Tag Archives: Bacchante

William-Adolphe Bouguereau’s Bacchante (1894)

The art world is a fun­ny old fish when it comes to “what’s hot and what’s not” and it was ever thus; unless you’re a bolt­ed-on, world-renowned big name like your Rem­brandts and your Van Goghs, you might find your­self in or out of fash­ion. Take William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1825–1905). Many peo­ple out­side (and prob­a­bly inside) of France have nev­er heard of him, and yet he was one of France’s pre­em­i­nent aca­d­e­m­ic painters in the lat­ter half of the nine­teenth cen­tu­ry.

Bouguereau exe­cut­ed some 822 known paint­ings dur­ing his career, often por­tray­ing quin­tes­sen­tial­ly clas­si­cal and mytho­log­i­cal sub­jects: Cupid and Psy­che, the Birth of Venus, nymphs and satyrs and so on, as well as a large body of slick reli­gious works, pas­torals, and coy­ly erot­ic nudes. His por­traits were ren­dered with near-pho­to­graph­ic verisimil­i­tude and with a con­sum­mate lev­el of skill and craft. Giv­en that a high per­cent­age of his works are life-size, it is one of the largest bod­ies of work ever pro­duced by any artist. So what went wrong?

Well, Bouguereau rep­re­sent­ed the “old guard”, an uphold­er of tra­di­tion­al val­ues and indeed one who con­trived to exclude avant-garde work from the Salon ( the offi­cial art exhi­bi­tion of the Académie des Beaux-Arts in Paris). Cézanne once expressed regret at being reject­ed by the ‘Salon de Mon­sieur Bouguereau’. In oth­er words, he was a dinosaur and des­tined to be over­shad­owed by the Impres­sion­ists and the mod­ernists of the dawn­ing new cen­tu­ry; his rep­u­ta­tion sank after his death and for many years his work was regard­ed as irre­deemably passé. He has, how­ev­er, recent­ly achieved some­thing of a reha­bil­i­ta­tion, and these days his works fetch huge prices at the auc­tion room. Quite right too, he was bril­liant.

A rep­re­sen­ta­tive work is this 1894 piece, Bac­cha­nte. A bac­cha­nte was a priest­ess or fol­low­er of Bac­chus, the god of wine and intox­i­fi­ca­tion, and, whilst in the Greek myths they are often depict­ed as wild women, run­ning through the for­est, tear­ing ani­mals to pieces, and engag­ing in oth­er acts of fren­zied debauch­ery, Bouguereau here choos­es to por­tray his Bac­cha­nte ‘before the par­ty’!