"We seldom get into trouble when we speak softly. It is only when we raise our voices that the sparks fly and tiny molehills become great mountains of contention."
In
the hot summer of 1964, I was poking about the hidden, sooty, and
airless corners of Paris seeking out and selecting a small group of
French artists.
I
was looking for painters of the emerging generation who were already
achieving home-town plaudits and merited the wider recognition that
could come from exhibitions on a circulating basis in the United
States.
Marc
Chagall, Pablo Picasso, Jean Dubuffet were of no concern: they were
way beyond my financial means. Nor was I interested in the very
young.
My
objective was genuinely gifted artists who had sufficient stature
already that their work graced the permanent collection of the
National Museum of Modern Art, Paris; the Tate Gallery, London; and
other museums, but had not yet achieved widespread public
recognition.
Two
good gallery friends arranged for me to see a particular painter in
his studio. They gave me a piece of paper with his name and address.
I
arched an eyebrow. “Millet?”
“Yes,
Millet,” was the discreet answer.
“Which
Millet?” I asked coldly. As I have written before, I grew up in
small-town Carson City, where I think every room in the first eight
grades had a terrible reproduction of one of Jean François
Millet’s most famous paintings, Les Vanneurs (The Gleanors).
Jean François Millet, The Gleanors
I
loathed it, and it had given me a deep prejudice against Millet, a
prejudice that would not have developed had I ever had a single look
at such works as The
Sailboat or Starry
Night.
Jean-François Millet, Nuit Étoilée (Starry Night), c. 1851.
In
1824, painters Claude Aligny and Philippe le Dieu wandered out from
Fontainebleau looking for woodland material to sketch. They became
lost in the forest. A friendly shepherd led them to the hamlet of
Barbizon, where he permitted them to sleep in the straw with his
sheep. In the morning they were so impressed with the surrounding
beauty that they stayed to paint.
A
peasant named Ganne fed them and finally took them in as lodgers. The
painters’ friends began joining them, and soon Ganne built a
hotel to accommodate the influx. Such was the humble beginnings of
the famous Barbizon school.
By
1830, the lot included Jean Baptiste Camille Corot, Théodore
Rousseau, Narcisse Diaz de la Peña, Jules Dupré, and a
bit later Jean François Millet, Charles François
Daubigny, Constant Troyon, and Charles Jacque.
It
was an illustrious group that made art history. They were the
flourishing body of painters who preceded Impressionism.
Corot
became the most successful of all the Barbizon painters, and his
success made him one of the most counterfeited artists of all time.
Millet’s work, on the other hand, generally defied the skill of
later forgers, for it had a certain personality — touch, color,
arrangement, and technique — that baffled many would-be
imitators.
Jean
François Millet (there is a reason I keep using his whole
name) learned to draw with burnt sticks on a white wall. Although his
parents were Norman peasants, they were interested in their son’s
potential. The father took some of his son’s sketches to nearby
Cherbourg to show to a painter who had been taught by Jacques David.
The painter took the boy in as his pupil.
In
spite of his bucolic origins, Millet became the most urbane and
well-informed artist, except for Eugène Delacroix, in
mid-century France.
Millet
had long periods without income, even though he was quite famous by
1850. His financial troubles did not end until 1865, when he turned
from canvases glorifying the moral superiority of hard labor —
which the middle class condemned as politically revolutionary —
to landscapes. He then produced more than 100 pastels, “which
combined his greatest gift, drawing, with a palette of high-toned
color.”
His
range was wider than most people suppose.
While
the French were still ignoring him, Millet found an appreciative
audience in the United States, where the Puritan ideal of work was a
fundamental part of the national mystique. Purchasers included
William Vanderbilt, J. P. Morgan, and the Chicago Potter Palmers.
By
then fake Millets had already become a problem.
A
drawing teacher named Grabon occasionally sold canvases that had been
left with him by artists who had used his studios. “Millet,”
he complained one day to F. Jousseaume “gave me a double of his Angeles.
I’ve sold it five or six times, but each time it has been
brought back. You can guess what I think of collectors and experts —
to refuse a picture that has been sent by Millet himself!”
This
Jousseaume was a notorious collector who amassed more than 2300 fake
Corots and claimed that they were genuine.
All
by himself a faker named Notlay signed more Millets than Millet ever
painted.
The
painter Charles Chaplin rests in deserved obscurity. He painted much
in the manner of Millet. In 1885, an unscrupulous dealer cleaned
Chaplin’s name off an oil showing a flock of hogs descending a
sharp slope of the Cévennes. He added Millet’s
signature, an act that must have been perpetrated all too often. In
1934, this particular painting was sold in Amsterdam for 100,000
francs.
“Which
Millet?” I asked again.
“The
same family as Jean François Millet.” My shudder must
have been visible, for my informant added quickly. “But you’re
not supposed to know that. He’s very sensitive and doesn’t
want to be linked with the family. You must never mention it to him.”
Young
Millet’s studio was the top floor of an old barn, which was
approached through an unattended courtyard choked with green growth.
The painter was tall, thin, hungry-looking. Two painter friends were
with him. All three unfolded their work.
It
was hideous, nothing that I could ever market in the United States.
There certainly was not any Jean François Millet in any of it,
neither good nor bad Jean François Millet. I blandly
interpreted young Millet’s drift from his ancestor’s
images as a manifestation of his own distaste.
Actually
the young artist had a double reason for family dissociation:
although Jean François Millet’s fame might embarrass the
descendant who wanted to win his own reputation, the infamy of one J.
C. Millet would be more than sufficient to taint the whole family
name in family-conscious France. Why? Jean François Millet’s
grandson started one of the most notorious fake-art cabals.
That’s
for next week.
Note:
Tsing-fang Chen is one or two of the most important artists working
the world scene today. He appropriates images from multiple sources
to create fresh visual and philosophical commentaries. To celebrate
the centennial of the Statue of Liberty, Tsing-fang painted 100
portraits of the lady in various guises and situations. All 100
paintings were published in a book, most of which I wrote.
In
this particular instance, Chen has imported an image of Millet’s
The Gleanors, only they are on a beach with the World Trade
Center towers in the background on the other side of the Hudson.
Liberty’s pedestal is a huge Coke stand. Instead of grain, the
gleanors are harvesting Coke cans for money.
Lawrence Jeppson is an art consultant, organizer and curator of art exhibitions, writer, editor
and publisher, lecturer, art historian, and appraiser. He is America's leading authority on
modern, handwoven French tapestries. He is expert on the works of William Henry Clapp, Nat
Leeb, Tsing-fang Chen, and several French artists.
He is founding president of the non-profit Mathieu Matégot Foundation for Contemporary
Tapestry, whose purview encompasses all 20th-century tapestry, an interest that traces back to
1948. For many years he represented the Association des Peintres-Cartonniers de Tapisserie and
Arelis in America.
Through the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the American Federation of
Arts, the Museum of Modern Art, and his own Art Circuit Services he has been a contributor to
or organizer of more than 200 art exhibitions in the United States, Canada, Japan, and Taiwan.
He owns AcroEditions, which publishes and/or distributes multiple-original art. He was co-founder and artistic director of Collectors' Investment Fund.
He is the director of the Spring Arts Foundation; Utah Cultural Arts Foundation, and the Fine
Arts Legacy Foundation
Lawrence is an early-in-the-month home teacher, whose beat is by elevator. In addition, he has spent the past six years hosting and promoting reunions of the missionaries who served in the French Mission (France, Belgium, and Switzerland) during the decade after WWII.