Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat (French, 1833-1922)
Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat (French, 1833-1922)

Samson's Youth

Details
Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat (French, 1833-1922)
Samson's Youth
signed and dated 'Leo Bonnat-1891' (lower right)
oil on canvas
83 x 99½ in. (210.8 x 252.7 cm.)
Painted in 1891.
Provenance
Harry Whitney Treats, Seattle, 1912.
By descent to his wife, 1923.
By descent to their daughters, 1946.
Thence by descent to a private collection, 1968.
Their sale; Christie's, New York, 25 October 2006, lot 118.
Acquired from the above sale by the present owner.
Literature
Michael S. Smith, Houses, New York, 2008, pp. 133 & 137.
Exhibited
Paris, Salon, 1891.

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Charlotte Young
Charlotte Young

Lot Essay

Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat was born in Bayonne in 1833 and lived for many years in Madrid where his father owned a bookshop. Under the tutelage of his maternal uncle, Charles Sarvy, he developed an appreciation for the Spanish Old Masters including Velázquez, Murillo and Zurbarán, making numerous sketches and copies of their work. He attended classes at the Royal Academy of San Fernando in Madrid for a short time before ultimately relocating to Paris to study at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts.

At the Ecole, Bonnat enrolled in the atelier of Léon Cogniet, where he made the acquaintance of Jules Lefebvre and Tony Robert-Fleury, two Academic artists who would remain his lifelong friends and frequent contributors to the annual Salon des Beaux-Arts. Bonnat made his Salon debut in 1857. That same year, he took second place in the Prix de Rome, the Ecole's most prestigious annual competition. He later rose to prominence as one of the most celebrated portrait painters of the Third Republic, lending his sitters a sense of realism and dignity no doubt influenced by his early study in Madrid. He won a number of state-sponsored commissions, the most important of which was the cycle of paintings that now adorns the interior of the Panthéon in Paris.

Bonnat exhibited Samson's Youth in the Salon of 1891. The painting depicts an early moment in the life of Samson when the hero slays a lion in a Herculean bout of strength. One reviewer of the Salon remarked, 'no one has reaped more laurels nor shown more talent than M. Bonnat'. The skilfully rendered Samson, his muscles contorted in battle, points to Bonnat's mastery of the Ecole's instruction; the figure could very well be modelled after classical sculpture, such as the Laocoön, now at the Vatican, which was often used as a learning tool for students at the Ecole in order to master the depiction of physical struggle and pain. The story also adheres to the topics chosen for the Prix de Rome, of heroic morality tales in which brain battles brawn. Its similarity to other epic characters - from Hercules to David - would have certainly appealed to the Salon's learned clientele.

Like Bouguereau, who was Bonnat's contemporary and reputed rival, Léon Bonnat was ultimately elected to the Académie and became Professor at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. His students including Raoul Doufy, Henri Matisse and Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (who he reportedly did not care for). In 1905, Bonnat received the highest honour of being appointed Directeur of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. Ultimately, his career exemplified the success of a 19th-century Academician and the work that the then-burgeoning 19th-century art market demanded.

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