Pierre-Auguste Renoir
Pierre-Auguste Renoir (
February 25,
1841 -
December 3,
1919) was a preeminent French
painter.

Pierre-Auguste Renoir was born in
Limoges,
Haute-Vienne,
France, the child of a
working class family. As a boy, he worked in a
porcelain factory where his interest in painting led to him painting designs on china. In
1862 he studied
art in
Paris, where he met
Alfred Sisley,
Frederic Bazille and
Claude Monet.
His initial paintings were influenced by the artistry of
Eugene Delacroix and his close friend Monet who helped Renoir found the
Impressionism movement. He would go on to become one of the greatest painters of his time. Today his paintings are probably the most popular, well-known, and frequently reproduced images in the history of art.
Although Renoir had his first exhibit of paintings in
1864 he did not gain any real recognition for another ten years due to the turmoil in Paris as a result of the
Franco-Prussian War. During the
Paris Commune in
1871, Pierre-Auguste Renoir was arrested as a government spy. His life was saved when he was recognized by one of the Commune leaders, whom Renoir had himself protected on another occasion. In the mid
1870s, the first exhibition was held for the new impressionist painters and Renoir gained his first great acclaim.
While living and working in
Montmartre, he would have an affair with one of his
models,
Suzanne Valadon who would become one of the leading female artists of the day. He would later marry Aline Victorine Charigot, with whom he would have three sons, one of which,
Jean Renoir, would become an important filmmaker. After marriage, his work changed when he became very much family oriented and was equally as interested in painting individual or family portraits as he was in landscapes.
One of the most famous impressionist works by any painter, is his
1876 Le Bal au Moulin de la Galette (Dance at Le Moulin de la Galette), an open-air scene, jammed with people, of a popular dance garden on the Butte Montmartre not far from where he had been living. (
See photo below.)
In
1881 he traveled to
Algeria, a country he associated with Eugene Delacroix, then to
Madrid, Spain to see the work of
Diego Velazquez and then to
Italy to see
Titian's masterpieces in
Florence and the paintings of
Raphael in
Rome. On
January 15,
1882 Renoir met composer
Richard Wagner at his home in
Palermo,
Sicily. Renoir painted Wagner's portait in just 35 minutes.
One of the most prolific artists ever, over a 60 year period, Pierre-Auguste Renoir made several thousand paintings. Even during the last 20 years of his life when he was severely hampered by
arthritis and wheelchair-bound. He moved to the warmer climate of Cagnes-sur-Mer not far from
Nice on the
Mediterranean Sea and continued to paint by using a brush strapped to his arm. He even created
sculptures, dictating to an assistant who worked the clay.
In 1919, Renoir had the extraordinary experience of visiting the
Louvre to see his paintings hanging with the old masters.
Pierre-Auguste Renoir died in the village of Cagnes-sur-Mer,
Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur, on
December 3,
1919.
Renoir has had two paintings sell for more than US$70 million. Below is a photo of one that sold for US$78.1 million.
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| Le Bal au Moulin de la Galette |
Other selected works:\n*
Mademoiselle Romaine Lacaux (1864)\n*
La Promenade (1870)\n*
Monet Painting in His Garden at Argenteuil (1873)\n*
La Loge (1874) \n*
Woman with Fan (1875) \n*
The Swing (1875)\n*
Lunch at the Restaurant Fournaise (The Rowers' Lunch) (1875)\n*
Girl with a Watering Can (1876)\n*
Madame Charpentier and Her Children (1878)\n*
Jeanne Samary (1879) \n*
Acrobats at the Circus Fernando (1879)\n*
On the Terrace (1881)\n*
The Luncheon of the Boating Party (1881)\n*
The Piazza San Marco, Venice (1881)\n*
Blonde Bather (1881)\n*
By the Seashore (1883)\n*
Umbrellas (1883)\n*

(1885)\n*
Bathers (1887)\n*
The Apple Sellers (1890)\n*
Two Girls at the Piano (1892)\n*
Vase of Chrysanthemums (1895)\n*
Coco (1905)\n*
The Farm at Les Collettes, Cagnes (1908-1914)\n*
The Concert (1918)
\nRenoir, Pierre-Auguste
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