Joseph-Laurent MalaineJoseph-Laurent Malaine (21 February 1745, in Tournai, Austrian Netherlands – 5 May 1809, in Paris) was a flower painter and created cartoons for tapestries as well as designs for wall-papers and textiles. LifeHis father was Régnier Joseph Malaine, a master flower painter in Tournai, where Joseph-Laurent Malaine also trained as a flower painter.[n 1] In 1773, he presented two paintings of flowers in vases at the first Lille "Salon des Arts".[1] We know of paintings by him that he dated from 1773, and up to 1806. It is not known when he arrived in Paris, but we know he married Hélène Victoire Roze (d. 1856), the daughter of a master sculptor and wood merchant[n 2] in Paris in the summer of 1779. The couple lived on the rue du Faubourg Saint Martin. In 1784[2] or 1786,[3] he succeeded Maurice Jacques (1712-1784) and became a flower painter at the manufacture des Gobelins, "where he designed cartoons for chairs": he was thus a painter-cartoon designer and, with his workshop, created models for chair tapestries.[4] Maurice Fenaille specifies that he "was invited by Director Pierre to come and occupy a lodging at the Manufacture; he was to receive no salary, but to be paid for all the works he would execute on behalf of the Manufacture." He adds[5] that "Pierre, premier peintre du Roi, wrote on July 2, 1788 to Comte d'Angiviller to ask him to ratify Laurent Malaine's appointment." The same author goes on to give details of an order received by Malaine: it concerns a "meuble complet" (i.e. all the seats in a salon) for which he made models for the backs, seats and platbands (the vertical strips of fabric or tapestry under the horizontal part of the seat) of two sofas, twelve armchairs and two sheets for fire screens.[3] A cartoon of this type can be seen at the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris.[6] Twenty-eight of Malaine's cartoons are preserved at the Mobilier National.[7] Malaine also produced designs for borders, a "carpet design ... for the service of the Savonnerie manufactory" (1788), etc. After Charles-Axel Guillaumot was appointed head of the Gobelins Manufactory, Jacqué indicated that the seminary where apprentices were trained, as well as the Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture which trained them in drawing, were abolished, and the three painters attached to the manufacture dismissed, including Malaine,[1][8] but the latter seems to have remained at the head of his workshop, at Les Gobelins. By 1792, we know that he was already working for the Arthur et Grenard (Rue Louis-le-Grand, at the junction with the boulevard des Italiens) wallpaper factory in Paris, and for an "indienne factory in Mulhouse, in Switzerland (Mulhouse was then an independent territory linked to Switzerland)[1]", that of Dollfus père, fils & Cie, founded in 1786, "in whose affairs he was interested and which he was used to visiting", according to Fenaille.[9][10] He also provides "a wallpaper project for the royal Savonnerie manufactory" (according to Véronique de Bruignac-La Hougue). He mentions his decision to leave the Gobelins in a letter dated September 29, 1792, three weeks after the September Massacres. According to Fenaille, "he was invited to evacuate the lodgings he occupied, the minister Roland having reiterated the order on October 11, 1792" because he worked less for the Manufacture than for the wallpaper and indienne factories. In early 1793, having settled in Mulhouse, he continued his cooperation with the wallpaper manufacturer Nicolas Dollfus et Cie (they had started working together in 1790 - and he had previously been Nicolas Dollfus's teacher), designing wallpaper patterns for the Alsatian company, to which he remained loyal after his return to Paris",[11] and worked as a flower painter for the canvas and wallpaper manufactures of Mulhouse, Thann, and Rixheim.[n 3] Returning to Paris in March 1797 (according to Jacqué; 1796, according to the Prado), "he continued to paint esteemed pictures, several of which have been attributed to Van Spaendonck" (Grand Dictionnaire), while continuing his collaboration with companies in Mulhouse, then Rixheim. He may then (according to the Prado) have been appointed professor at the Académie de Lyon, a position he held until his death in Paris on May 5, 1809 - however, Bernard Jacqué has found no trace of this appointment, and regards it only as a legend. He is buried in the Père-Lachaise cemetery, division 57.[12] PaintingsMalaine exhibited at the Salon from 1791 to 1808.[13] He painted in oil on copper, wood or canvas. Most of his works depict bouquets of flowers in vases set on entablatures, sometimes with insects or even birds. Among the paintings recently offered for sale[14] were two still lifes, one depicting two stems of "roses of Sharon", the other two bunches of grapes in trompe-l'œil. We also know of several paintings of fruit, such as one of peaches, with jasmine flowers and two goldfinches. The Prado Museum's website describes him as "A modest painter whose works are few and far between, his compositions are characterized by an elegance and simplicity far removed from the spectacular style that prevailed at the time. His two paintings of vases in the Prado Museum are a good example of his meticulous, detailed style. His work is particularly interested in the realistic, tangible effect of different textures and motifs, whether flowers, vases or insects. Through the study of light on different qualities, he succeeds in creating a sense of volume that reinforces the realism of his paintings.".[15] At the time of his death, we know that his son Louis Alphonse Joseph Malaine (Paris 1782-Mulhouse 1858 - his wife was from Thann) was a draftsman at the Gobelins.[16] He "then made a career in Mulhouse where he became a specialist in paisley".[17] Malaine signed his paintings "Louis Malaine", "L Malaine", or with a monogram, "LJM" or "LM". In written sources, he is often referred to as "Malaine père", while "Malaine fils" is his son, Alphonse (Paris, June 16, 1782 - October 11, 1858, Mulhouse). One of Malaine's pupils was Jacques Barraband, who became a painter in the "flower class" of the Lyon School of Drawing in 1807.[n 4][18][19][20][21][22][23][24] Public collections
Works by Malaine regularly come up for sale.[27] WallpaperAccording to V. de Bruignac-La Hougue, wallpaper manufacturers called on designers from the Gobelins.[28] Malaine began designing for wallpaper manufactures in the 1780s, for the Manufacture Arthur et Grenard (which became a royal manufacture in 1788), which was in operation from 1775 to 1789.[n 9] French painter Henri Lebert wrote that "Around the time of the French Revolution, we reached a new phase in the development of print design. A flower painter of great talent gave a more learned impulse to this varied art, through a more conscientious study of nature." That painter was Malaine, who used to sell his designs in Paris, and to send them over from Paris to Alsace. Lebert says that the designs he sold to Zuber in Rixheim "completely renewed the wall-paper industry. They are distinguished by the natural grace of each plant and a broad, well-felt touch, whose character draftsmen have rightly followed in the finest modern productions. These natural-sized groups of flowers, sometimes accompanied by fruit and birds, have always, since their appearance, served as a model for artists wishing to make good, complete studies." Lebert adds that when Malaine went back to Paris when it was safe again, the Gobelins tried to take him back, but Malaine "preferred to devote himself as a free-lance artist to painting pictures, while still working for the Zuber company and that of M. Steinbaechlein" : the manufactures sent him students.[n 10] Murs de papier details the subjects of wallpapers, and particularly the different kinds of flower illustrations and notes that : " We finally find the depiction of flowers striving for fidelity to nature, to a greater or lesser extent, which was Highly favored in the 1780s, and still very popular in the following decade. a whole range of artists, influenced by Dutch flower painters - some of whom settled in France, including G. van Spaendonck - created designs for various manufactures ; these works aimed for a precise, naturalistic rendering, demonstrating a meticulous attention to the quasi-botanical veracity of flowers. A particularly brilliant player in this genre, Joseph-Laurent Malaine, worked for both Arthur et Grenard (later Arthur et Robert) and the Mulhouse factory. He unquestionably played a crucial role in the floral aspect of the most exquisite pieces, such as an overdoor adorned with flowers, fruit, and birds.[29] The same author calls Malaine "an essential link in the creation of motifs for the Rixheim factory". Public collectionsThe Pop base[30] mentions four wallpapers designed from drawings by Malaine, two for the Manufacture Arthur et Grenard, and two for Hartmann Risler & Cie.[n 11] Several models of wallpaper panels decorated with flowers painted by Malaine for Hartmann Risler et Cie (Rixheim) are held by the Bibliothèque nationale de France and can be viewed on Gallica.[31] The Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris owns several wallpaper panels decorated with bouquets of flowers; two panels with mythological scenes (Pygmalion and Galatea; Eurydice stung by the snake); a "cameo"[n 12] representing a bouquet of flowers; a vase panel on a base crowned with a bouquet of fruit and foliage - the latter two works made for the Manufacture Zuber. The Kassel wallpaper museum has an "Overdoor with a red macaw, green parrot and oak jay" designed by Malaine for Hartmann Risler & Cie.[32] The Bibliothèque Forney, in Paris, owns a piece of wall paper showing a Vase with naturalistic bouquet and fruit basket, also designed for the Manufacture Hartmann Risler, ca 1800.[n 13] TextilesIn 1746, a textile factory was founded by Jean-Henri Dollfus in the Republic of Mulhouse, which was not yet part of France. Until the Treaty of Reunion on January 28, 1798, Indiennes could be produced there without restrictions, but had to pay duties on entering France. The duties were abolished on February 17, allowing the indiennes trade to flourish. According to Henry d'Allemagne it was difficult to find good artists to draw textile models : "Designers and engravers are the most difficult to recruit for a factory, yet they are the ones on whom the company's success depends. Apart from the "artists" at Gobelins and Beauvais, and the draftsmen at Lyon's silk factories, there are very few specialists in textile decoration in France".[33] According to Antoinette-Joséphine-Françoise-Anne Drohojowska , the success of manufactures depended to a large extent on these artists' designs, and "the most sought-after genres were those whose subjects were natural flowers, which required the cooperation of distinguished artists, who were paid a lot of money." She then mentions Malaine among "the most distinguished artists of the period, whose canvases are very remarkable in terms of both drawing and colouring. One notices bouquets and garlands that imitate nature as well as the best paintings".[34] Malaine worked for Dollfus, "one of the most important factories in Alsace for the perfection of its products and the beauty of its designs, due in part to Malaine père".[35] In 1806, the company produced "34,000 pieces, with 7 to 800 workers".[36] The POP database lists Malaine as, among other things, "painter for the Mulhouse cloth printing industry". Malaine may have been featured in the exhibition 'Quand les fleurs font l'étoffe : une histoire de la flore dans l'imprimé', from October 26, 2018 to December 31, 2020, at the Musée de l'impression sur étoffes (Mulhouse).[37] One of Malaine's former pupils worked in fabric printing. He was Henri Hofer.[n 14] Here is a description of his work by Louis Spach : "Hofer's drawings ... resembled master paintings, translated onto canvas, with a spiritual touch".[n 15] The Revue d'Alsace also mentions Henri Hofer as being "attached to the establishment of M. P. Dolfus,[n 16] in Thann, distinguished himself above all by the application of the touch and style of the flower painter his master, in his drawings for painted canvas. They were daring successes in which he reached a rare level of perfection, such was his taste and facility in execution, and they enabled him to operate a kind of renovation of the art of drawing for printing, getting as close as possible, through the study of nature, to new results with the usual means of Persian illuminations in solid colours. His flower borders, painted with admirable suppleness and assurance, resemble paintings by the master, translated for cotton canvas. Among the variety of his work, which embraced all genres, he made , in concert with my father,[n 17] in charge of figures, flower vases, fruit groups, for large drapery furniture. This worthy artist, retired from the business in which he had later participated as a manufacturer in Mulhouse, came to live in Colmar in 1837, where he died on October 11.".[n 18] Henri Clouzot also gives some details about Henri Hofer's brother Godefroy, also a student at "les Gobelins" : "At the Wesserling indiennes manufacture, brought the art of charming sofa designs, the secret of which he had learned at the Manufacture Royale des Gobelins and which are preserved in Mulhouse's historical museum."[n 19] Bibliography
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