Loading

Wandering Saltimbanques

Honoré Daumier1847/1850

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

National Gallery of Art, Washington DC
Washington, DC, United States

Best known for political cartoons and humorous caricatures satirizing contemporary life, Daumier's paintings reveal a more serious examination of the human condition. The itinerant street musicians and acrobats in Wandering Saltimbanques are depicted without ridicule, the artist sympathetically revealing the poverty and isolation of their offstage lives.


Daumier may have felt a personal affinity with the entertainers. The little boy carrying a chair could be a recollection of Daumier's childhood, when his family, destitute and living in Paris, endured numerous displacements to progressively worse lodgings. Further, it has been suggested that the older clown clad in traditional costume and leading his family in this painting may be associated with the artist's father, a failed poet and playwright committed to the insane asylum at Charenton in 1851, where he died.


Daumier was self-taught as a painter, and his style has many characteristics of the graphic media in which he trained. The blunt silhouettes of the figures and the simplified space they occupy are stylistic elements that originated in his lithographs. The unspecific, indefinite appearance thus produced endows them with more universal meaning. Personal associations aside, the saltimbanques here are artists struggling to make their way in a world that, as Daumier depicts it, is a bleak, anonymous place.


More information on this painting can be found in the Gallery publication _French Paintings of the Nineteenth Century, Part I: Before Impressionism_, which is available as a free PDF <u>https://www.nga.gov/content/dam/ngaweb/research/publications/pdfs/french-paintings-nineteenth-century.pdf</u>

Show lessRead more
  • Title: Wandering Saltimbanques
  • Creator: Honoré Daumier
  • Date Created: 1847/1850
  • Physical Dimensions: overall: 32.6 x 24.8 cm (12 13/16 x 9 3/4 in.) framed: 52.7 x 44.7 cm (20 3/4 x 17 5/8 in.)
  • Provenance: Alexis Rouart [1855-1911], Paris, by 1901;[1] probably by inheritance to his father, Henri Rouart [1833-1912], Paris; (Galerie Étienne Bignou, Paris and New York); sold July 1933 to Chester Dale [1883-1962], New York; bequest 1963 to NGA. [1] Lent by Alexis Rouart to the 1901 _Exposition Daumier_ at the l'Ecole des Beaux-Arts, Paris. On the back of the painting is a red wax seal that reads "Alexis Rouart."
  • Medium: oil on wood
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Get the app

Explore museums and play with Art Transfer, Pocket Galleries, Art Selfie, and more

Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites