The Bourgeois Class and its Painters (1862-1900)

Capturing a social class

Colour Study of the Allegorical Figures following the Chariot (the "Fortune", the "Industry", the "Trade" the "Crafts) and "Bavaria" (1895/1899) by Gyzis NikolaosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

1862 is a landmark in both modern Greek history and art.

Colour Study of the Allegorical Figures following the Chariot (the "Fortune", the "Industry", the "Trade" the "Crafts) and "Bavaria" (1895/1899) by Gyzis NikolaosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

Though the dethronement of King Othon brought an end to the Bavarian rule of Greece, in art a new period of “Bavarianism” began with the triumphant arrival of Greek artistic life of the major representative of the mature School  of Munich:

Grandma's Favourite, Iakovidis Georgios, 1893, From the collection of: National Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum
Show lessRead more

Nikephoros Lytras (1832 - 1904), Nikolaos Gysis (1842 -1901), Georgios Iakovidis (1853 - 1932), Konstantinos Volanakis (1837 - 1907) and many other painters.

Lysandros Kaftantzoglou (ca 1886) by Lytras NikephorosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

1862 also marked the end of a fruitful twenty-year period at the School of Arts, under the directorship of the brilliant architect Lysandros Kaftantzoglou (1811 - 1885).

Lysandros Kaftantzoglou (ca 1886) by Lytras NikephorosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

The students who distinguished themselves at the School of Arts during the Kaftantzoglou period (1844-1862) became outstanding teachers and founders of modern Greek art.

The Betrothal of the Children (1877) by Gyzis NikolaosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

Genre painting, the epitome of bourgeois taste since the time it developed in the Netherlands in the 17th century, was a prestigious preference of the new urban class that arose during the time of Charilaos Trikoupis.

Portrait of Marianthi L. Charilaou (ca 1895 - 1900) by Lytras NikephorosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

A form of portraiture for the haute bourgeoisie also achieve

Bourgeois portraiture was addressed to a higher social class noted for its advanced urban taste, considerable refinement, contacts with Europe and a completely different lifestyle.

Fish and Oysters, Vokos Nikolaos, From the collection of: National Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum
,
Nude, Lytras Nikephoros, ca 1867-1870, From the collection of: National Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum
Show lessRead more

Still life, the bourgeois genre par excellence, as well as the nude became part of the thematic repertoire of the mature phase of Greek academicism. 

Collecting the Nets (1871) by Volanakis ΚonstantinosNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

Sea painting, especially by Konstantinos Volanakis, prevails in landscape art. 

At the Chinese Tower in Munich (1915) by Savvidis SymeonNational Gallery of Greece - Alexandros Soutsos Museum

At the same time, there emerged a genuine plein air painting, marked by free brushstrokes, color and light; this plein-airism transmitted the image of a fluid and changeable world, where there were no certainties beyond the feelings of an individual at a specific moment.

Credits: Story

Texts: Marina Lampraki-Plaka, Professor Emeritus of the History of Art, ex-Director, National Gallery - Alexandros Soutsos Museum, Athens 
Project leader: Efi Agathonikou, Head of Collections Department,  National Gallery - Alexandros Soutsos Museum, Athens
Images: Stavros Psiroukis & Thalia Kimpari, Photographic Studio,  National Gallery - Alexandros Soutsos Museum, Athens
Digital curation: Marina Tomazani, Art Historian, Curator, National Gallery - Alexandros  Soutsos Museum 

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Explore more
Related theme
Greek Art Now
Dive into the masterpieces of Modern and Contemporary art from Greece
View theme

Interested in Visual arts?

Get updates with your personalized Culture Weekly

You are all set!

Your first Culture Weekly will arrive this week.

Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites