| Sitemap | |||||||||||||||||
|
|
John La Farge 1860-1945 American Tonalist Painter, Muralist, Stained Glass, Interior Designer and Illustrator Stylistically influenced by the following painters and movements - Symbolism, The Pre-Raphaelites, George Inness, Thomas Couture, Gabriel Dante Rossetti and John Everett Millais Education - studied under Thomas Couture and later with William Morris Hunt Cause of Death - Old Age
About the Artist John La Farge was the greatest landscape painter of the tonalist movement and one of the most productive artists of the late nineteenth century. Artistically trained under Thomas Couture in Paris, he was accomplished in stained glass, murals and interior design. La Farge is recognized for helping to create a solid foundation for fine art in America. John La Farge Quotation
"The
past, though it cannot be
relived, can always be
repaired." Description of the Tonalist Painting Style and Technique Tonalism is rooted in the French Barbizon movement, which emphasized atmosphere and shadow. The Tonalist style employs a distinctive technique by the use of color's middle values as opposed to stronger contrast and high chroma. Resulting in a understated and compelling overall effect. The tonalist subject matter is never entirely apparent; their is no effort to communicate a message or narrate a story. Instead of relating a story, each sensitively chosen color, composition, and line is arranged to create an intriguing visual poem. The interiors of tonalist paintings are generally elegant and sparsely decorated, tonally uniform, simplified and indistinct; the figures are usually presented alone in silent contemplation. Landscapes are typically luscious and luminous with evocative atmospheric effects featuring misty backgrounds illuminated by moonlight. Tonalists painters were drawn to both the natural and spiritual realms. They sought to awaken the viewers consciousness by shrouding the subject in a misty indistinct veil of emotionalism. The palette is minimal, characterized by warm hues of brown, soft greens, gauzy yellows and muted grays. Preferred themes were evocative moonlight nights and poetic, vaporous landscapes. Tonalist painters seemed to favored unconscious states and psychological experiences over reality.
Principle Painters of Tonalism Movement
Ralph Albert
Blakelock American,
1847-1919 Key terms and phrase associated with the tonalist movement - obscured details, single-figure themes, the natural and spiritual domain, waking, unconscious states, sleep, dreams, death, aura, religious significance, emotionalism, emotionalists, pictorial space, compositional space, diffused light, incandescent glow, organic forms, artistic inspiration, illusionistic representation, luminous, transcendentalist, glowing, metaphysical, emotional expression, poetic, evocative
© HistoryofPainters.com If you like this page and wish to share
it, you are welcome to link to it, with our thanks.
If you feel you have worthwhile information you would like to
contribute we would love to hear from you. We collect essential
biographical information and artist quotes from folks all over
the globe and appreciate your participation. When submitting
please, if possible, site the source and provide English
translation. Email to
|
|
| home | medieval art | artist quotations | iconography | 100 greatest paintings |
| renaissance art | artist biographies | top 50 painters | rococo art | book store |