James Tissot: the 19th century painter who swapped high society for the Holy Land

Arts

Tissots The Apparition (1885) was inspired by a séance following the death of his lover © Courtesy of Frédéric Mantion. Photo: Eric Marin

A contemporary of the Impressionists, the late 19th-century society painter James Tissot (1836-1902) is remembered best for capturing the more mundane aspects of fashionable company: ladies lounging in lace and ruffles, tense moustachioed men in ties. It comes as a surprise, then, that for the last two decades of his life, Tissot trained his eye—and his brush—on the spiritual, producing hundreds of biblical watercolours and drawings for which he was widely renowned in his own time, but which have since fallen away from public view.

James Tissot: Fashion and Faith, which opens this week at the Legion of Honor in San Francisco, attempts to reconcile the French artists mystical and material works, presenting new scholarship and the first major reassessment of his work in nearly 20 years. Co-organised with the Musée dOrsay in Paris, the exhibition includes more than 60 paintings—including both society and spiritual scenes, one of which was long thought lost—in addition to drawings, prints and photographs, which suggest Tissot was an artist between two worlds.

The bridge between those worlds is a recently rediscovered painting, The Apparition (1885), which was found in an estate sale by private collectors familiar with Tissots work. The uncharacteristically dark painting features the well-known spiritualist and medium, William Eglinton, accompanied by a woman, both shrouded in white and holding orbs of light. It is allegedly based on a vision Tissot had in a séance with Eglinton after his London lover, Kathleen Newton, had died of tuberculosis—a loss that sent him seeking refuge in his native France after several years in Britain.

James Tissot's "Holyday" (The Picnic) (around 1876) © Courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco

“Kathleens death was a turning point for Tissot,” says the exhibitions curator, Melissa E. Buron, noting that it was after this vision that the artist began creating his biblical scenes. Spiritualism, which sought to scientifically prove the existence of an afterlife, had a pop-culture appeal at the end of the 19th century. The artist, raised Catholic, and many of his contemporaries “didnt necessarily see a big divide between this kind of mysticism and Judeo-Christian religiosity,” she says.

Assumed lost or even destroyed by Tissot himself for the better part of a century, The Apparition was known only by a mezzotint attributed to the artist, now in the museums collection, and photographs of the painting in Tissots studio in the rural Bouillon region of southern France.

Exhibited publicly for the first time since the artist was alive, alongside a selection of his biblical watercolours, “it shows how his unabashed religious and spiritual curiosity dovetailed with the cultural zeitgeist of the time,” Buron says.

Tissot, who visited the Holy Land on more than one occasion, created around 700 biblical scenes between 1885 and his death in 1902, and they proved a commercial hit. Masses queued to see them when they toured Paris and London, and John Singer Sargent, serving as an adviser to a nascent Brooklyn Museum eagerly building its collection up to rival the Metropolitan Museum of Arts, counselled that they should invest in these works if they wanted to be taken seriously as an institution. The museum bought 350 New Testament watercolour scenes, while New Yorks Jewish Museum bought Old Testament scenes; both museums rarely exhibit the works due to conservation concerns and thRead More – Source