Tuesday, September 16, 2025

Georges de la Tour 🕯️ From Shadow to Light

 
For some reason I feel audacious after visiting museum shows and try to paint 🎨 like the painter…

17th century master painter George de la Tour (1593 -1652) just opened at musée Jacquemart-Andre.last Thursday.
My watercolor candle 🕯️ above is taken from this painting of Mary Magdalen.
Candle light 🕯️is a recurring theme 
In de la Tour’s 
Dramatic, mysterious 
Nocturnal scenes.
You can pick up a candle 🕯️ in the museum gift shop and set up your own de la Tour scene 👍
I captured 📸 a visitor unknowingly creating his own scene onsight.
With strong silhouetted shapes. 
The contrast of light and shade is crystal clear in this religious painting, The Newborn Child ( 1647-1648).
It’s fun to make a pencil ✏️ sketch analyzing the repeated geometric forms, here mostly triangles, in this exquisitely simple, yet perfect composition.
I did not sketch ✍️ on the spot. It was crowded opening day.
I did not watch the introductory film 🎥 but headed straight inside to the exhibit. You can always watch it after you exit. 
I did NOT get the audio phones that come with your ticket. People stand in front of paintings in a trance-like state and don’t actually look 👁️ at the artwork 🖼️ 😬
Instead watch the many art videos on YouTube BEFORE you go. I liked this one. You should  reserve your ticket ahead, though I did see some people buying them last minute.
I haven’t told you a thing ABOUT Georges de la Tour. He lived mostly in Luneville near Nancy in the Duchy of Lorraine, which became part of France during his lifetime. He was painter to Louis XIII. De la Tour often did not sign his paintings, though he was renowned in his time, so they fell into obscurity after his death during a pandemic in 1652.
The Fortune Teller - New York Metropolitan 
There are only 40 known de la Tour paintings and musée Jacquemart-Andre is showing 30 in this first retrospective since 1979 so it is quite a rare occasion. ‘The Fortune Teller’ above 👆 in the NYC Metropolitan Museum is too fragile to travel. 
The exhibit is on until 25 January, 2026.
There was quite a line for the museum’s
On Etsy
Much-adored tea salon and I was headed over to le Village International de la Gastronomie at Eiffel Tower.
 Thanks for reading Parisbreakfast! If you like this post and want to support it, buy Paris letters and watercolors or forward to someone who might enjoy it. Cheers!


19 comments:

  1. Love your skteches from your visit to this exhibition <3 You have a great eye and never miss any detail. A must-visit exhibition for me and any person who is into Chiaroscuro :-) Thank you Xx

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:14 AM

      Chiaroscuro, the word I can not spell ! ❤️

      Delete
  2. Anonymous10:38 AM

    Your watercolor flames are quite wonderful!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Anonymous11:03 AM

    Fabulous exhibit. Thank you for taking us along and I love your paintings of the candle and the sketch analyzing geometric forms. You are such a talented artist Carol. -Suzanne P.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:19 AM

      Thank you Suzanne ❤️ it’s challenging but not impossible to re-interpret something in oil into watercolor. De la Tour’s work is so beautiful. A rare artist many have not heard of.

      Delete
  4. I am always moved by your sketches and this one of the candle is a moving example. I wanted to draw a tree with long trailing roots for a protest sign. I live in California on land originally settled by the Ohlone and wanted to point out that most of us here now have roots elsewhere. How hard could it be to draw a tree and roots? For me, nearly impossible. How fortunate are you to have the gift!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous11:16 AM

      Find a picture on GOOGLE and trace it 🙏 A tree with roots is hard to draw.
      Ian Sidaway on instagram is great with trees 🌲 no me 🙄

      Delete
    2. Anonymous1:13 PM

      Carol, thanks for reference to Sidaway! Never heard of him. Fabulous drawings I see online. Very impressive.

      Delete
  5. Anonymous11:59 AM

    You nailed it!!! I bet it’s harder to capture light with watercolour than it is with oil or other mediums because with watercolour once you lose the light, it’s gone forever.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous12:00 PM

      Oops 😘 from 🇨🇦

      Delete
    2. Anonymous3:34 PM

      I think it’s the opposite:
      Watercolor is a transparent medium. The white paper shines through and creates your lights. You are always told to ‘reserve’ your whites or plan them ahead.
      Oil paint is an opaque medium, though it can also be used transparently in glazes or thin washes. The whites and light is added by the artist. I have never been much good with oils 🤷🏻‍♀️

      Delete
    3. Anonymous3:37 PM

      PS it’s true you can also go in again and add highlights with white gouache or markers.

      Delete
  6. Bonnie L12:08 PM

    Looks like a wonderful exhibit, Carol. I love the Jacquemart-André, it’s so elegant. Mind boggling to think it was a private residence. Your watercolors of candlelight are beautiful!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous3:35 PM

      It is a beautiful mansion, very much a showplace for balls etc. and still is on occasion.

      Delete
  7. Anonymous4:17 PM

    Carol,
    today's post was truly fabulous!!!! AWA Catering

    ReplyDelete
  8. Sukicart6:23 PM

    I was totally unfamiliar with de la Tour but love what I see here so will do some exploration.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Anonymous6:48 AM

      Georges de la Tour is a well-kept secret…perhaps no more.

      Delete
  9. Anonymous8:49 AM

    Thank you for this! I was always fascinated by this guy! His paintings are truly magical! You do lead an exciting life !!!! Manja Scott

    ReplyDelete

Love hearing from you