paints, brushes and some unfinished canvases behind him, and returned to Paris. Later he sold the house to his friend Alma-Tadema.

He carried on painting the fashionable society for three years after arriving in Paris, but from 1885 until his death in 1902 became very religious and spent the last 17 years living as a recluse painting religious pictures.

During his eleven years in London Tissot enjoyed great artistic and financial success and produced most of his finest work. Unlike some of the artists whose talents are only appreciated after their death, Tissot's pictures were loved and bought by his contemporaries and sold for very high prices.

Despite his success in England, however, the French persisted in regarding him as a minor artist and dismissed his work as being "too English" ! And curiously, he is one of the few painters who has not "gone out of fashion". He appeals to us today as much as he did to the people who saw his pictures at his first exhibitions.

His paintings are so genuinely charming and beautiful. The contrast between the dazzling elegance and complexity of Victorian dress and the drab practicality of modern attire arouses feelings of nostalgia. He painted beautiful society ladies taking tea in conservatories, having picnics by ornamental pools, taking trips on boats and going to balls and concerts.
Kathleen Newton was a model for many of his paintings. We can see he adored her totally and loved to paint not just her pretty face, but also to dwell on her dresses, pleats, ribbons, bows and hats. He had not only a great artistic talent, but also an eye for style and a feeling for chic.

The second reason for his enduring popularity could be that although the people in his pictures are so elegant and pretty that they could have been lifeless models out of fashion magazines, they are yet very human. Every picture tells a story. The pictures of his Mrs. Newton and her children exude an atmosphere of genuine domestic happiness.

Some pictures project a mood of unmistakable tension and unease. His pretty heroines seem lonely and frustrated. They gaze at the spectator with stares full of suppressed restlessness and boredom. Although apparently engaged in harmless and innocent diversions, they seem to be trapped behind the bars of an invisible cage.

 

 

           
The Fine Art of Oil Painting for the Home or the Workplace - Always Fast and Free Delivery