- Cristi..... v'là-t-y un bœuf qui est bien fait!....... on jurerait qu'il est vivant....., j'vais prendre un billet de loterie et si je gagne ce tableau, je l'mettrons dans l'étable avec ma vache qui s'ennuie d'être toute seule...... ça lui fera un compagnon.
- Cristi..... v'là-t-y un bœuf qui est bien fait!....... on jurerait qu'il est vivant....., j'vais prendre un billet de loterie et si je gagne ce tableau, je l'mettrons dans l'étable avec ma vache qui s'ennuie d'être toute seule...... ça lui fera un compagnon.
Title (alt.):
- Christ..... there's a beef that's well-done!....... you'd swear he was alive....., I'm going to buy a lottery ticket and if I win this painting, I'll put it in the stable together with my cow who's bored being all alone...... it will make her good companion.. Charivari
Description:
A man says that the bull in a painting looks so real that he is going to buy a raffle ticket to try to win the painting. If he wins he says he will hang the painting in his barn to keep his cow company. L'EXPOSITION DE 1859, a series of 9 irregularly numbered prints which appeared in the CHARIVARI between April and June 1859. SALON. The SALON, the yearly art exhibitions in Paris, were actually art fairs which attracted approximately 1 million visitors from Paris and the provinces. Hundreds of painters and sculptors exhibited. The Salons were the ideal marketplace for the classical painters as well as the new, modern, avant-garde artists. Having little access to private art galleries, these exhibits were especially for the progressive school of greatest economic importance. The jury played an increasingly important role for the future of an artist. Once an artist was rejected from the Salon by a conservative jury, he had most likely no chance to succeed commercially. Very often, a parallel Salon was organized for those artists whose works were refused at the official exhibition . This was the case in 1855, when Courbet’s pictures were considered too revolutionary to be exhibited at the Salon. As a consequence, Courbet opened his own exhibition outside of the official Salon. Baudelaire made some remarks concerning the Salons: “During our time there are only two artists in Paris who are as able as Delacroix: the caricaturist Daumier and the second one is Ingres. All three of them have one thing in common: they express what they mean to say…..” The SALON was for most artists the only possibility to present their works to a greater public. The Salon of 1834 for example attracted some 30’000 visitors already on the opening day. During the entire period of two months, a total of one million spectators went to the show. On certain days the ticket price was reduced to 20 sous or was even free of charge, attracting a large number of visitors. During the World Fair, which lasted from May 15 to November 15, 1855 thousands of visitors from Paris and abroad as well as from the French provinces visited the Salons. The most important annual event for French painters was the great exhibition, the SALON. The artists worked up to the last moment to finish their paintings before the opening of the show. Since the SALON was open for all painters, the number of participants increased steadily: 1806 750 works of art 1831 3182 works of art 1848 5140 works of art 1870 5434 works of art
Copyright restrictions may apply. For permission to copy or use this image, contact the Robert D. Farber University Archives and Special Collections Department, Brandeis University Libraries. The following credit line must be included with each item used: Benjamin A. and Julia M. Trustman Collection of Honoré Daumier Lithographs, Robert D. Farber University Archives & Special Collections Department, Brandeis University.
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Place of origin:
Paris
Notes:
2nd state.
Published in: Le Charivari, May 4, 1859.
Notes (acquisition):
Donated by: Benjamin A. and Julia M. Trustman, 1959.