Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Mariano Fortuny Marsal - The Artist’s Sons in a Japanese Classroom [1874]


Mariano Fortuny Marsal (Reus, June 11, 1836 - Rome, November 21, 1874) was the leading Catalan painter of his day, with an international reputation. His brief career encompassed works on a variety of subjects common in the art of the period, including the Romantic fascination with Orientalist themes, historicist genre painting, military painting of Spanish colonial expansion, as well as a prescient loosening of brush-stroke and colour. Fortuny paintings are colourful, with a vivacious iridescent brushstroke that at times recalls the softness of Rococo painting but also anticipates impressionist brushwork. He died somewhat suddenly from an attack of tertian ague, or malaria, contracted while painting in the open air at Naples and Portici in the summer of 1874.

[Museo Nacional del Prado, Madrid - Oil on canvas, 44 x 93 cm]

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